DSS accuses judges of collecting bribes from Departmental stores, clients in Niger republic, Benin Republic
While
 one of the judges just acquired a N1.5billion mansion, another 
allegedly collected bribe in a department store and one allegedly 
crossed the borders to Benin Republic, Niger Republic and Ghana to 
collect money. A Court of Appeal judge 
allegedly collected N200million but he was only recommended for 
retirement and the NJC directed him to refund the cash installmentally. 
The
 detained judges include two Supreme Court judges-Justices Sylvester 
Ngwuta and Inyang Okoro; the suspended Presiding Justice of the Court of
 Appeal, Ilorin Division, Justice Mohammed Ladan Tsamiya, who was picked
 up in Sokoto; Justice Adeniyi Ademola( Federal High Court); the Chief 
Judge of Enugu State, Justice I. A. Umezulike;  Justice Kabiru Auta of 
Kano State High Court; and Justice Muazu Pindiga( Gombe State High 
Court).
An
 agent of the DSS who spoke inconfident said “I think so far, about 
seven judges have been detained but altogether 15 judges are under 
investigations. We still have about eight others already being probed. 
There may be one or two Supreme Court Justices among the remaining 
eight. The DSS has also invited three 
registry staff of some courts, who probably played some roles in the 
bribery saga, for questioning.”
Asked
 of the welfare of their Lordships, the source said: “We have treated 
the seven judges in custody with utmost respect, decency, they are not 
treated like criminals at all. Their interrogation does not last more 
than two hours and they are given meals of their fancy. The
 judges are being detained. They need to fill some forms. Also,  if they
 had answered our questions, they would have been released under one 
hour. Some of these judges have 
made statements to our team. We have also shown them some evidence in 
order to show that the DSS was tidier in in its probe.”
The source continued said: 
 “A Supreme Court Justice has a property worth N1.5billion. If not DSS, 
which other agency will unravel this? Are you expecting the police to 
take on these judges? Another 
Supreme Court justice credited everything to his son. If the son started
 earning a living from the day he was born( assuming he was earning 
N1million), he cannot be able to earn one quarter of what he is claiming
 to have. We said it is very simple, tell us the business or the work you have done to have been able to earn so much. A
 judge entered a department store not to buy anything but to collect 
bribe, inside a supermarket from a go-between. Unknown to the judge and 
the collector, there are cameras in the store. The video clip is there. Another
 judge under probe has perfected the art of being a bribe collector on 
behalf of others. He is notorious in crossing the borders to Benin 
Republic, Niger Republic and Ghana. We know some of the hotels where he 
used to lodge.”
The
 source went on: “We have the case of a judge who issued bail conditions
 to an accused person but the conditions were not met and the suspect 
was released. After the court session, the accused person sent word to 
the judge that he could not meet the conditions but take this amount to 
set me free. Of course, the judge did 
not act alone; the court clerk, the bailiff and the Registrar were 
involved. The DSS knew all that transpired, the amount involved and who 
took what. When we confronted the Registrar to give us the details of 
how the bail conditions were met, there was no single evidence. The
 judge in Port Harcourt is under probe for about $2.5million. Out of 
that amount, $500,000 was moved elsewhere and we know where it went. They
 mobilised thugs because the recovery of the remaining $2million will be
 a lead that will open a can of worms. That face-off was used to remove 
the money. We are tracking the money, we already have the idea of where 
the $2million was hidden. We will get it. Governor
 Nyesom Wike’s fear was that once that money was taken, the judge must 
account. So, there was need to cover up. The judge exposed himself by 
bringing Wike into the investigation and he has made his case worse. The
 question is: Why was Wike at the judge’s house? Is the judge’s house a 
government house? How can a governor be in that place at that hour? The judge gave a ruling  on the PDP crisis by legitimising the illegitimate for a purpose.”
On
 the alleged planting of recovered cash in the judges’ quarters, the 
source said: “The DSS did not do anything like that. In fact, the judges
 signed for items recovered from their residences. If you crosscheck, the operation was spontaneous and simultaneous in the judges’ quarters. It started between  10.30pm and 11pm on Friday
 night. It was painstaking and professionally conducted. Technically 
speaking, the DSS gave the time and the cameras used for the operation 
were digitalised. The search was
 conducted in the presence of the owners of the houses. There was no 
molestation, no harassment. We don’t need to plant money in anybody’s 
house because we have all subscribed to the oath of office. In an era 
where the government is trying to be fair, we don’t need to do that. There
 was search warrant duly obtained from the court. The execution of a 
search warrant does not require the presence of a lawyer. Even at that, 
one of the judges invited his lawyer who examined the warrant and asked 
him to cooperate with the DSS operatives.”
Responding
 to a question, the source said: “The DSS is in custody of some audio 
and video tapes of some of these judges. By the time we start running 
these tapes, Nigerians will appreciate that we have done a good job. The
 DSS did not just jump into investigation, it received petitions on 
these judges on how  they literally took money. The worst aspect is that
 they took money with both hands. Some
 of these things were becoming disturbing and people were bringing facts
 and figures. We went to verify these. If a judge builds a house, it is 
easier to discover because he might have bought the land from an 
individual or an agency or estate agent. There is no way you can cover 
up all these things.”
Concerning
 why the DSS stormed the official quarters of the judges, the source 
added that the poor  cooperation of the NJC accounted for it.”
He
 spoke of how the DSS decided to go through the NJC to invite the judges
 for investigation “in a less dramatic way”. Correspondences were 
exchanged between the NJC and the Federal Ministry of Justice for 
certain information and dossier. The Ministry of Justice complied but 
the NJC refused, he claimed.
“We
 wanted to intervene in a less dramatic way. In fact,MIT was our wish, 
it would have been seamless. But it did not work that way. In
 the last two weeks, the NJC submitted the names of three judges for 
sanctions. By what the NJC told the press, one of the judges, Justice 
Mohammed Ladan Tsamiya, only demanded N200million from a litigant, but 
the DSS discovered that he took the money. The
 NJC asked the Appeal Court Justice to be paying back the N200million 
instalmentallly. Is that punishment proportionate to the offence? The 
NJC went ahead to give such a judge soft landing. That in itself is 
corruption. Other officers were 
to be retired. Then, what happens to the proceeds of the crimes 
committed? How is that action going to stop corruption? Notwithstanding,
 DSS is  working with everybody. We are in touch with NJC. Even today, 
we exchanged correspondence with the NJC. We don’t personalize issues. For
 record purpose, NJC is not a court of law; it is an institutional 
disciplinary body which ought to collaborate with security and 
anti-graft agencies.”
The
 Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) has criticized the arrests, saying the 
judges should be released. The source faulted the NBA’s reaction, 
stressing that the cleansing of the Judiciary was not peculiar to 
Nigeria. I think there is nothing like 
tension; whoever tries to provoke national insecurity will be dealt with
 according to the law of the land. There
 is nobody that is above the law. In Ghana, 32 senior judges and over 20
 magistrates were sent out if the bench because of corruption. Did the 
Ghana Bar Association threaten to shut down the courts?”
Asked
 if the DSS will respect court orders to release the judges when 
arraigned, the source said: “If it is an order, we will respect the 
court and release them.”

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