Alleged invasion: Address on search warrant was incorrect, ID card suspicious –Witness tells court

Alleged invasion: Address on search warrant was incorrect, ID card suspicious –Witness tells court

Jan. 17, 2021

Mr. Madaki Chidawa, the first prosecution witness (PW1), in the case of the alleged invasion of the residence of the Supreme Court Judge, Mary Odili, on Oct. 29, 2021, said on Monday in a resumed hearing that he was on duty when the 15 suspects arraigned by the police allegedly invaded her home.

Chidawa, an Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP), told Justice Nkeonye Maha while being led in evidence by counsel to the police, Mathew Omosun, at a Federal High Court, Abuja.

Earlier, Justice Maha had granted a N5 million bail each with two sureties each to 3 of the remaining 15 suspects.

They were ASP Mohammed Yahaya, Abdullahi Adamu and Abdullahi Usman, the 11th, 14th and 15th defendants respectively.

Chidawa, who said he serves as police officer at the Supreme Court and attached to Justice Odili’s residence located at No 7, Imo River Street, Maitama in Abuja, said he had been in the service for 29 years.

Responding to Omosun’s question, he said he knew the defendants.

“On 29 of October, 2021, at about 18:00 hours, I was on duty at the residence of Justice Odili at No 7, Imo River Road when they came.

“One CSP Lawrence Adjodo and others came and presented a document and they said they wanted to search the house and I asked from where.

“They said they were from EFCC, the Asset Recovery unit attached to the Ministry of Justice and I said I want to see the document and they presented the search warrant which I went through and signed by a Chief Magistrate in FCT,” he said.

The witness said he discovered that the address on the search warrant was incorrect.

And I discovered the number on the residence was written No. 9, Imo Street
“And I said, this is No 9, Imo River Street, not No 7. But Lawrence Adjodo said this is the house we are to search.

“Then I informed my boss, Justice Mary Odili, that some men came to conduct a search,” he added.

He said Adjodo presented an identity card signed by the Minister of Justice and Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF) which, to him, looked suspicious because “As a police office, I have an ID card.”

Chidawa said after Justice Odili made a phone call, she ordered that the invaders should be stopped from gaining access into the residence.

“They (the defendants) gave me a phone number, if I am doubting, and I dialed the number and true caller showed the name as Ojo Ola with EFCC,” the witness said.

He said he made his statement to the police on Oct. 31, 2021 and though the defendants also threatened that they would come back with force, they, however, did not.

During a cross examination by counsel to the 1st (Adjodo) and 4th defendants, Ahmed Abubakar, the witness said Adjodo introduced two other invaders as captains in the Nigerian Army, and another as EFCC officers.

He said he voluntarily gave the statement to the police.

The statement was, then, admitted in evidence by the court.

Justice Maha adjourned the matter until March 1 for continuation of cross examination of the PW1.

The Federal Government, through the Nigerian Police Force, had produced the 15 suspects before Maha for arraignment on 18-count charge bordering on forgery, criminal trespass, intimidation, extortion, among others, contrary to the sections of the law.

In the charge marked: FHC/ABJ/CR/436/2021, they were also alleged to have threatened Mrs Odili and members of her household while trying to execute an illegal search warrant.

Although 22 defendants are charged in the case, seven of them are still at large.

Some of the defendants arraigned were Lawrence Adjodo (a.k.a. Ola Ojo) , Michael Diete-Spiff, Alex Onyekuru, Bayero Lawal (a.k.a EFCC director), Igwe Ernest, Aliyu Umar Ibrahim, Hajiya Maimuna Maishanu, Dr Ayodele Akindipe (a.k.a. Herbalist), Yusuf Adamu (a.k.a. Godson to Chief Peter Odili),

The rest were Bashir Musa, Mohammed Yahaya, an assistant superintendent of police, Stanley Nkwazema, Shehu Jibo, Abdullahi Adamu, and Abdullahi Usman.

The seven defendants at large include Ike Ezekwe, a lance corporal, Mike, Sani Bala, Godwin Lucas, Solomon Bagudu, Austin M. and Michael M. (NAN)