EFCC gets court order to detain Fayose for two weeks, ex-gov to sue anti-graft agency

EFCC gets court order to detain Fayose for two weeks, ex-gov to sue anti-graft agency

The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission has obtained a court order from a Federal Capital Territory High Court to keep former Governor Ayodele Fa

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The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission has obtained a court order from a Federal Capital Territory High Court to keep former Governor Ayodele Fayose of Ekiti State for two weeks. The remand order, it was learnt, is subject to renewal which implies that Fayose could spend longer than two weeks in custody. A reliable source said, “We have obtained a court order to hold Fayose for at least two weeks pending investigation. He could be released earlier or later than two weeks depending on the outcome of investigation.”

Fayose is under probe for allegedly receiving N1.3bn from the Office of the National Security Adviser through a former Minister of State for Defence, Senator Musiliu Obanikoro, during the build-up to the 2014 governorship election in Ekiti State. However, sources within the commission revealed that Fayose was also under probe for allegedly receiving kickbacks from government contractors through his aide, Abiodun Agbele, who is currently standing trial for fraud. The EFCC source said, “We have many cases against Fayose being handled by three different teams. We cannot just arraign him immediately. We want to do a thorough job before taking him to court.”

Meanwhile, the lawyer to Fayose, Chief Mike Ozekhome (SAN), said on the telephone that if the EFCC failed to release the former governor on Thursday (today), the commission would be sued for breaching Fayose’s fundamental human rights. Ozekhome said the EFCC began investigating Fayose over two years ago and that he wondered why the agency would decide to hold him for over 24 hours. He said the commission could not force Fayose to write any statement as he reserved the right to remain silent. The senior advocate said any move to obtain a remand order would amount to illegality because the Supreme Court had made that clear.

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