CRIME

After  Supreme Court Upheld His  Conviction For 6-Year Sentence Over A N25.7 Billion Fraud, Francis Atuche, Ex Bank PHB CEO, Re-Arraigned On Fresh  9-Count Charge

<h4>After  Supreme Court Upheld His  Conviction<&sol;h4>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><strong><a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;openlife&period;ng&sol;">OpenLife Nigeria<&sol;a><&sol;strong> reports that the Lagos Zonal Directorate of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission&comma; EFCC&comma; on Monday&comma; December 16&comma; 2024&comma; re-arraigned a former Managing Director of the defunct Bank PHB Plc&comma; Francis Atuche&comma; on a nine-count charge bordering on conspiracy to commit felony and forgery before Justice O&period; O&period; Abike-Fadipe of the Special Offences Court sitting in Ikeja&comma; Lagos&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>Atuche alongside Nnosiri Joachim&comma; a&period;k&period;a Ifeanyi&comma; and Uguru Onyike had first been  arraigned before Justice Habeeb Abiru&comma; who has now been upgraded as a Judge of the Court of Appeal&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>The case consequently started de novo before Justice Adeniyi Onigbanjo&comma; who has now been transferred to another division of the Lagos High Court&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>One of the counts reads&colon; <em><strong>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;That you&comma; Mr&period; Francis Atuche&comma; Nnosiri Joachim &lpar;a&period;k&period;a Ifeanyi&rpar; and Uguru Onyike&comma; on or about 4th day of March&comma; 2013&comma; in Lagos&comma; with the Ikeja Judicial Division&comma; with intent to defraud conspired to commit felony to wit&colon; forgery of a document titled&colon; &&num;8220&semi;BOARD RESOLUTION&&num;8221&semi; of Future View Securities Limited dated 17th December&comma; 2007&period;”<&sol;strong><&sol;em><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>Another count reads&colon; &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;<em><strong> Nnosiri Joachim &lpar;a&period;k&period;a Ifeanyi&rpar;&comma; on or about 4th day of March&comma; 2013 in Lagos&comma; within the Ikeja Judicial Division&comma; with intent to defraud&comma; knowingly and fraudulently used a false document titled &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;Board Resolution of Trajek Nigeria Limited” dated 15th December 2007&comma; which you purported to have been duly signed by one Elizabeth Ebi &lpar;a Director of Trajek Nigeria Limited&rpar; to Keystone Bank Limited as genuine&period;”<&sol;strong><&sol;em><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>The defendants pleaded &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;not guilty” to the charges when they were read to them&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>In view of this&comma; the prosecution counsel&comma; Fanen Anum&comma; told the court that the matter  was starting de novo and also prayed the court for a trial date&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>Counsel to the first defendant&comma; Anthony Ejere&comma; however&comma; prayed the court to allow his client&comma; who has been convicted over another matter&comma; to continue to enjoin the earlier bail granted him by the court&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>Also&comma; counsel to second and third  defendants&comma; Clement Onwuenwunor&comma; SAN&comma; prayed the court to allow  his clients to continue to enjoy the earlier bail granted them by Justice Adeniyi Onigbanjo&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>In a short ruling&comma; Justice Fadipe upheld the prayers of the defence counsel that the defendants  be allowed to continue on the bail granted them by Justice Adeniyi Onigbanjo&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>The Judge adjourned the case till May 6&comma; 7&comma; 8&comma; 13&comma; 20 and 27&comma; 2025 for commencement of trial&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>  Atuche’s  fresh issues with the EFCC started when he recently contacted Nnosiri&comma; an  Office Assistant with Keystone Bank’s Central Sharing Services Centre in Lagos&comma; to deliver some alleged forged documents to the Bank&&num;8217&semi;s corporate headquarters in Lagos for onward presentation in court as exhibits in an on-going case between him and the Commission before Justice Lateefat Okunnu&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>The forged documents that had been missing since October 2009 are the Board’s resolutions of Future View Securities Limited&comma; Extra Oil Limited and Trajek Nigeria Limited&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>Similarly&comma; on Friday&comma; June 28&comma; 2024&comma; the Supreme Court of Nigeria upheld the conviction and six-year sentence of Francis Atuche by the Court of Appeal&comma; Lagos  Division over a N25&period;7 billion fraud&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>In a unanimous judgment by a five-member panel which was prepared by Justice Habeeb Abiru and delivered by Justice Moore Adumein&comma; the apex court held that Atuche has repeatedly failed to prove beyond reasonable doubts why the concurrent judgments of the two lower courts should be tampered and upturned&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><em><strong>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;Where the finding of a trial court on the demeanour of a witness is supported by oral and documentary evidence tendered at the trial&comma; as in the present case&comma; an appellate court has no business tampering with the decision of the trial court&period; <&sol;strong><&sol;em><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><em><strong>&&num;8220&semi;This court has not been given any reason to tamper with the concurrent findings of the two lower courts in this appeal&comma; hence the appeal is totally lacking in merit&comma; it is hereby dismissed&&num;8221&semi;&comma;<&sol;strong><&sol;em> the court said&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>At the court of first instance&comma;  Justice Lateefat Okunnu of the Lagos State  High Court sitting in Lagos on June 16&comma; 2021 ruled that the EFCC had convincingly proven its case beyond a reasonable doubt and subsequently sentenced Atuche to 12 years and  former Chief Financial Officer  of the defunct bank&comma;  Ugo Anyanwu Anyanwu to 10 years imprisonment&period; The judge also discharged and acquitted Atuche’s wife&comma;  Elisabeth Atuche&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>In an appeal&comma; the <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;vanguardngr&period;com&sol;">Court of Appeal&comma; Lagos Division<&sol;a> affirmed the judgment  of the trial court on  June 23&comma;  2022 with an adjustment in Atuche’s sentence to six years and Anyanwu’s sentence to eight years&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div> The Court of Appeal equally upheld the discharge and acquittal of Atuche’s wife&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>Atuche&comma; along with his wife Elizabeth and former Chief Financial Officer Anyanwu were tried by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission&comma;  EFCC&comma;  on 27 -count charges  bordering on conspiracy to commit felony&comma; stealing and money laundering&period;  The court found Atuche and Anyanwu guilty of 21 counts and were subsequently convicted by Justice Okunnu&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>The apex court’s unanimous decision has brought to conclusion the trial of the former top banker that has spanned over thirteen years&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><strong>How Francis Atuche’s Tribulation Started<&sol;strong><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>It all begun in the evening of May 3&comma; 2011 when a mild drama ensued at the home of the Atuches in Ikoyi&comma; Lagos&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>Nearly a dozen operatives of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission &lpar;EFCC&rpar; had arrived at the palatial home of Francis Atuche&comma; the former managing director of Bank PHB&comma; to arrest the bank chief and his wife&comma; Elizabeth&period; They were told the couple had travelled out of the country&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>But the officers&comma; relying on their intelligence&comma; thought otherwise&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>After forcing their way into the house to conduct a search&comma; they found Mrs Atuche&period; Her husband&comma; however&comma; had gone into hiding&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>A week later&comma; the EFCC declared Mr Atuche wanted over money laundering allegations amounting to ₦8&period;6 billion&period; He was also accused of using his wife’s company to steal depositors’ funds totalling over ₦100 million&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>The banker turned himself in two days later&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><strong>The arraignment<&sol;strong><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>On May 17&comma; 2011&comma; the EFCC arraigned Mr Atuche on two separate charges before Justice Adeniyi Onigbanjo of the Ikeja Division of the Lagos State High Court&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>In the first charge&comma; Mr Atuche&comma; the then managing director of Bank PHB&comma; allegedly conspired with Funmi Ademosu&comma; a director in the bank&comma; to steal N4&period;2 billion which were part of the proceeds from the sale of 241&comma;579&comma;284 units of Afribank shares and joint property of Caverton Helicopters Ltd and Bank PHB&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>The offence is contrary to and punishable under Section 516 of the criminal code laws of Lagos State&comma; 2003&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>In the second charge&comma; Mr Atuche allegedly conspired with another bank director&comma; Lekan Kasali&comma; to steal N7&period;2 billion which they fraudulently described as loans to Cogipar Nigeria Limited&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>The EFCC said all the offences were committed between April and September 2008&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>On the same day&comma; Elizabeth Atuche was arraigned before another judge&comma; Lateefah Okunnu&comma; on a three-count charge of conspiracy and stealing&period; She was accused of fraud totalling N11&period;4 billion &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;being property of Bank PHB Plc by fraudulently converting the proceeds of several illegal loans for the acquisition of 337&comma;500&comma; 000 units of Bank PHB Plc shares on behalf of Ghazali Yakubu Investment Ltd&period; and AFCO Associates Limited&period;”<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>During Mrs Atuche’s bail hearing&comma; her lawyers pleaded for the judge to allow her to remain in EFCC custody to enable her three young children to visit her regularly&period; The judge declined the request&comma; ordering that she be remanded in prison until she fulfils her bail conditions&colon; two sureties who must deposit N100 million and also possess a landed property worth N25 million in Lagos&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>In June 2011&comma; the EFCC amended the charges against the Atuches&period; The couple were re-arraigned before Mrs Okunnu on a 27-count charge bothering on conspiracy to commit felony and stealing of N25&period;7 billion belonging to the bank&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>The amended charges alleged that Mr Atuche&comma; his wife&comma; and Ugo Anyanwu&comma; a former chief financial officer of Bank PHB&comma; used some of the stolen funds to purchase 140&comma;625&comma;000 units of Bank PHB shares on behalf of Guesstrade Services and Clearville Business Support&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>They also allegedly used part of the money to purchase 112&comma;500&comma;000 units of Bank PHB share&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>The offences&comma; according to the EFCC&comma; were committed between November 2007 and April 2008&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>In their defence&comma; the defendants adduced 16 reasons why the charges against them should be quashed&period; They told the judge that the EFCC had filed a similar charge at the Federal High Court in Lagos&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>They also told the judge to restrain the anti-graft from preferring new charges against them because being the creation of a federal legislation&comma; the EFCC has no right to prosecute them under the Lagos State Criminal Code&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>Kemi Pinheiro&comma; counsel to the EFCC&comma; argued that the commission has powers under the statute creating it to prefer a charge and prosecute alleged offenders without delegation&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>He further said the charge filed by the EFCC against the defendants at the Federal High Court was different from the one they are facing at the Lagos High Court&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;My Lord can look at the counts filed at the Federal High Court and the one filed here to see whether they are similar or not&comma;” said Mr Pinheiro&comma; a Senior Advocate of Nigeria&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;While that of the Federal High Court has the names of 14 companies&comma; 11 of those companies are not here&period; They are not the same&period;”<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>The judge granted Mr Atuche a N150 million bail with two sureties&comma; in like sum&comma; who must be gainfully employed and resident in Lagos&comma; and one of them must be a member of the Board of Directors of a bank or other reputable firm&comma; with its head office either in Lagos or Abuja&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>The judge barred Mr Atuche from travelling abroad until the end of his trial&comma; without the leave of the court&period; He is also to report on the first working day of every month to the EFCC office&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>Done with the proceedings before Justice Okunnu&comma; the EFCC lawyers moved to Justice Onigbanjo’s courtroom where they asked the judge to recuse himself from the trial of Mr Atuche and the two bank directors&period; According to Mr Pinheiro&comma; the judge in a ruling weeks earlier had claimed there were similarities between the charges before him and the ones before the Federal High Court&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;The prosecuting authority is extremely perplexed and disturbed by these statements and believes that these comments give an inclination to the court’s mind in respect of the substantive charges&comma;” Mr Pinheiro said&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;In view of the disturbing comments&comma; our clients have lost confidence in the ability of the judge to hold the scale of justice in the pending charge&period;”<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>The EFCC’s request was&comma; however&comma; declined by Inumidun Akande&comma; the Chief Judge of Lagos State&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><strong>The trial<&sol;strong><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>Mr Atuche’s trial before Justice Okunnu began on July 6&comma; 2011&comma; after the judge dismissed the defence lawyer’s application for a stay of proceedings&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>One of the prosecution’s witnesses was Rauf Bello&comma; a representative of First Registrars Nigeria Limited&comma; who said Mr Atuche used about a dozen companies to purchase 1&period;6 billion units worth of Bank PHB shares worth N27&period;7 billion while he was the managing director&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>Mr Bello&comma; who was subpoenaed by the court&comma; said the dividend warrants of the shares were collected by the bank’s secretary&period; He added that the dividend made by the companies from the shares purchased was over N790 million&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>Another witness&comma; Elizabeth Ebi&comma; the managing director of Futureview Financial Services&comma; claimed Bank PHB unknowingly credited her account with a &OpenCurlyQuote;N10&period;9 billion loan&period;’<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>The next prosecution witness&comma; Ifetayo Obi&comma; told the court she was instructed by Mr Anyanwu&comma; the third defendant&comma; to transfer over N10 billion to Futureview Securities&comma; Falcons Securities&comma; and other accounts&period; She said the transfer was made without the traditional &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;customer instruction&period;”<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;Normally it is supposed to come with customer-signed instruction&comma;” said Ms Obi&comma; a staff of Bank PHB&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;So I reported to my immediate boss&comma; Kingsley&comma; who took the mail and said he would get back to me&period; He later came back with the same document signed by the bank Chief Financial Officer&period; So when I received the go-ahead from my divisional director&comma; we carried out the instruction&period;”<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>The court later admitted in evidence cheques&comma; which ran into billions of naira&comma; in the names of Futureview Limited&comma; Resolution Securities Limited&comma; Falcon Securities Limited&comma; and Petosan Nigeria Limited&period; The funds were used to buy Bank PHB shares during a public offer in 2008&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>In her testimony&comma; Phillipa Ulasi&comma; a former chief credit officer of Bank PHB&comma; said Mr Atuche granted N14&period;3 billion loans to some companies without the approval of the bank’s board&period; According to the EFCC&comma; the Bank PHB boss had granted loans to Futureview Securities &lpar;N3&period;5 billion&rpar;&comma; Extra Oil Ltd &lpar;N3&period;9 billion&rpar;&comma; Trajeck Ltd &lpar;N3&period;5 billion&rpar;&comma; Resolution Trust and Investment Ltd &lpar;N3&period;3 billion&rpar;&comma; and Petosan Oil and Gas Limited &lpar;N4 billion&rpar;&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;It was my responsibility to make credit presentations to the board when requested by customers for recommendation and approval&period; I did not receive any memo from the board concerning the said loans&comma;” Mrs Ulasi said&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>In March 2012&comma; Mr Atuche’s lawyers filed an application seeking to stop the EFCC from presenting additional evidence in the trial&period; The judge dismissed the application&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>On July 9&comma; 2012&comma; Justice Onigbanjo&comma; who is also hearing one of Mr Atuche’s cases&comma; granted the bank chief permission to travel to the United Kingdom for medical treatment&comma; between July 17 and September 7&comma; 2012&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>When trial resumed in September&comma; the EFCC presented documents that appeared to show Mr Atuche releasing N35 million and N10 million as tithes to St&period; Monica Catholic Church&comma; Ibusa&comma; and St&period; Augustine Catholic Church&comma; both in the bank chief’s native Delta State&period; The trial was&comma; however&comma; stalled for weeks after Bolaji Ogunsola&comma; the witness who allegedly made the claim&comma; said he received death threats from people in Delta State&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>After calling 12 witnesses to give oral evidence and subpoenaing six others to tender documents&comma; the prosecution closed its case on March 4&comma; 2013&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>The defence thereafter filed a no-case submission where they urged the court to discharge Mr Atuche because the testimonies of the prosecution’s witnesses were riddled with contradictions&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;One witness said hoax loans were granted&period; The other said they were regular loans&period; It is the burden of the prosecution to provide explanation for these contradictions&comma;” Anthony Idigbe&comma; a Senior Advocate of Nigeria and counsel to the Atuches&comma; said&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>For Mrs Atuche&comma; the lawyer said there is no evidence from the witnesses linking her to the charges&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;The only evidence is that she is a shareholder in Gazali Yakubu Investment Limited and the wife of a bank managing director&comma;” Mr Idigbe said&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>Sylva Ogwuemor&comma; counsel for Mr Anyanwu&comma; also told the court to discharge his client because there was no sufficient evidence to warrant him standing trial&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;There is no evidence to support the charge of stealing because the third accused did not benefit from the transactions&comma;” the lawyer said&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;His only offence was signing papers and sending e-mails which were his legitimate duty as the chief financial officer of the bank&period;”<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>The EFCC opposed the applications&comma; noting that Mrs Atuche owned 80 per cent of Gazali Yakubu shares and was also a majority shareholder in Afco Associate Ltd&period;&comma; which received some of the funds&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>The judge dismissed the defendants’ no-case submission and ordered them to open their defence&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;The prosecution has enough evidence before me&comma; about 12 witnesses have been called&comma; and 272 exhibits have been presented before the court by the prosecution&comma;” the judge said&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><strong>The defence<&sol;strong><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>The defence opened their case with Pat Utomi&comma; the chairman of the board of Bank PHB&comma; as its first witness&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>In his testimony&comma; Mr Utomi said Mr Atuche’s trial was due to plans by some public officials to take over his bank&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;I was told that if Atuche was removed&comma; that it will be acceptable to CBN and Bank PHB will be left intact&period; The person that told me is the current CBN governor &lpar;Lamido Sanusi&rpar;&period; He was a very good friend of mine until recently when these injustices were being carried out&comma;” Mr Utomi said&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>He said the bank failed the CBN’s Stress Test following the refusal of the board to comply with Mr Sanusi’s directive&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>Mr Utomi also said the loans granted by Mr Atuche were approved by the board of directors&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>The EFCC countered Mr Utomi’s testimony by saying as board chairman&comma; he also got loans from the bank&comma; part of which he used to fund his 2007 presidential election campaign&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><strong>Mr Utomi denied the claim&period;<&sol;strong><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>In October 2013&comma; Justice Okunnu fined Mr Atuche’s lawyers for &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;wasting the time of the court&period;” The two lawyers were absent on a day scheduled for hearing because they were delivering lectures&period; The judge also granted Mr Anyanwu permission to travel to the United States&comma; between October 7 and 21&comma; for a medical check-up&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>Mr Atuche’s lawyers returned to the court on December 3 to file an application for the dismissal of the charges against their client&period; The move came after a Court of Appeal in Lagos struck out a theft charge instituted against a former Managing Director of Finbank Plc&comma; Okey Nwosu&comma; and some others&period; The appellate court held in Mr Nwosu’s case that the Lagos High Court lacked jurisdiction to entertain the charge because it emanated from capital market transactions&period; The court held that a case associated with the capital market should be handled by the Federal High Court&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>Mrs Okunnu dismissed the application and adjourned for the continuation of trial&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>In March 2014&comma; Mr Atuche’s lawyers filed an application for a stay of proceedings on the grounds that they have a pending case at the court of appeal&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>Again&comma; the judge dismissed the application&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>For much of the court days in 2014&comma; proceedings were stalled by power outages in courtrooms&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>Mr Atuche&comma; however&comma; took to the dock in mid-2014 and said he’d never stolen in his life&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;I am a Catholic&period; I cannot be a thief&period; I was baptised in the church and before I left primary school&comma; I have started receiving Holy Communion which I do every day&comma;” he said while being led in evidence by his lawyer&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;I cannot receive Holy Communion when I am not in the state of grace&period; I cannot be a thief because God has been gracious to me&period;”<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><strong>Temporary reprieve<&sol;strong><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>The Atuches got a temporary relief in June 2015 after the high court&comma; in response to the decision of the court of appeal that the charges are capital market issues&comma; dismissed the charges against the defendants for lack of jurisdiction&period; The court also directed that the case be reassigned to a different judge&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>The EFCC swiftly appealed the decision&comma; arguing that most of the charges against the defendants bordered on stealing and conversion of depositors’ funds to personal use&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>The Atuches victory was&comma; however&comma; short-lived&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>In 2017&comma; the Supreme Court overturned the court of appeal’s decision and ordered that Justice Okunnu&comma; who had already listened to 18 witnesses in the case&comma; resume the trial&period; The apex court held that the court of appeal failed to give reasons why the case should be reassigned to a new judge&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>Justice Ejembi Eko&comma; who read the unanimous decision&comma; held that the decision of the appellate court was &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;perverse&comma;” noting that transferring the case to a new judge would have required that it starts afresh&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;Neither Justice Lawal-Akapo nor Justice Okunnu was accused of any wrongdoing by the parties to the case to warrant the transfer of the case to a new judge entirely&comma;’’ he said&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>The case returned to Justice Okunnu and on June 16&comma; the judge convicted Messrs Atuche and Anyanwu&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>Reading her judgement that lasted for 12 hours&comma; Mrs Okunnu upheld the arguments of Mr Pinheiro&comma; the EFCC counsel&comma; that the N25&period;7 billion was stolen&comma; not loaned&comma; as argued by Mr Atuche&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>The judge held that the first and third defendants did not debunk the evidence of the prosecution that the loans were used to purchase shares&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;They rather contended that the monies granted as loans could be used for whatever purposes&period;”<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>Mr Atuche’s wife&comma; however&comma; was discharged and acquitted&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>Before the judge read out her sentencing&comma; she gave the convicts an opportunity to speak&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>In pleading for leniency&comma; Mr Atuche said that as a professional banker and chartered accountant&comma; he did not want to become a convict&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;I pray that God will place in your heart to be kind&comma;” he told the judge&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;I plead from the bottom of my heart&period; I’m extremely sorry&comma; today will be a turning point in my life&comma; I’m very sorry&period;”<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>The judge sentenced Messrs Atuche and Anyanwu to six years in prison each&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div><&sol;div>&NewLine;

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Alleged Sexual Harassment In The Senate: Natasha, Senate President Akpabio On A Final Showdown

Alleged Sexual Harassment In The Senate OpenLife Nigeria reports that Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan representing Kogi…

13 hours ago

Knock Out For Governor Adeleke Over Withheld Council Funds: You Took Wrong Legal Step—Supreme Court

Knock Out For Governor Adeleke Over Withheld Council Funds   OpenLife Nigeria reports that the…

1 day ago

The Woman I Really Love—Senator Ned Nwoko

The Woman I Really Love OpenLife Nigeria reports that in what seems a final decision…

1 day ago

Oil And Gas Boom: Nigeria Offers 50 Oil Gas Blocks, Eyes $10 Billion Revenue

Oil And Gas Boom   OpenLife Nigeria reports that Nigeria has unveiled an ambitious plan…

2 days ago

Nigerian Presidency Challenges US Over Sharia Law

Nigerian Presidency Challenges US Over Sharia Law OpenLife Nigeria reports that Presidential Adviser on Policy…

2 days ago

United States Announces Visa Restriction Targeting Nigerians Over ‘Violation’

United States Announces Visa Restriction Targeting Nigerians OpenLife Nigeria reports that the United States has…

3 days ago

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