On Tuesday, the Lagos High Court resumed the trial of undergraduate Chidinma Ojukwu for the alleged murder of former Super TV CEO Usifo Ataga.
An audio recording of a phone call between Ms. Ojukwu and Abubakar Mohammed, a security guard at the apartment where Mr. Ataga is alleged to have been murdered, was played in court.
Along with Adedapo Quadri and her sister Chioma Egbuchu, Ojukwu is accused of theft and forgery.
In the audio recording, Muhammed asked, “Who is this?” Ojukwu, the first defendant in the charge, responded, “It is me”, and then asked the security guard about Ataga’s car.
She asked, “Is the car around?”
“Which car?” Mohammed responded, and Ojukwu said, “the Range Rover, that my oga’s car, the black Range Rover.”
The court also heard when Mohammed asked her why she had not returned since Tuesday night that she left, and she said that she went for a meeting.
Mohammed then asked her how about Ataga, and she said he was fine.
In the conversation, the court further heard as Mohammed told Ojukwu that since she was not around, he could not go and knock on Ojukwu’s room door.
He further asked her when she would be coming back. and she said, “I am coming.”
While she was saying she was coming, Mohammed asked her to use her phone number to call him, so that he could have the number. She agreed.
Earlier, Lagos State deputy director of public prosecutions, Adenike Oluwafemi, asked the ninth prosecution witness, DSP Olusegun Bamidele, to confirm his testimony of May 9, when he told the court about the security guard’s conversation with Ojukwu.
Bamidele confirmed the evidence and recalled how he testified that Mohammed transferred the audio conversation to his Infinix Hot 4.
He said that the audio was attached to his office desktop.
He told the court that, with the help of a senior colleague with deep knowledge of information and communication technology, it was turned into a compact disc.
The witness said that he would be able to identify the disc.
When the disc was shown to him, he identified it and also told the court that he attached a certificate of compliance to it.
The prosecution tendered the disc in evidence but the first defendant’s counsel, Onwuka Egwu, objected on grounds that Bamidele (PW9) was not the maker of the disc.
He said “The alleged maker of the CD is Mohammed (PW2).”
He argued that there was no satisfactory reason for prosecution to desire that the court should accept a ‘hearsay document’ when the author had given evidence as PW2.
Egwu cited Section 83 1 (a) (ii), 2011 of the Evidence Act and said, “The prosecution has not laid any of this foundation for tendering of the document through Segun Bamidele.
“If the prosecution actually wants to rely on this document, PW2 ought to have been called,” he argued.
However, Quadri’s counsel, Babatunde Busari, did not object, but counsel to Egbuchu, the third defendant, C. J. Jiakponna, aligned himself with the first defendnat’s counsel.
He said, “Due process must be followed. This is a court of law, they did not lay the foundation, the author of this document is supposed to appear before your lordship. This is a hearsay.”
In her reply, Oluwafemi said, “It is trite law that whatever the investigation police officer gathered as evidence is a direct evidence and not hearsay. Finally, admissibility is based on relevance.”
In a short ruling, Justice Yetunde Adesanya dismissed the objection of the defence.
Adesanya held that, on June 16, 2021, PW2, gave evidence about how he asked Ojukwu some questions and she answered.
“The maker of the audio recording has already been called to this court, and there is no requirement of the presentation of the gadget, objection is hereby dismissed, I so hold,’’ she said.
The audio CD was marked as Exhibit PW22A and the certificate of compliance marked as Exhibit PW23B.
Adesanya adjourned the case until October 6 for continuation.