In March, 2011, 31-year-old Basil Ogbonnaya was murdered in cold
blood in the Ejigbo area of Lagos. He was brutally killed by his
brother-in-law and friend, one Israel Okafor Okereke.
According to the police, Okereke invited Ogbonnaya to his house at
Ejigbo, drugged and axed him to death. He afterwards dumped his body in a
blue plastic drum at a dumpsite in the same area of Lagos.
According to the account, the accused claimed that he killed the
deceased because he owed him N3.6 million. Meanwhile, the victim’s
widow, Mrs. Uzoma Ogbonnaya dismissed the claim, saying that it was
even the accused that owed her late husband the same amount of money.
That’s not the news now. The news is that to the chagrin of
Ogbonnaya’s widow, Uzoma, their three year old daughter, Precious and
many lovers of justice, Okereke has since become a free man sort of . He
was granted bail by a Lagos High Court and for over a year now, has not
been attending court. What makes it so offensive is that the victim’s
widow and her late husband’s family were not even privy to his bail.
The news came to her as a rumour and she didn’t want to believe it.
In an emotion-laden voice, she told Sunday Sun how she found
out about the release of her husband’s killer. “There was a rumour,
some people said they saw him somewhere. Then I decided to check the
Ikoyi Prison where he was kept. When I got there, I discovered truly
that he had been released. The prison authority asked me the year he was
brought in and I told them. When they went through their records, they
said that he has been released. When we came to court, they confirmed
that he has been bailed.”
Uzoma feels betrayed by a system which made her believe that justice
would be done . “I felt bad in the first place because after the
incident, the police commissioner assured me that the case was not even
against me. They told me that it was a crime against Lagos State
Government and that they were going to take care of the case. They
assured me that it was going to be Lagos State against Israel (the
accused person). With that assurance, I thought they were going to do
the right thing. Then of all of a sudden, they let him go.”
Even following his bail and subsequent disappearance of the accused
person, the Lagos Directorate of Public Prosecution (DPP) could not
offer her an explanation. “What I heard in court at the last date from
two lawyers whom I believe represented the DPP was that the court did
not give them a chance to oppose his application for bail when the
argument came up. The DPP lawyers were there on the day he was granted
bail, but because they could not argue the bail, the court had no other
choice than to grant him bail. I learnt this from their discussion. They
did not explain to me”, Uzoma lamented.
It does seem that the conspiracy to deny her justice was hatched not
long after her husband’s killing. Her efforts to follow-up the case were
craftily thwarted. “We were following the case. My late husband’s
family has a lawyer. They hired a lawyer because at a point I was out of
the case. For reasons best known to them, they didn’t want me in their
meetings. I know that they were not comfortable having me around because
they felt the person who killed my husband was my cousin”, she said.
Though Uzoma tried hard to suppress the tears, they kept rolling down
her cheeks as she muttered each word in anguish. “Through the IPO
(Investigating Police Officer) at Panti, they were following the case to
know how far the case had gone. They were told that a case can stay up
to two to three years before being charged to court, but that at the
appropriate time, he would be taken to court. If not for the rumour
mill, I could not have known that he had been released because the IPO
kept telling me that the DPP had not advised him. That was the feedback
I was getting from Panti each time. They said they would let me know
when the advice is given. Nobody got back to me when the advice was
given. The next thing I heard was that the man had been released”, she
said.
While Uzoma and her family were being dribbled, the case had gone
before Justice Ademola Candide-Johnson of the Lagos High Court. Sunday Sun
gathered that even though the DPP advice came through in December
2011, she was not told. The accused was charged to court in February
2012 and again, she was left out of it. Subsequently, the bail
application was filed, served, argued and granted but she was not
told.
Asked what she wanted now, Uzoma said “I am appealing to everybody
involved, because in the first place the crime is against Lagos state
government. Secondly, I am appealing to the Chief Justice of Nigeria and
the Chief Judge of Lagos State. They should please intervene in this
matter. They know what they can do about this case now. The murderer was
arrested and handed over to them. I don’t know how everything went bad
and they let him go. His case was reported in national newspapers, on
the internet and the international community is aware of the case too. I
have been receiving calls from people who wanted to know if it was true
that the killer had been released. The international community is
waiting to see how Nigeria is going to handle this case. They should
please do the right thing. The people that released him should know
where he is. They should bring him out in order for justice to be
served.”
When she noticed the turn the case had taken, Uzoma petitioned the
founder of The Redeemed Evangelical Mission (TREM), Bishop Mike Okonkwo,
(her spiritual father), who then detailed FBA Nabena Law Firm to look
into the case. As a result, Mrs. Bose Adedeji waded into the matter in
June this year.
Adedeji told Sunday Sun “When I took over the case, I went
to Panti, because I learnt that was where the matter started. From
there, I learnt that the man was arraigned before a magistrate court in
Ebute Metta, Court 14 on April 11, 2011 a month after the incident. But
because of the nature of the case, the magistrate court could not try
the case as it does not have jurisdiction over murder cases.
“What they usually do is that they will take it for DPP’s advice. At
Panti, I spoke with one Mayowa Elejede, the investigating police
officer. He also told me that the DPP’s advice was issued in December
2011; that the man should be charged to the state high court. Though the
DPP’s advice was given on December 13, 2011, they received it at Panti
on February 13, 2012.
“The matter was assigned to Hon. Justice Candide-Johnson. He is the
judge handling the matter and the same person that granted the accused
bail. The charge sheet is dated December 13, 2011. I did not get the
first date that the man appeared in court. When I went to conduct a
search on the file, I only saw 26 pages. Every other thing, even the
bail application and the response were not in that file.
“When I asked the registrar, the registrar told me that those would
be in the archive. I went to the archive to ask, and I could not get
anything. I knew that they could not have been in the archive because
the matter is still ongoing. It has not been concluded. The matter has
been before the same judge.
“I was particular about the bail application and the response from
the Attorney-General’s office. What grounds were raised in the
application and for which the bail was granted? There are some
conditions you need to meet before you can be granted bail. I didn’t see
the bail processes. When I insisted on seeing the papers, the registrar
told me that the judge had issued a bench warrant on the accused
person. But it is not about bench warrant.”
Adedeji further revealed what she gathered from a DPP lawyer
concerning the bail. She added “The day I went to conduct the search, I
met one of the lawyers from the office of the AG. The lawyer told me
that on the day the bail was up for argument, they were not with their
file. So, when they could not respond, the judge acted without
listening to them and granted the accused bail. According to him, the
judge refused to grant them adjournment to enable them to respond to the
bail application. But I have not been able to get anything to
substantiate what the lawyer told me.
“From what I have gathered so far, the accused person was granted
bail in June 2012. So, if the matter came before the judge in February
last year; and by June of the same year, he was already in a hurry to
grant the accused bail in a murder case that was well publicized, then
something seems to be amiss.”
The lawyer herself was baffled by the incident. “Even as a lawyer, I
am still trying to understand what has happened. There are so many
people awaiting trial in our prisons for even minor offences and the
court has not granted them bail. So, why will bail be granted someone
who murdered another person? I can’t understand it.”
However, contrary to what Sunday Sun gathered from Mrs.
Adedeji, Lagos State Ministry of Justice insisted that their lawyer was
in court the day the bail was granted and had done his best in opposing
the bail application. But that the court had granted it despite his
protest.
Speaking with Sunday Sun, the Senior Special Adviser to the
state governor on legal matters, Akingbolahan Adeniran insisted that
“The counsel involved was in court and he opposed the bail application
on that particular day.”
“We hadn’t done all that we needed to do because we ought to have
filed the information in respect to the offence and we hadn’t done
that.” This is despite Adedeji’s account that the charge sheet she saw
was dated December 13, 2011.
Adeniran explained what likely led to the delay in filing the
charges. According to him“When an investigation is completed, the police
sends the file to us. We look at the case file and issue legal advice
and then file the information. Obviously, that process takes time. We
were in the middle of that process when the bail application was filed.
And we basically indicated that we were working on it and that we would
file the information. But we had not filed the information as at the
time the bail was granted.
“So, we opposed the bail and that was why it was not an unconditional
release; it was a conditional release. There were reasons attached to
the release of the suspect in this particular case.” Is it possible for a
court to grant bail before a case is formally brought before it?
Adeniran answers in the affirmative. “Yes, the judge can grant bail
even before someone is arraigned.”
Sunday Sun asked under what conditions bail could be
granted and Adeniran said “I don’t know that for now. It wasn’t
something that we could get from the bar ready. Remember that these
things happened sometimes back. If you want, maybe we can ask for a CTC
(Certified True Copy) and furnish you with that.”
The controversy was exacerbated as the lawyer engaged by the family
of the victim, Mr O. R. Kalu also claimed that the DPP lawyers did not
oppose the bail. He further claimed that he was left in the dark by the
office of the DPP. After the accused person’s first appearance at the
magistrate court, Kalu said he had “written a letter to the office of
the DPP, telling them that we were interested in this matter. I asked
them to contact me whenever they were charging the case to the proper
court and to inform me of any development in the matter. They
acknowledged the letter and gave me a copy.
“When the defense filed the application for bail, the DPP did not
contact me despite the fact that he knew that the defense counsel
will not serve me any papers. He will rather serve the DPP. But the DPP
office never reverted to me.”
Kalu said he was unaware that the accused was granted bail until
“sometime towards the end of last year and that people became
apprehensive saying that they saw the accused somewhere at Ketu. When I
checked at the Ikoyi Prison where he was remanded, I found out that he
had been released on bail.”
Kalu then traced the case to Justice Candide-Johnson’s court and said
he discovered that “the affidavit in support of the bail application
was all fabricated. They deceived the court with the facts deposed to in
the affidavit. And of course, I think there was no reaction from the
DPP. There was no counter-affidavit. It means that there must have been a
compromise somewhere along the line. It’s a murder case and it would
not have been easy for the accused to just walk away like that.”
The conditions were not that difficult, he said adding “He was
required to provide two sureties in the sum of N500,000 who must have
landed property and must be relations of the accused. That must be the
reason they brought the wife of the accused and one man who claimed to
have a street named after him at Ikotun. They fabricated a landed
property and brought forged papers to the court. They succeeded because
they were able to bribe the bailiff whose responsibility it is to verify
the deeds to the properties. He will come back and tell the court that
the properties were genuine. In this particular case, everything before
the court was all lies. A lot of compromises must have taken place and a
lot of money must have changed hands.”
Sunday Sun sought the views of a human rights lawyer, Wale
Ogunade on the developments on this matter. What could have led a court
of law to grant bail in a murder trial which had barely started? What
does the law say about bail and murder cases?
Ogunade said “Generally, murder cases are not bail-able because they
are in the realm and species of a capital offence. Capital offences are
not bail-able. They include armed robbery, murder, sometimes
manslaughter and of course treason. When it comes to issues of bail for
these offences, judges are very circumspect, very careful in granting
bail.”
“For him to be a free man, a lot of things could have gone wrong. How
many times did the court sit to know that the prosecution was not
serious with the case? But even if the prosecution was tardy, that does
not mean that a bail should be granted. How many times did the court sit
on the matter? The judge can say “Well, I have carried out my
investigation, I found out that this is a trumped up charge”. That
again, does not give him the right to act on his own.
“So, to me, this is an exception of the situation on ground. If it is
just that the prosecution could not move its case, then the judge ought
to have given them enough time to put their house in order because the
man was in custody. Since bail was granted, the man refused to attend
his trial, which again is serious. It shows that the man has no respect
for the law of the land. Then there is something wrong somewhere. If the
prosecution is not complaining, then the complainants, the family of
the victim should do something. It is the duty of the complainant to
complain to the world. So that people who matter will take it up.
“I am sure that because of this publication, the chief judge of the
state, the commissioner of police and the attorney-general of the state
will intervene in this matter. These three people are the heads of the
various agencies involved in this matter. Let them beam the searchlight
on this case and find out what has gone wrong. We want to know the truth
because things can’t continue like this in this country, else we are
done for. The rule of law must prevail. If it does not, then people
will do anything with impunity because we encourage the culture of
impunity”.
Even though the rule of law cannot bring back Basil Ogbonnaya to his
three-year old daughter, Precious, who was only seven months old when
life was snuffed out of him, it can at least ensure that more kids
are not made fatherless before they even learn to say “Daddy.”
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