The Nigerian Senate Committee on Ethics, Privileges and Public Petitions will
on Wednesday begin a probe of the Chairman of the Economic and Financial
Crimes Commission, Ibrahim Lamorde, over an allegation that he
fraudulently diverted over N1tn proceeds of corruption recovered by the
anti-graft agency.
Part of the money alleged by a petitioner to have been diverted by the
EFCC boss included the loot recovered from a former Governor of Bayelsa
State, Diepreye Alamieyeseigha; and ex-Inspector-General of Police, Tafa
Balogun.
The petitioner, Mr. George Uboh, whose complaint to the Senate prompted
the probe, has been invited to appear before the Senate committee at
Meeting Room 120 of the New Senate Building, National Assembly Complex,
Abuja, by 10am on Wednesday.
Similar invitation, it was learnt, had been extended to Lamorde to
appear before the Senate committee the same time on Wednesday.
The fraud allegedly perpetrated by Larmode was said to have dated back
to his days as the Director of Operations of the EFCC between 2003 and
2007, as well as an acting Chairman of the commission between June 2007
and May 2008, when the then chairman of the anti-graft agency, Mr. Nuhu
Ribadu, was away for a course at the National Institute for Policy and
Strategic Studies, Kuru, Jos.
Uboh, Chief Executive Officer of Panic Alert Security Systems, a
security firm, in his petition dated July 31, 2015, accused Lamorde of
some specific instances of under-remittance and non-disclosure of
proceeds of corruption recovered from criminal suspects, including
Balogun and Alamieyeseigha.
He assured the Senate that he would produce “overwhelming evidence” to back his claims against Lamorde.
Uboh also alleged that the EFCC had not accounted for “offshore
recoveries” and that “over half of the assets seized from suspects are
not reflected in EFCC exhibit records”.
The petitioner equally accused Lamorde of conspiring with some EFCC
officers and external auditors “to operate and conceal a recovery
account in the Central Bank of Nigeria and excluded the balances from
your audited financial statements between 2005 and 2011”.
“Lamorde continues to conceal the details of the unsold properties
forfeited by both Tafa Balogun and DSP Alamieyeseigha despite receiving
rent revenues from some estate agents on the said properties,” he
further alleged.
Alamieyeseigha, the man who former President Goodluck Jonathan succeeded
as Bayelsa State governor in 2005, had forfeited property and funds in
various bank accounts as part of terms of plea bargain in his trial by
the EFCC.
He had pleaded guilty to six counts of corruption charges before a
Federal High Court in Lagos on July 26, 2007 and served concurrent two
years imprisonment on each count, though he was later pardoned by
Jonathan in 2013.
Balogun had also forfeited landed assets and funds and was sentenced to
six months imprisonment by a Federal High Court in Abuja after he
pleaded guilty to various counts of corruption charges.
Uboh, asked that Lamorde be prosecuted and proposed 10 counts of fraud
in his petition, which was addressed to the Senate President Bukola
Saraki, through the Delta State Senator in the National Assembly, Peter
Nwaoboshi.
In the petition bearing Nwaobohi’s acknowledgment, Uboh alleged that
Lamorde in March 2013 diverted the sum of N779m out of the total N3bn
forfeited by Balogun to the Federal Government and that the EFCC boss
conspired with some officials of the anti-graft agency to under-remit
the ex-IG’s forfeited funds of about N5.85bn into the Consolidated
Revenue Account by holding back about N2.65bn.
Uboh also alleged that Lamorde conspired with some EFCC officials to
remit to Bayelsa State the sum of N3.1bn instead of the total sum of
N4.3bn proceeds of corruption recovered from Alamieyeseigha.
The petitioner said that Lamorde, as Director of Operations of the EFCC,
conspired with some officers of the commission to manipulate records of
assets recovered from Alamieyeseigha, an act which allegedly paved the
way for him to trade with about N3.7bn of the recovered funds for almost
two years.
“Sir, the aggregate funds diverted by Lamorde/EFCC stated below in the
attached criminal charges is over N1tn. However, because over 95 per
cent of overseas seizures are diverted, there is an urgent need to
investigate and recover those funds as well,” Uboh’s petition read in
part.
Our correspondent, on Sunday, obtained a copy of the Senate Committee on
Ethics, Privileges and Public Petitions’ letter, which was signed by
the committee’s clerk, Freedom Osolo, inviting Uboh to the Wednesday’s
meeting.
The letter of invitation entitled, ‘Invitation to a meeting of the
Senate Committee on Ethics, Privileges and Public Petitions’, partly
read, “I am directed to invite you to a meeting of the Senate Committee
on Ethics, Privileges and Public Petitions of the National Assembly in
respect of your petition (copy attached) against the Economic and
Financial Crimes Commission Chairman, Mr. Ibrahim Lamorde.”
“You are by this invitation, required to appear before the committee
with all necessary evidence to support your allegation,” the invitation
letter also noted.
Part of the proposed charges prepared by Uboh read, “That you Mr.
Ibrahim Lamorde, as the executive chairman of EFCC in March 2013, in the
bid to conceal a fraud of N779,155,004:62, being the diverted amount
from the forfeited funds by Tafa Balogun, falsified documents in
response to the request made on you by duly constituted authorities,
wherein you fraudulently stated the total of 13 bank balances as
N2,258,100,576:98 instead of N3,037,255,521:60
“That you Mr. Ibrahim Lamorde, as the Director of operations, conspired
with some officers in the EFCC to manipulate the forfeitures and
recoveries from DSP Alamieyesiegha, which events took place between 2006
and 2007, as if it took place in July 2008, with a view to shifting
responsibilities to the regime or tenure of Mrs. Farida Waziri. By this
act, you traded with recoveries amounting to over N3.7 bn for almost two
years before formerly documenting the transaction.”
When contacted, the spokesperson for the EFCC, Mr. Wilson Uwujaren, said, “I am not aware of it (the petition).”
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