A Federal High Court
in Lagos has asked the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission to release the
travelling passport of a former Minister of Aviation, Mr. Femi Fani-Kayode,
facing money laundering charges.
Fani-Kayode’s
passport had been seized by the anti-graft commission on the order of Justice
Ramat Mohammed before who his trial started in December 2008.
But Justice Rita
Ofili-Ajumogobia, on Tuesday ordered the EFCC to submmit Fani-Kayode’s passport
to the Deputy Chief Registrar of the Lagos Division of the Federal High Court,
Mr. Bello Okandeji, to allow him access to it.
The judge said if
Fani-Kayode needed the passport, he should file and address a formal
application to the court copying the Attorney General of the Federation.
He is to disclose his
intended destination and the purpose of his travel in the said application.
Ofili-Ajumogobia
added that Fani-Kayode shall not be allowed to stay out of the country for more
than 31 days until the conclusion of his trial.
The accused had,
through his lawyer, Wale Akoni (SAN), filed an application asking the court to
order the release of his passport and grant him permission to travel out of the
country.
Ofili-Ajumogobia said
the application succeeded as the EFCC did not object to it.
“The Economic and
Financial Crimes Commission shall bring the passport of the accused person to
court within 7 days,” the judge held.
Fani-Kayode was
arraigned by the EFCC before Ofili-Ajumogobia on February 11, 2013 on 40 counts
bordering on money laundering to the tune of N100m.
The EFCC alleged that
while he was the Aviation Minister and then the Minister of Culture and
Tourism, he transacted at various times in cash sums in excess of N500,000
without going through any financial institution.
According to the
EFCC, this alleged offence violated Sections 15(1) (a) (b) (c) (d) and 15 (2)
(a) (b) of the Money Laundering (prohibition) Act, 2004.
Fani-Kayode, however,
denied the allegations, upon which the prosecution, led by Mr. Festus Keyamo,
opened its case on March 10, 2014 and closed it on July 10, 2014, calling a
total of six witnesses in the process.
In response to the
prosecution, Fani-Kayode filed a no-case application, insisting that the
prosecution had not established a prima facie case against him to warrant him
entering any defence.
He asked the court to
quash the charges and set him free.

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