Court orders police to produce Lekki Robbery suspect

Suspected Lekki Armed Robbers, L-R Promise Abiwa, Agbojule Bright, Monday Omoboye, and Monday Ikuesan

Suspected Ikorodu Armed Robbers, L-R Promise Abiwa, Agbojule Bright, Monday Omoboye, and Monday Ikuesan
Photo: Idowu Ogunleye

Henry Ojelu

Suspected Lekki Armed Robbers, L-R Promise Abiwa, Agbojule Bright, Monday Omoboye, and Monday Ikuesan Photo: Idowu Ogunleye
Suspected Lekki Armed Robbers, L-R Promise Abiwa, Agbojule Bright, Monday Omoboye, and Monday Ikuesan
Photo: Idowu Ogunleye

Justice Iyabo Akinkugbe of the Lagos High Court on Thursday ordered the police to produce in court a 20-year-old man, Ebi Tosan, nabbed by the force in connection with the March 12, 2015 robbery of the Lekki branch of First City Monument Bank.

The deadly gang, which Tosan allegedly belonged to, reportedly killed at least five persons, including three policemen and a fish hawker, before carting away about N15m belonging to the bank.

The robbers, who reportedly stormed the bank in broad daylight, wearing military uniform, were said to have engaged the police in a gunfight on Admiralty Way, Lekki, Lagos State, for about 30 minutes before finally escaping through the lagoon in a speed boat.

The police, however, tracked down and apprehended four of the suspected members of the robbery gang on April 5, 2015.

Those arrested and paraded by the police were Tosan, Duke Odogbo, 38; Lawrence Kingsley, 31; and Ekelemo Kuete, 30.

But Tosan had headed for the court seeking a declaration that his arrest, torture and continued detention by the State Anti-Robbery Squad, Ikeja without admitting him to bail was a violation of his human rights, preserved by sections 34(1)(a), 35(1)(4) and Section 41 of the 1999 Constitution.

The suspect, who urged the court to order the police to immediately release him on bail, is also claiming N100m damages against the police for what he termed unlawful detention and torture.

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The suspect’s lawyer, Chief S.W. Baidi, argued that the continued detention of his client without bail was an “infringement and curtailment of the applicant’s constitutional right to personal liberty, freedom of movement and presumption of innocence.”

At the resumed hearing of the suspect’s fundamental rights enforcement action today, Justice Iyabo Akinkugbe reaffirmed an earlier order made by Justice Lateefa Okunnu on July 9 directing the police to produce the suspect in court.

Akingkugbe, who was a vacation judge, also granted an application by the suspect seeking urgent hearing of the case during the court’s long vacation.

The judge adjourned till August 10, 2015 for the police to bring the suspect to court.

Joined as the respondents in the suit are the Lagos State Commissioner of Police, the Officer-in-Charge of SARS, Ikeja, Abba Kyari, and the Attorney General of Lagos State.

In a 26-paragraph affidavit filed in support of the originating summons, Tamuno Amos, who addressed himself as the suspect’s uncle, said he believed that his nephew’s continued detention by the police was a deliberate act by the police to “extract a confessional statement from him on the alleged offence.”

Amos, who said he had not been allowed to see his nephew since his arrest, claimed that “the applicant is suffering on daily basis without access to food, bath and other conveniences and he may die in custody unless granted bail.”

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