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HomeLATEST NEWSJUST IN: Court sentences Maina’s son to 24 years’ imprisonment

JUST IN: Court sentences Maina’s son to 24 years’ imprisonment

The Federal High Court has sentenced Faisal, son of the chairman, defunct Pension Reformed Task Team (PRTT), Abdulrasheed Maina, to 24 years’ imprisonment.

Justice Okon Abang, in his judgment, held that Mr Maina, who was sentenced in absentia, was guilty of the three-count charge against him.

The judge, who handed down a five-year-jail term for count one bordering on money laundering offence, sentenced Mr Maina to 14 years imprisonment on count two.

The judge, thereafter, sentenced the son of the ex-pension reformed boss to a five-year prison term on count three which bordered on asset declaration offence but ruled that the prison terms would run concurrently.

On July 16, the judge had fixed the matter for judgment after the then EFCC’s lawyer, Mohammed Abubakar, adopted the commission”s final written address and urged the court to convict Mr Maina in all the three counts levelled against him, “the prosecution having proved the case beyond all reasonable doubt.”

Mr Faisal’s counsel, A. A. Onoja, who did not file any final written address, had sought an adjournment because he was not briefed on the development in the case.

The EFCC lawyer, however, opposed his plea for an adjournment, arguing that on March 17, when the case was adjourned, Anayo Adibe, who appeared for Mr Maina, did not apply to file any written address, even after the ruling was delivered, saying “four months since that day, the defence has not done anything.”

On count one, Faisal was sentenced to five years’ imprisonment, 14 years on count two and another five-year sentence on count three. The sentence is to run concurrently starting from judgment day.
Abang also ordered that 21-year-old Faisal, who had since June 24, 2020 failed to appear for his trial, be arrested anywhere he is found in Nigeria and remanded in any Correctional Service Centre to serve his jail term.
“The federal government shall arrest the convict anywhere found in the country and commit him to serve his jail term, if not found in the country, the FG shall legally or lawfully commence extradition proceedings against him,” the judge held.
The court ordered that the company through which the fund was laundered, Alhaji Faisal Farm 2, be wound up, and the funds in it forfeited to the government.

The judge, who dismissed the application for adjournment, held that the request was made in bad faith.

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