Ohakim gave me $2.29m cash to buy house –Witness
A witness, Mr. Abu Sule, told a Federal
High Court in Abuja on Wednesday that he collected $2.29m cash in
Ghana-Must-Go’ bag from a former Governor of Imo State, Ikedi Ohakim, to
help the former governor to buy a property in Asokoro, Abuja.
Sule, the Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission’s second prosecution witness in Ohakim’s ongoing trial, said
this while he was being cross-examined by the former governor’s lead
counsel, Awa Kalu (SAN).
The witness said he collected the
$2.29m, which was an equivalent of N270m, from Ohakim in $100 bills at
night sometimes in November 2008 and handed it over to the then owner of
the property, Alhaji Isah Maidabino, the next day.
The witness, an architect and Managing
Director of Tweenex Consociates H.D Ltd., said he kept the money in the
boot of his car overnight before handing it over to Maidabino, now a
director in the office of the Head of Service of the Federation.
The EFCC is prosecuting Ohakim who was Imo State governor between 2007 and 2011 on three counts of money laundering.
The charges arose from his alleged
purchase of the property at 60, Kwame Nkrumah Street, Plot No 1098,
Cadastral Zone A04, Asokoro District, Abuja with cash payment of $2.29
which was said to be dollar equivalent of N270m in November 2008.
Ohakim was also accused of failing to declare the property as part of his assets when asked by the EFCC to do so.
The prosecution said the offences
bordering on cash payment of N270m violated section 15(1)(d) and section
14(1)(b) of the Money Laundering (Prohibition) Act, 2004.
Sule had earlier in his
evidence-in-chief, narrated how he allegedly helped Ohakim to buy and
conceal the former governor’s ownership of the property.
The witness had told Justice Adeniyi
Ademola, that the former governor instructed him to use his (Sule’s)
company, Tweenex Consociates H.D Ltd., to buy the property.
Led in evidence by the prosecution
counsel, Mr. Festus Keyamo, the witness said Ohakim subsequently put
pressure on him to prepare a tenancy agreement with Tweenex as the
landlord to make it look as if he (Ohakim) was a tenant in the property.
Fielding questions from Kalu on
Wednesday, Sule said he did not count the $2.29m when the former
governor handed over the money to him out of trust they had for each
other.
He however said he counted it along with Maidabino before handing the money over to him.
He said, “The money ($2.29m) was given
to me by the defendant. It was given to me in a ‘Ghana-Must-Go’ bag and
that was how I transported it. It was in $100 bills. I didn’t count the
money and he (Ohakim) didn’t request for counting because we trusted
each other. But I counted it along with Alhaji Maidabino.
“I did not issue a receipt because a receipt was not demanded. I was sent on an errand and I delivered it.
“I carried the money to a bank in Maitama in Unity Bank. I handed over the money to Alhaji Maidabino at Unity Bank.
“Alhaji Maidabino issued deed of assignment and sale agreement to me.
“He did not acknowledge the receipt of the sum in writing.
“I didn’t pay the money into any
account. I didn’t see Alhaji Maidabino pay that sum into any account. I
did not witness any transaction.
“What Alhaji did with the money, I don’t know. But he handed over the title documents of the property to me.”
Fielding more questions, he said did not
have any security arrangement in place when carrying the money from one
place to another.
He said, “I had no security. I trusted
in God. I left the money in my car boot and I went home and I slept. I
was not accompanied to the bank by any security operative, I went
alone.”
He confirmed that all his dealings with
the former governor were always documented and that he had issued a
receipt for a N20m transaction to the defendant.
Sule confirmed that he did not issue any receipt for the $2.29m given to him by Ohakim.
He also said he did not collect any
receipt from the Maidabino because the title documents which he
collected from him (Maidabino) were sufficient as proof of payment.
Sule said, “I gave the money to him
(Maidabino) and he gave me the title documents. He signed the sales
agreement and I believe that was a good receipt.”
But he confirmed that the sales
agreement was between Tweenex and Maidabino and that up till date,
Tweenex remained the registered owner of the property at 60, Kwame
Nkrumah Street, Plot No 1098, Cadastral Zone A04, Asokoro District,
Abuja.
He said he could not confirm the details of the use of the property as collateral by Maidabino for certain loans.
But he confirmed that up till October 6,
2009 the transfer of the ownership of the property was still
“encumbered” by Unity Bank.
The EFCC called Maidabino as its third prosecution witness on Wednesday.
Maidabino confirmed that he sold the property to Tweenex through Sule sometimes in November 2008.
Led in evidence by Keyamo, the witness, a
serving director in the office of the Head of Service of the
Federation, said he had finished building the house in 1997 while he
was a deputy director in the Presidential Villa.
Maidabino, who will be 60 on June 6,
2016, confirmed that he collected $2.29m cash at Unity Bank, Maitama,
from Sule for the sale of the house
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