Former Minister of Special Duties and Inter-Governmental Affairs, Kabiru Turaki, was dismissed and acquitted of money laundering allegations by a Federal High Court in Abuja on Monday.
In a judgement on the defense’s no-case submission, Justice Inyang Ekwo found that the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission had failed to establish a relationship between Turaki and his co-defendants and the crimes charged in the 16 counts.
The prosecution, he said, had failed to prove a prima facie case against them.
Defendants have removed all of the evidence of the prosecution witnesses summoned in the case during cross-examination, according to Justice Ekwo, who described the EFCC’s 12 witnesses as “tainted witnesses.”
The judge further noted that it was established during cross-examination that Turaki was not a signatory to the account of the ministry and did not authorise any payment or make any transfer of funds.
The court aligned with the argument that held the former minister was not a member of the Ministerial Tender Board and that there was no inflow of funds from the account of the ministry to Turaki’s company.
It had been reported that the EFCC, in the 16 counts, had accused the ex-minister alongside his former Special Assistant, Sampson Okpetu, and two firms – Samtee Essentials Limited and Pasco Investment Limited, of money laundering charges involving about N854m.
The EFCC alleged that the ex-minister used the two companies: Samtee Essentials Limited, and Pasco Investment Limited – to perpetrate the alleged fraud while he was serving as the Minister of Special Duties and Inter-Governmental Affairs, and during his stint as a supervisory minister under the Ministry of Labour.
Turaki presided over the Ministry of Special Duties and Inter-governmental Affairs from 2013 to 2015 and served as the Supervising Minister of Labour from 2014 to 2015 in former President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration.