Magu ordered my detention after i demanded N763m legal fee- SAN

A former prosecutor of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Chief Godwin Obla (SAN), says the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, under the leadership of its suspended acting chairman, Ibrahim Magu, has refused to pay him a sum of N763.9m in legal fees. He, however, said amid several demands for his pay, Magu ordered his detention and prosecution on trumped up charges of bribing a judge. Obla said this while reading out an 18- page letter to the Justice Ayo Salami- led Presidential panel titles, ‘Presentation in Respect of Malicious and Reckless Abuse of State Power of Investigation and Prosecution Resulting in Management of Forfeited Assets by Deliberate and Contrived Incompetence and Suspicious Dealing of Forfeited Assets’. The senior advocate testified before the panel in the presence of Magu at the Banquet Hall of the Presidential Villa on Monday. He also presented 12 questions to the panel which he said the suspended EFCC Chairman must answer and made five recommendations. Obla, who presented over 10 documents to the panel including his bill of charges, said he prosecuted 40 cases for the EFCC including those of former bank chief sacked by the Central Bank of Nigeria under the leadership of Lamido Sanusi and also helped the commission recover hundreds of billions of naira in cash and assets. He said, “As of date, the EFCC owes me an outstanding balance of N685,389,928.10 and $202,460.47 (N78.5m) or its Naira equivalent at the prevailing Central Bank of Nigeria exchange rate, together with interest at prime lending rate, being professional fees for the prosecution of over 40 high profile cases. The senior advocate said all subsequent letters sent to the EFCC were ignored but the fee was never contested. He said rather than pay him his legal fees, Magu decided to level several allegations against him in order to discredit and deny him his due.
The senior advocate who helped the EFCC to secure the conviction of a former Director-General of Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency, Temisan Omatseye in 2016 said he in course of the case which lasted six years, he traveled from his base in Abuja to Lagos several times and made 46 court appearances but was not paid a penny. He said, despite securing the conviction for the EFCC, Magu accused him of bribing Justice Rita Ofili-Ajumogobia to secure the conviction. Obla said, “I have never paid any payment of N5m or any other amount to Justice Rita Ajumogobia. To the best of my recollection, the payment of N5m under reference, was a payment i made on May 21, 2015 to company named Nigel&Colive Nig. Ltd for the purchase of building materials for my construction site in Abuja (now my present office building). “At that material time of this commercial transaction and till date, i had no prior knowledge that Justice Ajumogobia had any interest whatever in the company”. The senior advocate said based on the allegations, he was informed by EFCC prosecutor, Rotimi Oyedepo, that Magu had personally directed that he be detained and he remained in custody for 21 days before he was subsequently arraigned alongside the judge. The senior advocate called on the Attorney General of the Federation, Abubakar Salami (SAN) to ensure that frivolous criminal charges brought against him were withdrawn. Obla said after he received a letter of disengagement from the EFCC, he turned in all files and gave his professional opinion on how to ensure that the cases continue seamlessly. He said, unfortunately, that the lackadaistical manner in which most of the matters had been handled either indicate that the matters had been compromised or constructively withdrawn or abandoned like the 18billion fraud case involving the Head of Service. The senior advocate said that Magu went ahead to unceremoniously redeploy the Head of Legal Department, Chile Okoroma, who was assigned those cases. Obla added, “Secondly, material evidence which we returned to EFCC custody, were seemingly, withheld from him as he severally reached out to my office for help. Next, when it seemed that Mr Chile was gaining some traction with the pension fraud cases, Ibrahim Magu conveniently dispatched Mr Chile off to National Institute for Policy and Strategic Studies, Kuru, thus foisting a constructive abandonment of the pension fraud cases. “In 2016, when Ibrahim Magu took over the files, those pension fraud cases were all half-heard in various courts of the Federal High Court, Abuja. Today, most of those cases are now in limbo and constructively abandoned. “It has been suggested that one of the reasons why the Pension Fraud prosecutions have been stalled/ frustrated has to do with the interest of one Alhaji Ali Abatcha who is a kinsman of Ibrahim Magu. They said Alhaji Ali Abatcha was the president of Nigerian Union of Pensioners and was undergoing prosecution by myself before Mr Magu took over. The status of this case and others should be reviewed”. When contacted on the telephone, a lawyer to Magu, Tosin Ojaomo, said it was unfortunate that the panel could invite someone facing corruption charges to testify against Magu. Ojaomo admitted that Obla was being owed funds but said that the EFCC had to verify the fee before payment could be made. “The Salami panel is offering its platform to those aggrieved one way or the other against Magu by inviting them to make presentations. The presentations/ allegations were not made to Magu. “Even elements with pending cases in court were invited . People being prosecuted by the prosecuting agency are making wild allegations even when pending allegations have yet to be cleared in court.