A
59-year-old Okeke, founder of God’s Pentecostal Ministry World Wide, Iba,
Lagos, was charged by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) on a
nine-count bordering on stealing, forgery and impersonation.
At
the resumed hearing on December 3, 2013, Tuesday, the EFCC counsel, A.M.
Ocholi, told the court that the trial could not go on due to absence of a
witness (one Nurudeen Bello) who took his two-month-old baby to the hospital
following complications.
Responding,
the defendant’s counsel, U.C. Ikebulu, argued that the prosecution had nine
witnesses, and could have called another witness since they could not go on
with Nurudeen (witness).
The
presiding judge, Justice Aishat Opesanwo, after listening to both counsels,
adjourned the case to February 8, 2014 to enable the prosecution produce its
witnesses.
It
will be recalled that a businessman, Ignatius Ozorumba, had on January 31, 2013
told a Lagos High Court in Ikeja how the archbishop (defendant) allegedly stole
his land worth N7 million.
Testifying
in the case, Ozorumba, who was led in evidence by EFCC counsel, Mrs. Atinuke
Daramola, said he was a former member of the defendant’s church.
He
said sometime in 2005, Okeke informed him that the Federal Housing Authority
(FHA) had instructed all persons allocated plots of land in FestacTown to pay
their land rents.
Ozorumba,
who is the director of Immortal Impex Limited, said he asked the archbishop to
help him process the payment so that the land would not be revoked.
The
witness said: “I gave him N200,000 to help me pay eight years rent at a cost of
N25,000 per year, for my land known as “Plot H1”, located on 2nd Avenue,
FestacTown, Lagos.
“I
also gave him photocopies of the Title Deed and other relevant documents to
facilitate the process.”
Ozorumba
explained that the defendant later told him to bring the original documents for
“sighting” purposes by the authorities of the FHA and he complied.
According
to him, after the defendant took the documents, he failed to return them,
claiming that they were in the custody of the FHA. He later discovered that the
defendant had sold the property to the trustees of Mainland Motorcycle and
Spare Parts Dealers Association for the sum of N7million.
Ozorumba
alleged that the archbishop had forged documents, including a change of
ownership form purportedly issued by the FHA, to facilitate the transaction.
The
witness further alleged that the defendant misled the buyers that he was the
original owner of the property and had sold it since September 2005.
He said this led to a dispute
between himself and the archbishop which prompted him to petition the
EFCC.
Vanguard

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