Indications
emerged, yesterday, that the Office of the Attorney General of the Federation
and that of the Inspector General of Police might have disagreed on what to do
with former Kwara Governor, Dr. Bukola Saraki,
on his alleged use of fronts to
withdraw the sum of N6 billion from the accounts of a company, Joy Petroleum,
domiciled in Intercontinental Bank, now Access.
Initially,
the Office of the IG had approached a Federal High Court in Abuja on April 26,
2012 to press charges against the former governor for conspiracy, forgery and
stealing after claiming to have initiated a comprehensive investigation into a
petition sent to it by Joy Petroleum that it was being denied access by the
bank following the illegal change of signatory to the account by unknown
persons.
But in a legal advice to the IG on the move to prosecute Saraki and others named by the petitioner, the Attorney General advised against taking any action against Saraki and his aides over the bank issue, since from the records available to his office, the former governor had not committed any offence to warrant such trial.
In
the legal document, which Vanguard sighted last night, dated 9thOctober 2012,
with reference Number DPP/ADV: 061/12, and signed by the Director of Public
Prosecutions of the Federation, Mrs. O.O. Fatunde, the AGF Office, noted that
it would be improper to hold Saraki liable for the internal actions of the then
Intercontinental Bank.
The
AGF Office said: “It would therefore be improper and unjust in the circumstance
to hold Dr. Saraki , Mr. Pinheiro or indeed the companies criminally liable for
the internal actions and decisions of the bank and its officials bordering on
exercise of discretion.
“Every
customer of a bank (corporate or individual) has the right to apply for a loan
on the most favourable terms possible. This alone does not constitute any
offence under any law because it is within the discretion of the bank to grant
or refuse such loan application.
“Dr.
Saraki and Pinheiro are alleged to be connected with the grant of the loans as promoter
and director respectively of the companies. By virtue of Section 18 of the Act,
a director or any other partner or officer of a company can only be held
responsible in that capacity for the actions of the company if the company is
guilty of an offence under the Act.
“Since
the company in this case cannot be held to have committed any offence under
Section 15( 1) (a), it follows that Dr. Saraki and Mr. Pinheiro cannot also be
held criminally responsible only on account of having acted as promoter and
director of the companies in connection with the said loan,” the DPP advised.
However
in a new twist that is likely to upturn the whole investigation and pave the
way for the prosecution of the former governor, the Attorney General has
written a different letter to the IG to hand over the case file to him for
further action.
In
the new letter, which Vanguard obtained last night, the AGF in insisting that
his office needed to carry out further review of the case file before any
further action is taken on the matter.
In
a memo with reference No. DPP/ADV: 061/12/91 and addressed to the Inspector
General of Police with particular attention to the Commissioner of Police
Special Fraud Unit, and signed by Haruna Isa Alabi, Deputy Director of Public
Prosecution, the AGF said his office wanted the case file to be able to
ascertain whether the evidence presented against Saraki and others was borne
out of mere suspicion or was capable of sustaining a conviction before trial.
Saraki
has said that there was no infraction of any law in the matter, which his
companies obtained loans and paid back to the banks through agreed terms of
settlement.
But
the former IG, Mohammed Abubakar, who initiated the trial of Saraki, had
alleged among other things that the former governor made the bank to lose funds
by using his fronts while serving as governor to engage in money laundering.
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