Justice Lateefa A. Okunnu of the Lagos State High Court sitting in Ikeja, on Tuesday, convicted and sentenced Mr. Okey Nwosu, former Managing Director, Finbank Plc, to three years imprisonment for over N10.9 billion fraud.
The Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission, EFCC, had arraigned Nwosu alongside Dayo Famuroti, Agnes Ebubedike
and Danjuma Ocholi on a 26-count amended charge bordering on stealing and
illegal conversion to the tune of N10,934,704,402.
The defendants, who perpetrated the fraud while they were directors of the bank, pleaded not guilty to the charge preferred against them, thereby leading to their full trial.
In the course of the trial, the
prosecution counsel, Rotimi Jacobs, SAN, called witnesses and also tendered
several documents that were admitted in evidence against the defendants.
Delivering her judgment, the Judge
found the defendants guilty and sentenced the first and second defendants,
Nwosu and Famoroti, to three years imprisonment each.
The Judge also sentenced the third
defendant, Ocholi, to 12 months imprisonment and slammed a six-month community
service on the fourth defendant, Ebubedike.
The case had, suffered a setback as
the defendants challenged the jurisdiction of the trial court up to the Supreme
Court.
While the court maintained its
jurisdiction to try the defendants, Nwosu approached the Lagos Division of the
Court of Appeal which in November 2013 struck out the charge against the
banker.
The appellate court ruled that the
Lagos High Court lacked jurisdiction to entertain the charges because they
emanated from capital market transactions, which should be handled by the
Federal High Court.
Following the appeal court ruling,
Dayo Famoroti, Danjuma Ocholi and Agnes Ebubedike approached the Lagos High
Court to dismiss the charges preferred against them.
But Rotimi Jacobs, SAN, counsel to
EFCC had prayed the court to adjourn the matter indefinitely pending the
determination of its appeal at the Supreme Court.
Justice Okunnu upheld prayers of
Jacobs and adjourned the matter sine die to allow the Supreme Court rule on the
matter.
The Supreme Court, in its judgment,
upheld EFCC’s appeal.
In a unanimous judgment, a seven-man
panel of Justices of the apex court faulted the argument of the Court of Appeal
that the decision by the EFCC to charge Nwosu and the other directors for
stealing before the Lagos High Court while it maintained a charge of money
laundering against them, would amount to double jeopardy.
The Supreme Court directed Nwosu and
co-defendants to submit themselves for trial before the Lagos High Court.

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