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Pastor re-arraigned for touching minor’s breasts

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A pastor who is also a legal practitioner, Aka-Bashorun Olawale Akanni, was on Wednesday re-arraigned before Justice Hakeem Oshodi of the Lagos State High Court sitting in Ikeja for the alleged indecent treatment of a 14-year-old girl.

The Lagos State Government re-arraigned Akanni on a one-count charge bordering on the indecent treatment of a child.

The charge alleged that the defendant, who also serves as a pastor with the Redeemed Christian Church of God, indecently assaulted the minor at the Iwaya area of Lagos by fondling her breasts.

The prosecution counsel, Funmilola Aluko, told the court that the defendant had unlawfully fondled the breasts of the minor.

According to her, the offence committed contravened Section 135 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015.

The defendant, however, pleaded not guilty to the charge.

Following his plea, defence counsel, Morenikeji Oyekunle, prayed the court to allow her client to continue on the bail earlier granted by a Magistrate’s Court, arguing that he had complied with all conditions and was not a flight risk, being a lawyer and clergyman.

But Aluko opposed the bail request, urging the court to review the terms of release.

In his ruling, Justice Oshodi upheld the bail conditions previously granted by the Magistrate’s Court and directed the defence counsel to ensure the defendant’s presence at every adjourned date.

After the ruling, the prosecution informed the court that the complainant, now 27 years old, was present and ready to testify.

Led in evidence by the prosecution, the witness told the court that she met the defendant through her father, who was a member of the defendant’s church, the RCCG, on Lagos Island.

She said that in 2010, when she was about eight years old, she moved in with the defendant’s family to improve her academic performance and participate more actively in the church choir.

The witness alleged that during her stay, the defendant began to molest her sexually and physically.

She narrated how he would assault her and subject her to severe punishment whenever she performed poorly in school.

According to her, she eventually ran away from the defendant’s house and reported the matter to her parents.

She said she officially lodged a complaint in 2023 after learning of a similar incident involving another minor in the same church.

Under cross-examination, the witness told the court that she first confided in her class teacher, identified as Mrs Akingbeoyewa, about the alleged abuse while still living with the defendant.

At the close of her testimony, the defence requested an adjournment to enable it to obtain the Certified True Copy of the witness’s evidence.

The prosecution opposed the application, arguing that further delay could cause emotional distress to the witness.

Justice Oshodi granted the adjournment but invoked Section 193 of the Administration of Criminal Justice Law, awarding a cost of N50,000,in favour of the witness, to be paid by the defence before the next trial date.

The judge subsequently adjourned the case to December 9, 2025, for continuation of the trial.

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Crime

PHOTOS: Hollywood producer, David Pearce, jailed until the year 2170 for r@ping and murd£ring two models

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Disgraced Hollywood producer, David Pearce, has been jailed until 2171 after he r@ped and k!lled two models.

Hilda Marcela Cabrales-Arzola, 26, and her model friend Christy Giles, 24, from Alabama, were plied with fatal cocktail drugs by Pearce on November 13, 2021, at his Beverly Hills home after meeting at a warehouse party a few hours earlier.

The girls were then dumped and left for dead outside different hospitals in Los Angeles by two masked men.

Pearce, 42, was found guilty in February for k!lling the two women as well as a series of brutal s£x abuses and rapes on seven Jane Does he targeted between 2007 and 2021, who later came forward to share their horrific experiences.

On Wednesday, Judge Eleanor Hunter sentenced him to 146 years behind bars for the heinous crimes. The total included the maximum sentence of 25 years to life for each murder, plus additional sentences for the r@pe victims.

‘You’re the worst kind of criminal, Mr Pearce,’ Hunter told Pearce, adding that he thought he was a hotsh0t who had ‘the whole LA vibe thing going on’ with his ‘duck lips’ and ‘slicked back hair.’

‘You’re charming, you’re smart, you’re a manipulator, and you’re extremely goal-driven.

‘You fit the role … Not once have I seen a genuine issuance of some sort of remorse. No sense of compassion for Hilda and Christie or anyone else,’ Hunter added.

Cabrales-Arzola, a Mexican native, was revived by hospital staff but a lack of oxygen had left her brain de@d.

Her mother and sister rushed to her bedside from abroad, where she remained in a coma for nearly two weeks.

She died on November 24, just five days before her 27th birthday. Giles was already dead when she was dropped off at the hospital.

During the trial, it was revealed that Pearce told a friend ‘dead girls can’t talk’ which prosecutors said indicated he wanted the girls to perish so they couldn’t report him to police.

He allegedly recruited his actor friend Brandt Osborn, 42, to help him dispose of the bodies.

But the jury failed to reach a verdict on whether Osborn, who pleaded not guilty, should be convicted on two counts of being an accessory after the fact.

The jury heard how the two men waited 11 hours before they dumped the women’s lifeless bodies outside two different hospitals and fled.

As doctors tried in vain to resuscitate the women, the two men ate a meal at El Pollo Loco.

The Los Angeles Times reported that the LAPD presented r@pe allegations against Pearce at least three times between 2007 and 2020, each with twisted similarities to his murder case.

‘The criminal justice system failed. First, the women who came forward, then those who followed, and ultimately, my sister and Christy,’ she told the Daily Mail.

‘They paid the highest possible price for a failure that never should have happened. Had the system acted when it should have, he never would have crossed paths with them.’

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Court orders forfeiture of $49,700 found in INEC ex-REC’s home

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The Federal High Court in Abuja on Wednesday, ordered the permanent forfeiture of $49,700 allegedly recovered from Dr Nura Ali, a former Resident Electoral Commissioner of the Independent National Electoral Commission in Sokoto State, during the 2023 general elections.

Justice Emeka Nwite gave the order after counsel for the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission , Osuobeni Akponimisingha, moved a motion seeking the final forfeiture of the money.

Akponimisingha informed the court that the ICPC had complied with its earlier order directing temporary forfeiture of the funds and that a public notice had been issued inviting any interested parties to show cause why the money should not be permanently forfeited to the Federal Government.

He noted, however, that no objections or representations had been received since the publication.

“We, therefore, seek an order permanently forfeiting the sum of $49,700 to the Federal Government, in view of the compliance with the interim order and the absence of any opposition,” Akponimisingha said.

In his ruling, Justice Nwite held that the application had merit.

“I have listened to the submission of learned counsel for the applicant and carefully examined the supporting affidavit. I am satisfied that the application is meritorious. Consequently, it is hereby granted,” the judge ruled.

The trial judge had, on December 30, 2024, granted an interim forfeiture order following an ex parte motion jointly filed by the ICPC and the Department of State Services.

The motion, marked FHC/ABJ/CS/1846/2024, sought temporary forfeiture of the recovered sum pending the outcome of further investigations.

The application, signed by Mr Usman Dauda, Director of Legal Services for the DSS, and filed by Akponimisingha on behalf of the ICPC, stated that the money was found during a search conducted by DSS operatives Dr Ali’s residence in Kano.

According to the supporting affidavit deposed to by  a litigation officer with the ICPC,Iliya Markus, intelligence reports alleged that Ali received bribes from political stakeholders while serving as INEC REC in Sokoto State.

Markus stated that during the search, $49,700 was recovered, and Ali, in his statement, claimed that the money was a gift from former Sokoto State governor, Aminu Tambuwal, and Senator Aliyu Wamakko.

He also noted that Ali later wrote to the DSS requesting the release of the seized funds.

The ICPC maintained that INEC does not pay its staff in US dollars, and that the recovered money was suspected to be proceeds of unlawful activity.

Following the interim order, the court had directed the publication of a notice in a national newspaper inviting interested parties to show cause why the funds should not be forfeited.

After confirming compliance and noting that no objections were received, the court granted the ICPC’s request for the final forfeiture of the funds to the Federal Government.

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Ecobank $42m Fraud: Court adjourns case against Briton, Indians to Jan 27

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The Federal High Court in Lagos has fixed January 27, 2026, for further hearing in the $42.48m, fraud case filed against a Briton, two Indian nationals, and their companies over alleged defrauding of Ecobank Nigeria Limited.

The defendants, who are Marcus Wade, a British national and chairman of Wilben Trade Limited; Prem Garg and Devashish Garg, both Indian nationals, are being prosecuted alongside their firms, Wilben Trade Limited (Dubai) and Agrico Agbe Limited (Nigeria).

The case, instituted by the Office of the Attorney-General of the Federation, alleged that the defendants conspired to defraud Ecobank under the false pretext of using the funds to import parboiled rice into Nigeria in 2015.

At the resumed hearing of the case recently, Justice Akintayo Aluko adjourned the matter following the absence of both the prosecution and the defendants.

A lawyer, A. A. Akinteye, who represented the defendants, informed the court that the prosecutor had requested an adjournment, citing engagement in another matter at the Court of Appeal.

The defence did not object and asked the court to fix another date for the continuation of the case.

Meanwhile, in compliance with earlier freezing orders placed on the defendants’ bank accounts, representatives of three banks, Zenith Bank, Guaranty Trust Bank, and Citibank, informed the court that neither the defendants nor their companies maintained accounts with their institutions.

Justice Aluko subsequently adjourned the matter to January 27, 2026, for further hearing.

In the charge marked FHC/L/562C/2022, the defendants were alleged to have, between May and September 2015, conspired to commit the offences punishable under Sections 421 and 422 of the Criminal Code Act, Cap C38, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004.

One of the counts read “That you, Prem Garg, Devashish Garg (both of Indian nationality), Agrico Agbe Limited (a company registered in Nigeria), Wilben Trade Limited, Dubai (a company registered in the United Arab Emirates), and Marcus Wade (Chairman of Wilben Trade Limited, Dubai) of British nationality, between May and September 2015, at Ecobank Plc, Lagos, within the jurisdiction of this Honourable Court, conspired among yourselves to cause Ecobank Plc to deliver monies to the tune of $42,485,900, which was intended for the importation of Indian parboiled rice, but which you failed to utilise for the contract.”

The defendants have yet to appear in court to take their pleas despite multiple summons.

Several applications filed by them to halt their arraignment, prosecution, and to set aside bench warrants issued for their arrest have been dismissed by the court.

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