The Chief of Army Staff under the late
former military dictator, Gen. Sani Abacha, Lt.Gen. Ishaya Bamaiyi
(retd.), on Tuesday, narrated to a Lagos State High Court in Ikeja how
he was allegedly swindled by an alleged serial fraudster, Fred Ajudua,
with the aid of a suspended court registrar, Mrs. Oluronke Rosulu.
Bamaiyi appeared as a witness before
Justice Lateef Lawal-Akapo, where Rosulu, the then registrar to Justice
Olubunmi Oyewole, is facing two counts of conspiracy and obtaining money
by false pretence.
According to the Economic and Financial
Crimes Commission, Rosulu allegedly connived with Ajudua to defraud
Bamaiyi of $330,000 on November 20, 2004.
The money was allegedly obtained from
Bamaiyi by Ajudua with the aid of Rosulu, under the false pretence that
the sum represented the professional or legal fee demanded by Chief Afe
Babalola (SAN) to represent Bamaiyi in court.
Then, Bamaiyi was standing trial before Justice Oyewole over the allegation of attempted murder of the publisher of The Guardian Newspapers, Mr. Alex Ibru and two others.
Ajudua had allegedly told Bamaiyi that he
was a lawyer and that on the advice of the then Lagos State Chief
Judge, Justice Ade Alabi (retd.) and the then Lagos Attorney General,
Prof. Yemi Osinbajo (SAN), it was best for him to hire Babalola as his
lawyer, in order to facilitate his release from the Kirikiri Maximum
Prisons in Lagos, where he was remanded.
Rosulu, whose trial had now been
separated from that of Ajudua for want of speedy trial, was alleged by
the EFCC to have violated Section 1 (3) of the Advance Fee Fraud and
Other Fraud Related Offences Act No. 13 of 1995.
Led in evidence by the EFCC lawyer, Seidu
Atteh, Bamaiyi said, “On November 23, 1999, I was in cell 5, first
floor, at Kirikiri Maximum Prisons. Later Ajudua and Ade Bendel were
brought in at the block. I and Ajudua were together in my cell, so we
became friends.
“Ajudua told me that he was a lawyer and
that he had studied my case, and found out that it was purely political.
Ajudua told me that he was interested in the case and that he had sent
his wife to see the Lagos Chief Judge, Justice Ade Alabi and the state
Attorney General, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, over the matter. I was told that
the CJ was the one in contact with Chief (Afe) Babalola.
“I was told that Chief Babalola charged
$18m as professional fee. I was then told that the money was to be paid
through Justice Oyewole. Ajudua told me that Justice Oyewole was going
to send his registrar (Rosulu).
“On October 23, 2004, which was Rosulu’s
first visit to me in Kirikiri, the defendant came to the visiting room
with Ajudua and confirmed to me that she was sent by Justice Oyewole.
She came with Ajudua alongside a prison officer, ACP Abdullahi Garuba.
“On November 6, 2004 at 10am, which was
her second visit, the defendant came with Ajudua to the prison,
alongside ACP Garuba. This time she came with her daughter, who she said
was from the university. The defendant assured me that any money
released through Justice Oyewole would get to Chief Babalola.
“Before the defendant’s third visit on
November 20, 2004, a friend of mine had arranged $330,000 for me. The
money was brought in a ‘Ghana-Must-Go’ bags to the prison. I showed
Ajudua the money and he said he would send one Jonathan, his boy, to
assist us in counting the money. The money was counted in the presence
of the defendant (Rosulu) and the prison officer (ACP Garuba).
“That evening, Ajudua told me that the
defendant called and confirmed delivering the said money to Justice
Oyewole and the same had been taken to Chief Babalola. I never met her
again until December 19, 2013 at the Lagos office of the Economic and
Financial Crimes Commission.
“Not hearing from Chief Babalola after a while, then Ajudua had travelled to India, I suspected that something was wrong.
“I called Ajudua’s line in India to tell
him that Justice Oyewole said he never received any money and Chief
Babalola did not handle my case. Ajudua asked me how I got Justice
Oyewole’s number and since then he stopped receiving call on that line.”
During cross-examination by the defence
counsel, Mr. Bamidele Ogundele, the retired General said that Rosulu
never introduced herself to him as a legal officer or a member of staff
in the office of Chief Babalola.
Bamaiyi added that Rosulu did not sign
any document on receiving the $330,000 claimed to be part payment for
Babalola’s legal services.
Rosulu’s trial was, on October 24 last
year, separated from that of Ajudua, who had hitherto stalled the
proceeding with various applications.
Her lawyer, Ogundele, had pleaded with
Justice Oluwatoyin Ipaye that Rosulu, who had been suspended as a court
registrar, needed to know her fate before her retirement due for this
year.
Ogundele told the court that unlike
Ajudua who had several pending applications stalling the trail, her own
client desired a timeous trial, adding that out of the 32 counts filed
by EFCC, Rosulu was involved in only two.
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