Ahmed Idris, the former Accountant General of the Federation, accused the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) of manipulation, stating that he was deceived into confessing to the allegations against him.
According to the ex-AGF, the EFCC conveyed to him their plan to use his involvement to implicate not only the Minister of Finance but also some governors.
Standing trial on 14 charges of criminal breach of trust and stealing totaling N109.5 billion, Idris and his co-defendants, Godfrey Akindele, Mohammed Usman, and Gezawa Commodity Market and Exchange Limited, were arraigned for the alleged offenses.
In the court proceedings on Thursday, Hayatudeen Ahmed, a prosecution witness, read a statement dated May 16, 2022, attributed to Idris. According to the statement, Idris stated that the EFCC had pledged non-usage of any information he shared against him.
Chris Uche (SAN), representing Idris, led the cross-examination of the witness, Hayatudeen Ahmed, making him read the statement during the Thursday court session.
Facing the witness, Uche said, “My client told me he was deceived into making the statements after the investigators assured him that he would not be prosecuted and that he was not the main target, that the Minister of Finance and some governors were the main target. The governors are those receiving derivation funds.”
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However, the prosecution witness maintained that the EFCC gave the embattled ex-accountant general no such assurances.
“There was no such assurance. The statements made by Idris on the 25th, 26th, and 31st of May 2022 and those made on the 1st, 6th, 10th, 20th of June 2022, and 5 July 2022 were made willingly by the defendants contrary to the claims that they were allegedly made under duress by the defendants,” the witness said.
Earlier, when the hearing commenced on Thursday, the counsel for the EFCC, Rotimi Jacobs(SAN), applied to tender a video evidence which contained a recorded interview of the first to third defendants at the Commission’s Monitoring Unit Chairman’s office as exhibit before the court.
Jacobs said the video clip was to counter the defendants’ claims that they were interrogated in the absence of their lawyers and without video recordings, as required by the Administration Of Criminal Justice Act.
Idris’lawyer, however, objected to the admissibility of the video clip, contending that it was just sent to him a day before the hearing and he needed time to know what was contained in the compact disc.
Other counsels aligned themselves with Uche’s submission.
However, Justice Yusuf Halilu, in a brief ruling, overruled their objections.
“Admissibility and value are two different things. A document once admitted can also be useless or otherwise. The Defendants did not give reasons the video should not be admitted but complained about the time they were served. This video is hereby admitted as evidence,” the judge held.
The further hearing in the matter was adjourned till March 20.