A Federal High Court sitting in Ikoyi, Lagos on Monday discharged and acquitted former Director General of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), Mr. Ziakade Patrick Akpobolokemi of an alleged N8.5 billion fraud brought against him by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).
Justice Ayokunle Faji discharged and acquitted the former NIMASA chief while delivering ruling on a no-case submission filed by him and four defendants, in a 22-count charge against them.
Akpobolokemi was arraigned before the court alongside a former Commander of the Joint Task Force Operation Pulo Shield, Major-General Emmanuel Atewe (rtd.), and two other staff of the agency, Kime Engonzu and Josphine Otuaga.
In discharging and acquitting Akpobolokemi and one Josephine Otuaga, a staff of NIMASA, Justice Faji held that the EFCC failed to establish a prima facie case against them.
However, he ruled that Atewe and Engonzu have to open their defence because they have a case to answer in counts 12 to 22 of the charge.
In a no-case submission by his lawyers, Mr. Joseph Nwobike (SAN) and Collins Ogbonna, Akpobolokemi prayed the court for an acquittal without having him present a defence.
He stated that the prosecution, with all its witnesses and evidence tendered while making its case, failed to link him to the alleged crimes.
The defendants are being prosecuted for an amended 22-count charge bordering on conspiracy conversion and stealing.
One of the counts read: “That you, Patrick Ziadeke Akpobolokemi, Major General Emmanuel Atewe, Kime Engozu, and Josphine Otuaga sometime in 2014, in Lagos, within the jurisdiction of this Court, with intent to defraud, conspired amongst yourselves to commit an offence to wit: Conversion of the sum of N8,537,586,798.58 property of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency and you thereby committed an offence contrary to Section 18 (a) of the Money Laundering (Prohibition) Act 2012 and punishable under Section 15 (3) of the same Act”.
They had pleaded “not guilty” to the charges, thereby prompting the commencement of their trial.
Upon conclusion of the prosecution’s case, all the defendants opted for no-case submission.
Delivering ruling, Justice Faji held that none of the witnesses called by the prosecution led any shred of evidence linking the first defendant, Akpobolokemi, and the fourth defendant to the offences they were charged for.
The court held that having regard to the totality of evidence led by the prosecution failed to provide any credible evidence linking the first defendant with the commission of the crimes alleged against him in Counts 1-11 of the first amended charge and/or established a prima facie case against him warranting him to enter upon his defence.
The court also noted that out of the 11 witnesses fielded by the prosecution, only one witness gave evidence where Akpobolokemi’s name featured, while other witnesses made it abundantly clear that they did not know the first defendant and did not have any dealings with him.
“If there is no sufficient evidence linking the accused with the statutory elements and ingredients, a court of trial must as a matter of law discharge him. It has no business searching for evidence that is nowhere and therefore cannot be found”, the judge held.