quashed all 170 count charges
Southwark Crown Court in London In his verdict on the matter, Judge Anthony Pitt of London Southwark Court said that Ibori’s sentencing would be followed by the consfication of his properties through another legal process and that consequences might arise if there was problem with that. In 2007, the London’s Metropolitan Police Service secured an order from a London court to freeze $35 million worth of his foreign assets, including a private jet.
The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has expressed its satisfaction with the conviction of Ibori and the 13 years jail sentence. In a recent statement, the EFCC said it “welcomes the conviction which is the icing on a tortuous investigative and legal odyssey for all actors invoved in the Ibori saga. It is reassuring that the sentencing of Ibori was based on the foundation of the case built by the EFCC in 2007 which unfortunately was thrown out by the Federal High Court, Asaba for lack of merit. The same fate has lately befallen other EFCC cases, notably the Erastus Akingbola, Ndudi Elumelu , Dimeji Bankole and Gbenga Daniel matters.They were all thrown out by the courts purely on technical grounds without consideration of the subtantive issues.
“The fact that a case which supposedly lacked merit in Nigeria could
fetch a 13 year jail term in the UK after a landmark guilty plea,
brings to fore the need for a reassessment of the nation’s justice
delivery process. We must strenghen our judicial instituitions if we
are to make any headway in the anti- graft efforts. Once again, his fate has proven that there is no safe haven
abroad for politically exposed persons who looted state funds entrusted
in their care”
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