EFCC sets up team to identify,
mark Patience
Jonathan’s property
Indications emerged on Friday that the Economic
and Financial Crimes Commission was intensifying moves to gather evidence
against the former First Lady, Patience Jonathan, for a possible prosecution.
A top operative of the commission said on Friday
that the leadership of the commission had initiated a discreet probe of the
former First Lady in a bid to assemble evidence against her in the event of her
prosecution as a fallout of the commission’s decision to freeze $20m traced to
her.
The source said that the commission had assembled
a team of detectives saddled with the responsibility of identifying all houses
and property belonging to the former First Lady.
It was stated that the operatives had been instructed from the office of the
commission’s chairman to mark such houses and property as part of the
preparation for the prosecution of the First Lady.
It was further stated
that the operatives were focusing attention on property in Abuja, Yenagoa, Port
Harcourt and other cities in the country.
The source said, “It
would not be correct to conclude that the commission has halted the
investigation into the activities of the former First Lady.
“The investigation is
progressing and it is being handled by the office of the chairman of the
commission.
“A team of operatives has
been assembled to identify all her properties in the country with a focus on
Abuja, Port Harcourt and Yenagoa.
“The responsibility of
the team is to mark all such properties in preparation for a possible court
action.”
The EFCC had traced $5m
to the personal account of the former First Lady and frozen the account
domiciled in Skye Bank Plc last month.
The commission’s face off
with Mrs. Jonathan started when the commission froze the accounts of four
companies traced to the Special Adviser to ex-President Jonathan on Domestic
Affairs, Waripamowei Dudafa.
The four firms identified
as Pluto Property and Investment Company Limited; Seagate Property Development
and Investment Company Limited; Trans Ocean Property and Investment Company had
a total of $15,591,700 in their accounts.
However, the commission
was brought into a face-off with Mrs. Jonathan when she deposed to an affidavit
that the money belonged to her.
The former First Lady has
since filed a suit at a Federal High Court in Lagos against the commission
seeking an order to unfreeze the accounts.
She is also demanding
$200m compensation from the commission for alleged violation of her rights.
The Head of Media and
Publicity of the EFCC, Mr. Wilson Uwujaren, said that he did not have the
information on the latest move by the commission as of the time of filing this
report on Friday.
Meanwhile, the former
Special Adviser to former President, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, Dr. Reuben Abati,
might spend the weekend in detention.
A source at the
commission said that Abati was still struggling to meet the conditions of the
administrative bail granted him by the commission on Friday night.
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