Sources
within the Department of State Security (DSS) have revealed that the
implemented Bank Verification Number (BVN) was responsible for its operative to
trace several millions to alleged corrupt judges who are currently in its
custody.
Recall
that seven judges- Justice Inyang Okoro and Sylvester Ngwuta of the Supreme
Court; Adeniyi Ademola of the Federal High Court, Abuja; Kabir Auta of the Kano
High Court; Muazu Pindiga of Gombe High Court, Mohammed Tsamiya of the Court of
Appeal in Ilorin, and the Chief Judge of Enugu State, I. A. Umezulike- have
been arrested and currently in detention at the SSS office.
In
a report by Newsmen, DSS access to the bank accounts of the detained judges and
revealed that they had been taking bribes from many sources in the discharge of
their duties but used the names and pictures of their wives, children and
siblings to open such banks account.
“When
we brought in most of the children, wives and relatives of the suspects based
on the papers we got from the banks, they did not even have an idea that their
names had been used by the judges to open such accounts.
“But
you see under the Bank Verification Number, you must put in your passports,
name, signature and others. So, for some of the judges, who used fake names and
their wives names to open the accounts into which they paid in the proceeds of
crime, they foolishly appended their signatures or used their pictures,
something that gave them out.
“From
what we have found out, some of the suspects acted foolishly in committing the
offence because they cannot prove that even if their children were to earn N1
million monthly since they were born till date, none of them can accumulate the
amount of money we have traced to their accounts and the type of property they
have.
“Look,
it may interest you to know that one of the two Supreme Court judges in our
custody has a property worth N1.5 billion in one of the South-South states. If
we may ask, where did he get the money to set up such project?”
“As
far as we are concerned, there is nothing unusual in arresting corrupt judges
and taking them to court because it would be an offence against the nation to
continue to turn a blind eye to mounting corruption in the judiciary.’’
The
report also pointed that another judge, who is being detained and questioned,
disguised as a shopper in one of the supermarkets and ended up collecting
bribes in Dollars from a ‘client’ only to be caught on CCTV camera.
Commenting
on the botched arrest of a judge in Rivers by Governor Nyesom Wike
“The
behaviour of the judge has worsened his case. In the last three months, the
judge has been going across the Nigerian borders with other countries
collecting bribes for himself and others.’’
The
source also indicated that the judges might be allowed to go home as soon as
they answered the questions put to them by the operatives, adding that they
were being given royal treatment, in view of their status and the need to give
them a conducive atmosphere to speak up.
Meanwhile,
Police authorities is set to sanction the commissioner of police in Rivers
state, Francis Odesanya for his role in the foiled arrest of a judge of the
Federal High Court, Port Harcourt by Rivers state governor, Nyesome Wike.
,
the official wondered what Mr Wike went to do at that time of the night, if he
was not part of the judge’s deal.
“It
was the governor, who blocked the DSS operatives from seizing the $2 million
crime proceeds, which the judge had made from the PDP crisis stoked by a faction
backed by the governor.
“But
for the our highly professional operatives and service direction, we would have
beaten up Wike that night so that he would have explanations to make on why he
went to a crime scene at odd hours and aided a suspect to move $2 million crime
proceeds to an unknown location.
“But
we already have an idea of where the money was moved to and we are going to
retrieve it and bring the judge to trial. As a matter of fact, we are going to
treat the Port Harcourt FHC judge case as a ‘special case’, given his collusion
with the governor to obstruct our work.
No comments:
Post a Comment