The court held that Ajudua
will remain in prison custody pending the hearing of his bail application and
commencement of trial today.
Suspected serial fraudster, Fred Ajudua, was remanded in Kirikiri prison custody yesterday by an Ikeja Special Offences Court for allegedly defrauding Ziad Abu Zalaf of Technical International Limited in Germany of $1.046 million.
The Economic and Financial
Crimes Commission (EFCC) arraigned Ajudua before Justice Mojisola Dada on a
12-count charge bordering on fraud and conspiracy.
According to the EFCC,
Ajudua and his accomplice, Joseph Ochunor, defrauded Zalaf on April 2, 1993.
The arraignment of Ajudua
and his accomplices had suffered series of setbacks that led to 44 adjournments
before several judges.
The same scenario played
out before Justice Josephine Oyefeso who took over the matter last year before
the Lagos State Chief Judge (CJ), Justice Opeyemi Oke, reassigned it to a
special court for accelerated hearing.
In the fresh charge filed
before the court yesterday, the EFCC said Ajudua, on April 2, 198 in Ikeja,
allegedly conspired with Ochunor, said to be on the run, and obtained
$268,000.00 from Zalaf of Technical International Limited, a division of Mystic
Company Limited in Germany.
Ajudua was also accused to
have obtained $225,000.00 by false pretence from Zalaf.
EFCC accused Ajudua of
uttering and forging Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) official receipt numbers 128
and 138, purported to have been issued by the apex bank to Zalaf.
“On May 12, he was also
said to have forged a Contract Completion Certificate (CCC) purported to have
been issued by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Falomo,
Lagos, to defraud Technical International Limited.
Ajudua pleaded not guilty
to the charges.
Following the defendant’s
plea, his lawyer, Norrison Quakers, through an application dated June 1,
applied for his bail.
Quakers urged the court to
grant his client bail and allow him to continue to enjoy same bail conditions
as earlier granted by Justice Josephine Oyefeso in a related charge.
The lawyer assured the
court that his client would not jump bail.
“We urge your lordship to
grant the defendant’s bail because he was granted bail by your learned brother.
He has never for once absented himself from court except when he was out of the
country.
“Also, we want my Lord to
consider his bail application because of his health condition.
“He will need medical
attention from time to time and he cannot access that in the prison custody,”
Quakers said.
Counsel to the EFCC, Mr.
Seidu Atteh, opposed the bail.
He said: “My Lord, we shall
be opposing the bail application but we leave the decision at the discretion of
the court.”
Justice Dada ordered that
Ajudua be remanded in prison custody pending the court’s ruling on his bail
application.
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