The Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission has summoned some officials of the Department of State
Services, who were attached to Dame Patience Jonathan, the wife of
former President Goodluck Jonathan, for interrogation.
It was learnt on Friday that the
invitation was part of investigations into the $15m frozen in four
company accounts, which Patience had laid claim to.
Sources in the EFCC told our
correspondent that a letter had been written to the DSS, requesting that
the officials be allowed to honour the anti-graft agency’s invitation.
A detective told our correspondent that
the commission had evidence that the DSS officials had, on several
occasions, deposited money into some of the accounts in Skye Bank
between 2013 and 2015.
The source said, “The $15m, which we
have frozen in the four company accounts was not paid into the accounts
at once. The money was paid into the accounts over a two-year period.
“However, we have evidence that it was
DSS officials attached to Jonathan’s wife that deposited the money. We
have gathered bank documents and we have invited them for
interrogation.” When asked why Patience had not been
invited by the EFCC, even after she had openly laid claim to the money
and dared the anti-graft agency to invite her for questioning, another
source told our correspondent that it was because the commission was
trying to build a solid case.
The source said, “We will not like to
exchange words with her on the pages of newspapers. She says the money
belongs to her but she has no evidence to show that she owns the money
except the fact that she was given platinum cards to use in withdrawing
money.
“Possessing an ATM card of an account
that does not bear your name, signature or credentials does not give you
the legal right over that account. We froze the accounts as part of
investigations into a money laundering case.
“We are still investigating and we may
invite her based on the outcome of investigations. We are still trying
to build a solid case.”
The EFCC had stumbled on four company
bank accounts in Skye Bank while investigating a former Special Adviser
to Jonathan on Domestic Affairs, Waripamowei Dudafa.
The names of the four companies are:
Pluto Property and Investment Company Limited; Seagate Property
Development and Investment Company Limited; Trans Ocean Property and
Investment Company Limited; and Globus Integrated Service Limited. The
joint balance of the accounts, as of the time it was frozen, was said to
be $15, 591,700.
The four companies standing trial before a Federal High Court in Lagos have since pleaded guilty to money laundering. Jonathan’s wife has, however, accused
the EFCC of hiring mercenaries as directors of the company in an attempt
to steal her hard-earned money.
Patience, who has sued Skye Bank for
N200m, also has another account under the name ‘Patience Ibifaka
Jonathan’ in the bank, which had a balance of $5m. The account was,
however, not frozen by the commission.
In the suit filed by Patience, while
laying claim to the $15m, which is the subject of prosecution of Dudafa
and others, one Sammie Somiari, who deposed to an affidavit on behalf of
Patience, claimed that Dudafa helped Patience to open the bank accounts
in 2010.
According to him, Dudafa had on March 22, 2010, brought two Skye Bank officials to meet Patience at home to open five accounts.
The deponent claimed that Patience was the sole signatory to the accounts.
He, however, claimed that after the five
accounts were opened, Patience later discovered that Dudafa opened only
one of the accounts in her name while the other four were opened in the
names of companies belonging to Dudafa.
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