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Chief Collins Oyejiaka in Court
On March 25,
2009, Justice J.E. Oyefeso of Ikeja High Court,
Lagos will
decide whether an accused person, Chief Collins
Oyejiaka, a
Lagos
businessman, who is standing trial in an advance fee
fraud case should be admitted to bail.
The 49- year old
indigene of Imo state was arraigned last week by the
Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC on
four-count charge of obtaining money under false
pretence. Collins Oyejiaka and C.B Trust Limited
were alleged to have on the 7th and 16th
of August 1996 fraudulently obtained the sums of
$5000 and $57,000 from Mr. Carle Vance of Oxford,
Ohio, USA by falsely representing the sum to be the
cost of remittance of funds for an oil allocation
contract from the Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation, NNPC.
The accused
pleaded not guilty to the charges and the trial
Judge ordered that he be remanded in Kirikiri
Maximum prisons till March 25, 2009 when she will
rule on his bail application.
The accused was
arrested by EFCC on the strength of a petition from
the victim. The complainant alleged that Oyejiaka
and others still at large, defrauded him to the tune
of $1,813,728.00 over a period of time through wire/
money transfers. He explained that the money was
transferred in 16 different transactions to the
syndicate’s accounts in at least seven countries:
Nigeria, Switzerland,
Benin
Republic, Dubai, Belgium, Hong Kong and Japan.
The complainant
who is said to be willing to come to Nigeria to give
evidence against the accused person recalls that in
October 1995, he was contacted by a Chief E.D. Akan,
who claimed to be a Director of NNPC. The said Akan
introduced two other persons to him: one Emeka
Etiaba, as his friend and confidant, and Dr. Edward
Kathy as Assistant Internal Remittance Director at
the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN. He said that in
the course of their discussion on telephone, they
made him believe that he could be supplied with
Nigeria’s crude oil and they sent him several fake
documents to back up their claim. They claimed these
documents purportedly emanated from various
government institutions and banks in Nigeria and
abroad.
The victim
swallowed the bait and started transferring money to
them in Nigeria and abroad in respect of the
transaction. He met members of the syndicate in
Washington, USA; Accra, Ghana; London, UK and
Brussels,
Belgium. A
statement by Femi Babafemi, EFCC’s spokesman said
all these went on for about 10 years and after
spending almost two million dollars without
receiving any crude oil supply, it dawned on him
that he had been duped. He subsequently petitioned
EFCC.
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