Two employees of Kwara State Government who stood as sureties for suspects being investigated by the Ilorin Zonal Command of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, for internet fraud related offences have incurred the wrath of the law over their failure to produce suspects for trial.
They are Adenigba Olusola, an employee of the State Judicial Service Commission and Bisiriyu Abdulfatai, a staff of the State Universal Basic Education Board (SUBEB).
Adenigba stood as surety for one Amaechi Umenye and Adeyemi Adedeji, while Bisiriyu stood for Dawodu Olusoji. The two civil servants had made an undertaking to produce the defendants who are now at large each time they were needed by the anti-graft agency.
The trio of Amaechi, Adeyemi and Dawodu were amongst the thirty suspected internet fraudsters arrested in Offa, Offa Local Government Area of the State sometime in 2020 while acting on anonymous petition received by the EFCC on the activities of the scammers popularly known as “Yahoo Boys”, in the area.
According to EFCC, both Adenigba and Bisiriyu wrote separate bail applications to the Ilorin Zonal Commander of the EFCC, entered bail bonds and promised to produce the defendants anytime their attention was needed.
The suspects after their release, jumped the administrative bail granted them by the Commission while the sureties also could not produce them.
Delivering ruling on the applications Justice Akinpelu agreed with the submission of the EFCC lawyers – Sesan Ola and Andrew Akoja.
The court ordered Adenigba (surety to Amaechi) to forfeit the recognizance of five million naira and remit the sum of four point five million naira thereon, but pay the sum of five hundred thousand naira within three months or be committed to six months imprisonment in the event he failed to pay the said sum .
On Adeyemi’s case, the Judge ordered Adenigba to forfeit the recognizance of one million naira and remit the sum of seven hundred and fifty thousand naira thereon, but pay the sum of two hundred and fifty thousand naira within three months or be committed to prison for five months in the event he failed to pay the said sum.
For Bisiriyu, who stood as surety for Dawodu, Justice Akinpelu ordered the surety to forfeit the recognizance of three million naira and remit the sum of two million naira thereon, while he was ordered to pay one million naira within three months or be committed to six months imprisonment in the event he failed to pay the said sum
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