Olisa Metuh's Retrial Date Fixed By Federal High Court

As the legal battle between the EFCC and embattled lawyer and Statesman, Olisa Metuh trudges on, a Federal High Court in Abuja on Monday has fixed June 22 to hear a suit filed by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) for the retrial of Chief Olisa Metuh, former National Publicity Secretary, Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

The court fixed the date following the EFCC’s appeal at the Supreme Courtl of the judgment delivered by the Court of Appeal in favour of Metuh, the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reliably gathered.

Although the matter was listed on the Monday’s cause list, the trial judge, Emeka Nwite, was not in court.

Africa Today News, New York reports that the suit marked: FHC/ABJ/CR/05/2016 between the Federal Republic of Nigeria Vs. Olisa Metuh and another, was listed as number 16 on the cause list.

Read Also: My Travails Were All Politically Motivated, Metuh Speaks

But due to the absence of the judge, the matter could not go on and the case adjourned until June 22 for mention.

It was also reported on Feb. 15 that the retrial of the ex-PDP spokesman had been reassigned to Nwite, who was recently transferred to the Abuja division.

Prior to the reassignment, the matter was before a sister judge, Obiora Egwuatu.

The matter was assigned to Justice Egwuatu last year following his transfer to Abuja division of the court.
Egwatu had fixed Oct. 14, 2021, for Metuh’s re-arraignment after the Court of Appeal’s decision which nullified the trial court’s judgment.

But on the adjourned date, the judge was not in court. He was said to have gone for the judges’ seminar in Lagos State.

The court, therefore, fixed Feb. 15 for the former PDP spokesman’s retrial. But reports have shown that details at Court 9, where the matter was expected to take place showed that the case was not on the cause list.The Court of Appeal, Abuja had, on Dec. 16, 2020, nullified a Federal High Court judgement that convicted and sentenced Metuh to seven years imprisonment for money laundering.

In a unanimous decision, a three-man panel of justices of the appellate court held that the judgment of the trial judge, Okon Abang, delivered against Metuh on Feb. 25, 2020, was tainted with bias.

The appellate court held that Abang had by disparaging remarks he made in the judgement betrayed his premeditated mindset against the defendant (Metuh) whom he accused of writing various petitions against him.

According to Justice Stephen Adah, who delivered the lead verdict of the appellate court, allowing the trial court’s verdict to stand “will set a dangerous precedent.”

Consequently, it voided the conviction and sentence that was handed to Metuh and his firm, Destra Investment Limited, and remitted the case file back to the high court for a re-trial by another judge.

 

Africa Today News, New York

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