Former Governor of Delta State, James Ibori has filed an appeal in the British Court of Appeal against his 2012 conviction.
Feelers to that effect emerged from the former governor’s Media Assistant, Tony Eluemunor, who said that Ibori’s counsel informed the Southwark London court on Friday March 17, that they had filed the appeal on Ibori’s behalf. He said the court thereafter adjourned the on-going proceedings on the second confiscation hearing indefinitely.
“The original three-week confiscation hearing before Judge Pitts in September 2013 was unable to make any finding of theft from the Delta State,” he stated.
According to him, the British Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) had, since February 2016, been undertaking a mammoth disclosure exercise and so far substantial material evidencing the police corruption and misconduct had been disclosed.
The CPS has gagged the media from reporting on this, he said.
Eluemunor said David Rose of the London Mail and Sunday newspaper as well as other reporters had made applications in open court for the release of this material.
“Mr. Rose, for instance, argued that it was in the public interest to do so, as the Ibori and linked cases were said to have been corrupted by Metropolitan Police corruption, prosecution misconduct and significant non-disclosure of key material which undermines the convictions.
“For instance, a BBC report of July 2, 2016, titled, “Ibori lawyer awarded £20,000 by Crown Prosecution Service” mentioned police and prosecution’s misbehavior as well as their massive misleading of the courts.
“According to the report, the extraordinary payment is just the latest twist in a legal case that has led to investigations into allegations of police corruption and a cover-up of key evidence”.
The BBC also reported: “In May (2016), the CPS acknowledged that it had intelligence that “supports the assertion” that a Metropolitan Police officer was paid for information.
On Tuesday 7 June 2016, Stephen Kamlish, QC, representing BhadreshGohil submitted further corroboration of the serious misconduct by the prosecutors in the case – Sasha Wass QC and Esther Shutzer-Weissman- and how both knowingly conspired to pervert the course of justice by orchestrating a cover-up of the corruption and their own past misconducts. However, the most shocking episode concerns the willful misleading of the Court of Appeal in the Gohil appeal of 2014. When main stream British media, The Times, Guardian, Sun, Telegraph, etc, focused public interest on the misconducts, the National Crime Agency (NCA) conducted an inquiry (opened an inquiry).
Mid-September 2016, the NCA’s report appeared; it confirmed that police officers, working within the elite Department for International Development-funded Police Unit, were corrupt, and had withheld substantial material from the defenceteams, but bizarrely stated that the convictions of James Ibori and others including BhadreshGohil“are safe” – though obtained through acts that clearly fall below the high standards of the British legal system. This conclusion will now be challenged by the appeal process, not only by Ibori but also by all other defendants.
Most of all, in a London-based Ben TV interview, Lambertus de Boer, one of the bankers jailed in the case has dropped this bombshell: “DFID entered into an agreement with the Nigerian Authorities in 2005 claiming the first £25m from all funds recovered during confiscation proceedings from Ibori and Ibori linked cases…” would be paid to DFID before a penny is returned to Nigeria”.
On this disclosure, a Nigerian newspaper commentator said: “So, a treasure hunt is on. No wonder the Crown Prosecution Service’s (CPS) public statements have been exceptionally misleading. DFID/CPS have repeatedly claimed that some $250 million was alleged to have been stolen by Ibori from Delta State. But at the 2013 Ibori confiscation hearing at Southwark Crown Court, it became clear that His Honour Judge Anthony Pitts, having heard the underlying evidence, was unable to make any such findings in relation to the DFID/POCU allegations. So, the Judge could not deliver a ruling; instead he ordered a new trial even though the prosecution and the defense had made their final submissions”.
De Boer, who has maintained his innocence, claimed that he was a victim of the same DfID-funded corrupt Metropolitan Police Service (“MPS”) and Crown Prosecution as was BhadreshGohil, a co-defendant in the V-Mobile transaction and have appealed against their convictions.
“My appeal is based not only on the staggering police corruption but also given the heretofore non-disclosed material which clearly demonstrates the absence of any fraud/money laundering in the V-Mobile Case, it is now clear that prior to the commencement of the original December 2010 V Mobile trial, we were denied proper disclosure”, De Boer explained.
His words: “The catalogue of lies and deceptions by officers of the Met police is currently under an internal investigation. The evidence shows numerous sworn Witness statements by police officers which contradict each other.
“In a brazen attempt to win this matter the Met police ignored all establish procedures and guidelines, instead choosing to manipulate the evidence to suit the purpose.
“The Metropolitan Police dishonesty began early in the proceedings. Transcripts reveal as early as October 2007 in the original restraint proceedings, DC McDonald was openly caught lying in cross examination before HHJ Hardy at Southwark Crown Court. What is however clear is that the degree of mischief, created by the Met police, has been considerable”.
Ibori’s appeal is expected to follow the arguments Gohil and De Boer opened even as it will open several new ones.