Press Release
![]() |
|
Raymond Temisan Omatseye
|
Justice Rita-Ofili
Ajumogobia of the Federal High Court sitting in Ikoyi,Lagos has reserved ruling till January 26, 2015, on
an application for a no-case submission, filed by a former Director-General of
the Nigeria Maritime Administration and Safety Agency, NIMASA, Raymond Temisan
Omatseye.
The judge reserved the ruling based on the submissions of counsel to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, Godwin Obla, SAN, who, on Tuesday, told the court that Omatseye had been directly linked to the charges brought against him by the EFCC.
"The accused person has been sufficiently
and severally linked to the offences for which he is being prosecuted and this
is not an issue to over-flog because the accused person wrote it in his
statement at the EFCC office and in his own hand writing that his threshold for
goods is N2.5million and works N5million,” he said.
But the defence counsel, Sina Sofola, SAN, argued that “the law under which the accused person was charged, did not state what the threshold was and there was no date as to when that document was enforced. Besides, the Public Procurement Act did not state that this particular amount is the threshold”.
He also
pointed out that, “the motion seeking to discharge the accused is on the
grounds that he has no case to answer,
as the prosecution has not been able to establish what the legislation
was when the contracts were awarded, this is In addition to the motion moved in
the application, affidavits and a written address in support of the no case
submission".
Obla immediately prayed
the court to discountenance the arguments of the defence counsel to dismiss the
charge against the accused person, but further hinged his argument on the
entire 49-page affidavit that vehemently opposed the application filed by
Omatseye.
According to Obla, “prosecution witness 1, meticulously demonstrated
to this court, how the accused person
committed the offences contained in each of the counts before this court, and
prosecution witness 3, an expert in the field of procurement, also used the exhibits before this court to
show how these offences were committed by the accused. With profound respect,
it is late in the day for the accused person to raise an objection to the
charges now, since he never raised same when the charges were read to him and
upon arraignment before this court, pleaded not guilty to all the counts. This
presupposes that he understood the charge that was read to him", he
stressed.
Omatseye is being
prosecuted by the EFCC on charges bordering on contract variation, bid rigging
and violation of the provisions of the Public Procurement Act by awarding
contracts above his approval limit.
Wilson Uwujaren
Head, Media &
Publicity

No comments:
Post a Comment