Bank stops Patience from withdrawing money (Unfrozen $5.9m)
Patience Jonathan, the wife of former President Goodluck
Jonathan, was barred by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) from
withdrawing money from a $5.9m account with Skye Bank, which was ordered to be
unfrozen by a court last week.
This is just as the EFCC has begun fresh move to ensure that
a separate $15m, which was traced to Patience, is permanently forfeited to the
Federal Government.
It was learnt, on Monday, that Mrs. Jonathan was barred from
operating the $5m account after a Federal High Court, sitting in Ikoyi, Lagos,
ordered that the restriction on the account be lifted.
A reliable source told Our Team that the EFCC was able to
obtain a ‘stay of execution’, a court order obtained for the purpose of
suspending the execution of a court judgment.
The source said, “Shortly after the judge ordered that the
account be unfrozen, the EFCC quickly obtained a stay of execution in order to
prevent her from having access to the money.
“The EFCC communicated with the relevant authorities at Skye
Bank that it was important that she wasn’t allowed to withdraw the money or
else, the whole purpose of the freezing would have been defeated.”
Patience Jonathan: Group slams N5bn suit on EFCC
In a ruling on Thursday, Justice Mojisola Olatoregun set
aside the ‘No-Debit Order’, which the EFCC had earlier placed on the account on
allegations that the $5.9m found in it was proceeds of crime.
The judge upheld the contention of Patience’s lawyer, Mr.
Ifedayo Adedipe (SAN), that his client’s account was unlawfully frozen by the
EFCC.
Adedipe had urged the court to unfreeze Patience account on
the grounds that she was not a party to the suit leading to the freezing order.
Citing judicial authorities, Adedipe contended that the suit
was an abuse of court processes, contending that the court had no jurisdiction
to make an order against someone who was not a party in a suit filed before the
court.
Following the favourable court order, Mrs. Jonathan’s lawyer
went before Justice Mohammed Idris of a Federal High Court in Ikoyi, Lagos,
praying the judge to order the EFCC to release to Patience the sum of $15.591m,
which was seized from four companies by the anti-graft agency.
Justice Idris adjourned to May 8, 2017 to decide whether or
not to grant the prayer.
Impeccable sources within the EFCC, however, told our
correspondent that the EFCC would do everything possible within the law to
ensure that the money was never returned to Patience.
The fresh move by the EFCC is coming about three days after
President Muhammadu Buhari instructed anti-graft agencies to stop losing court
cases and do more diligent investigations.
The source added, “In line with the President’s directive,
we are changing our strategy to ensure that court cases are not lost. We are
covering all angles. We understand that the war against corruption is one of
President Buhari’s cardinal goals.”
In an interview with OUR TEAM on Monday, Mrs. Jonathan’s
lawyer, Adedipe, admitted that the bank had not allowed his client to withdraw
money from the account, but disagreed with the notion that the account had been
frozen again.
He explained that Skye Bank, rather than comply with the
court’s order unfreezing the accounts, was banking on the fact that the EFCC
had gone on appeal to challenge the unfreezing of the account and had also
filed a stay of execution.
Adedipe said, “After the account was unfrozen, the EFCC
filed an appeal and a purported stay of execution and on that basis, the bank
has not given us access. I have told the bank that it risks litigation. I will
not say more than that for now.”
The EFCC had, in June last year, arrested four domestic
servants, including a driver and a houseboy, who allegedly operated bank
accounts belonging to Patience.
Sources within the anti-graft agency said the identities of
the domestic servants were used in opening the company accounts.
The companies are Pluto Property and Investment Company
Limited, Seagate Property Development and Investment Company Limited, Trans
Ocean Property and Investment Company Limited and Globus Integrated Service
Limited.
The four company accounts, which have since been frozen by
the EFCC, have a balance of about $15m while another account, which bears
Patience Jonathan’s name, has $5m.
Mr. Sammie Somiari, who deposed to an affidavit on behalf of
Patience, said the former first lady was the owner of the money in the
accounts.
She had revealed that she gave millions of dollars to the
then Special Adviser to the President on Domestic Affairs, Waripamowei Dudafa,
to open an account for her.
He, however, claimed that Dudafa opened five accounts for
Patience and that only one of the accounts was in her name, while the other
four were opened in the names of companies belonging to Dudafa.
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