Court registrar denies defrauding Bamaiyi

Oluronke Rosolu

Oluronke Rosolu

Henry Ojelu

Oluronke Rosolu
Oluronke Rosolu

Oluronke Rosolu, a court registrar accused of conspiring with others to defraud the former Chief of Army Staff, Lt. Gen. Ishaya Bamaiyi of $330,000 told an Ikeja High Court on Tuesday that she did not commit the offence.

“I did not receive $330,000 from Lt. Gen. Ishaya Bamaiyi neither did I go to the Kirikiri Maximum Prisons to see him on Dec. 20, 2004,” she claimed while giving evidence before the court.

Rosulu is standing trial before Justice Lateef Lawal-Akapo for allegedly aiding a one-time Lagos socialite, Fred Ajudua, to defraud Bamaiyi of $330,000.

Led in evidence by the Defence Counsel, Mr Bamidele Ogundele, Rosolu said that she had never met Bamaiyi and Ajudua prior to her arrest by the EFCC.

“I knew Bamaiyi and Ajudua only as defendants in separate criminal cases before Justice Oyewole, I never had any personal interactions with either of them until I was summoned by the EFCC in Abuja in 2013,” she said.

Rosolu claimed that she was confronted by Bamaiyi and a prison official, ACP Garba Abdullahi while in the custody of the anti-graft agency in Abuja over the alleged fraud.

“Bamaiyi and Abdullahi confronted me at the EFCC office claiming that money was given to me in a ‘Ghana must go’ bag. I told them it wasn’t me and I had never been to the prison,” she said.

Lt. Gen. Ishaya Bamaiyi
Lt. Gen. Ishaya Bamaiyi

On the polygraph test the EFCC conducted on her, the court registrar claimed that the anti graft agency conducted the test on her despite knowing that she was hypertensive.

“The polygraph test was conducted on me despite the EFCC knowing full well that I am hypertensive.

Related News

“The polygraph test was one sided because a polygraph examination was not conducted on Bamaiyi and Abdullahi to ascertain if they were lying against me.

“Also, my lawyer was not present while the test was conducted on me,” Rosolu said.

Earlier during the trial, the Lagos State Controller of Prisons, Mr Vincent Ubi, told the court that it was against prison policy to bring foreign currency to the Kirikiri Maximum Prisons.

Ubi who was a Deputy Controller of Prisons from 2004 to 2006 at the Kirikiri Maximum Prisons when Bamaiyi and Ajudua were in custody made the claim while giving evidence as a key witness for the defence during the trial.

“We don’t accept dollars in Kirikiri Maximum Prisons.

“Any money brought for a detainee is taken to the Records Department and such money needs my approval before such money can be released to a detainee.

“Most times, the detainees need such monies to pay their lawyers,” Ubi said.

He said he never encountered Rosolu during the time he spent working as a senior prison official at the prison.

“No visitor can come into Kirikiri Maximum Prisons without my approval.

“I have never seen the defendant before at the prison,” Ubi said.

Load more