$2m Fraud: Appeal Court Dismisses Olufemi Thomas’ No-Case Submission

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A three-man panel of the Court of Appeal, Lagos Division, on Thursday, dismissed the application filed by Dr Olufemi Thomas, a former Executive Secretary, National Health Insurance Scheme, seeking to stop the alleged $2,198,900 fraud charges levelled against him by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission.

Thomas was re-arraigned alongside one Kabiru Sidi, a Bureau De Change operator, by the EFCC on an amended seven-count charge of money laundering to the tune of $2,198,900.00 before Justice Ayokunle Faji of the Federal High Court sitting in Ikoyi, Lagos.

He pleaded not guilty to the charge preferred against him by the EFCC.

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The defendants allegedly conspired with the wife of the first defendant, Funmi, to make a cash payment of $2,198,900.00 to one Ibitoye Bamidele at their residence at No. 20, Lagos University Teaching Hospital Road, Idi-Araba, Lagos.

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The second defendant, Sidi, allegedly lied to an EFCC investigator, Afeez Mustapha that he was the owner of the money that the first defendant and his wife transacted with.

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During the trial, the first defendant, Thomas, had filed a preliminary objection of no-case submission, saying that the lower court does not have jurisdiction in view of the earlier judgment in a fundamental case before the Court of Appeal.

Thomas, through his counsel, had also argued that the offences, which he is being charged with, were not known to the law and the prosecution had not made a case against him.

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However, the prosecution counsel, Ekene Iheanacho, in his response, submitted that the defendant had not been tried before “as the offences for which he is facing trial are created by the Money Laundering Prohibition Act.”

Iheanacho had urged the court to dismiss the no-case submission and allow the defendants to open their case.

Justice Faji, in a short ruling, dismissed all the grounds of preliminary objections by the defendant.

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The Judge had held that “The concept of res judicata operates in both criminal and civil matter. But with respect to a criminal matter, the applicable principle is that of double jeopardy, which does not allow a person to be tried twice.

“In this case, the defendant has not been shown to have been tried before, as the facts before the court are not the same as the one at the Court of Appeal. Therefore, the first defendant’s plea of res judicata fails.”

Consequently, Thomas approached the appellate court seeking to set aside the March 13, 2020 ruling of the lower court.

Delivering judgment in the appeal filed by the former NHIS boss against the ruling of Justice Faji that he has a case to answer, Justice Abubakar Sadiq Umar, who led the panel, held that the decision of the lower court was well-grounded.

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