COURTROOM NEWS 01/03/2022
Alleged Fraud: Bauchi Governor’s Son To Open Defence April 28
The Federal High Court Abuja yesterday fixed April 28 for Shamsudeen Bala, son of Bauchi State Governor Bala Mohammed to open his defence in an alleged fraud charge levelled against him.
The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) had filed a 20-count charge against Bala bordering on money laundering, forgery and failure to disclose his assets.
However, in December last year, Justice Nnamdi Dimgba ruled that Bala had a case to answer regarding only nine of the charges and dismissed 11 of the 20 counts.
Justice Dimgba fixed the date after counsel to Bala, Mr Chris Uche, (SAN) prayed the court for an adjournment to enable his team to “deal with certain housekeeping issues” when the matter was called.
Uche acknowledged that the business of the day was ordinarily for his client to open his defence but that he had appealed to the prosecution to allow him to take an adjournment to prepare properly to defend his client.
The prosecutor, Mr Wahab Shittu, told the court that Uche had approached him on the matter and that he was “reluctantly” conceding to an adjournment.
Justice Dimgba had, in December 2021, dismissed 11 out of 20 counts preferred against Bala relating to money laundering for not being supported with credible evidence by the prosecution.
The judge held that only the nine charges relating to Bala’s failure to declare some of his bank accounts and the amount in them to the EFCC, identity fraud, and forgery warranted a defence from him.
He also discharged the four companies charged alongside Bala on the grounds that they were not indicted by the evidence led by the EFCC with respect to the money laundering charges.
The EFCC accused Bala of conspiring with four firms to make payments of huge sums in cash for the purchase of properties in different parts of Abuja without going through a financial institution.
The alleged cash transactions which summed up to about N1.2 billion according to the anti-graft agency violated the cash transaction limits stipulated in the anti-money laundering law.
The agency also alleged that Bala failed to declare his monetary assets in his accounts domiciled at Standard Chartered Bank Plc, when he was arrested and asked to complete the EFCC’s assets declaration form in June 2016.
He was also accused of forging documents relating to his acquisition of some properties in Abuja as well as committing separate identify fraud, by disguising his true identity to take possession of two properties in Abuja.