A Court of
Appeal sitting in Lagos on Thursday discharged and acquitted Raymond Omatseye ,
the former Director- General (D-G), Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety
Agency (NIMASA), convicted of awarding contracts above his threshold.
Omatseye
was on May 20, 2016, convicted and sentenced to five years’ imprisonment by
Justice Rita Ofili-Ajumogobia of a Federal High Court in Lagos over aN1.5billion-contract
scam.
Ofili-Ajumogobia
ruled then that Omatseye had awarded contracts worth N2.5 million above his
stipulated threshold, and accordingly, convicted him in 24 out of 27-count
charge.
Omatseye
was sued by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).
The
ex-NIMASA boss, however, through his lawyer, Mr Edoka Onyeke, went on appeal.
On his
grounds of appeal, his lawyer argued that Omatseye was persecuted and not
prosecuted, stressing that contract splitting though existing in the law, the
approval above threshold does not exist.
He also
argued that the judge threw out a Jan. 23, 2013, letter from the Bureau of
Public Procurement (BPP), which cleared Omatseye of any wrong doing while in
the agency.
Onyeke
argued that the letter was addressed to the former President Goodluck Jonathan,
signed by Emeka Ezeh, former D-G of BPP.
He said
that the letter had informed the president that after a scrutiny of the case,
the Bureau was of the view that the 27 charges were breaches brought under sections
of the Procurement Act.
He also
said the breaches dealt with administrative breaches rather than real offences
under the Act that could attract conviction or sanctions from the regular
courts.
He said,
surprisingly, the lower court jettisoned the report admitted as evidence in
court. It, however, discharged and acquitted Omatseye on a three-count charge
bordering on contract splitting.
Onyeke
said that the court, however, sentenced Omatseye to five years’ imprisonment on
24-count charge of N2.5million approval above his threshold, which does not
exist in law.
But the
appellate court, after going through the grounds of appeal, held among others,
that the trial court did not properly evaluate the evidence.
The court,
presided over by Justice Yargata Nimpar, resolved all five grounds of appeal in
the appellant’s favour.
Other
members of the three-man panel were: Justice Adejumo Obaseki and Justice
Abraham Georgewill.
In
reaching its decision, the court considered four issues for determination,
including whether under Section 16(1)(A) of the Public Procurement Act 2007,
approval for spending over the threshold constitutes an offence.
Justice
Nimpar, who read the judgment, considered whether the trial court properly
evaluated the evidence.
She said:
“I found that it did not.
“The long
and short of it, is that, the appeal succeeds. The prosecution should not ride
roughshod over the Constitution.
“The
judiciary will do the war on corruption more harm by declaring someone a
criminal, where no offence has been committed.
“I find
merit in the appeal. The conviction is hereby set aside and the appellant is
hereby discharged and acquitted”.
The News
Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Omatseye’s kinsmen who were in court
dressed in their native attire were happy with the judgment. (NAN)
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