Mr Nwosu pleaded guilty
after being arraigned by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).
He was arraigned alongside Yisa Adedoyin, Tijani Bashir, and Mrs.
Alison-Madueke, who was not present for the arraignment.
An Independent National
Electoral Commission (INEC) official, Christian Nwosu, confessed to Justice
Muhammed Idris of the Federal High Court in Ikoyi, Lagos that he received a N30
million bribe from former Minister of Petroleum Diezani Alison-Madueke to
compromise the 2015 general election.
EFCC Prosecuting Counsel
Rotimi Oyedepo informed the judge that Mr. Nwosu had elected to enter into a
plea bargain with the anti-graft agency.
Mr. Oyedepo added that Mr.
Nwosu had already made a refund of N5m while he had also surrendered the title
document of a landed property he purchased for N25m in Delta State.
Reviewing the facts of Mr.
Nwosu's case, the prosecutor informed the court that the EFCC acted on an
intelligence report disclosing that Mrs. Alison-Madueke had stashed $115m in
the bank and instructed the bank to convert the sum into naira. She told the
bank that a portion of the converted funds should then be paid to certain INEC
officials in the run-up to the 2015 election.
Mr. Oyedepo explained that
out of the $115m, N30m was traced to Mr. Nwosu, who stored the cash in a Toyota
Hilux vehicle in Ilorin.
He added that Mr. Nwosu was
invited by the EFCC to make a confessional statement. Mr. Oyedepo then tendered
both the confessional statement and the document with which Mr. Nwosu
acknowledged receiving N30m from the former petroleum minister.
Both were admitted in
evidence by the court and marked as exhibits.
Mr. Oyedepo then urged the
judge to convict Mr. Nwosu as charged in view of his plea and the evidence
adduced.
The charges pressed against
the defendants bordered on conspiracy, acceptance of gratification and money
laundering.
The EFCC, in the first charge,
alleged that Mr. Nwosu, Mr. Adedoyin and Mr. Bashir, in connivance with Mrs.
Alison-Madueke, took possession of N264.88m, which the anti-graft agency said
they "ought to have reasonably known formed part of proceeds of an
unlawful act to wit: gratification."
The defendants were said to
have on March 27, 2015 made a cash payment of N234.88m without going through a
financial institution. Mr. Adedoyin allegedly received N70.05m cash from Mr.
Bashir on the same day, while Mr. Bashir received N64.88m and Mr. Nwosu
received N30m.
The prosecution said the
accused persons acted contrary to Section 18(a) of the Money Laundering
Prohibition Act of 2012 and were liable to be punished under Sections 15(3) and
16(2)(b) of the same act.
Consequently, Justice Idris
held, that “In line with the plea of the defendant coupled with the facts and
the exhibits tendered by the prosecutor, the defendant is hereby convicted as
charged.”
However, the defendant’s
lawyer, Adaku Mbama, pleaded with the judge to temper justice with mercy in
deciding the fate of her client.
Justice Idris adjourned
till April 7, 2017 to sentence Mr. Nwosu, ordering that he be remanded in EFCC
custody in the meantime.
Mr. Nwosu’s co-defendants,
who pleaded not guilty, were admitted to a bail of N50m each with two sureties
in like sum.
The judge said the sureties
must own landed property in Lagos and were to show evidence of three years’ tax
clearance.
The defendants were
directed to deposit their passports in the custody of the court's registrar.
Justice Idris then ordered
that they should be remanded in the prison custody pending their fulfillment of
the bail conditions.
Sahara Reporter

If he pleaded guilty what about Jonathan himself why is he not arraigned.
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