After many successful
runs, a man described as an oil tycoon has been detained by the
operatives of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission,EFCC, over
sundry financial offences. Shehu Badamasi, who is reported to have duped
a Lagos-based businessman of N2.3bn was hauled into EFCC custody on
Saturday and has been questioned on many other ‘deals’ which deprived
victims of their hard-earned money.
He is being grilled by operatives from the Special Bank Fraud Unit of
the EFCC, who immediately confronted him with evidence of issuing a dud
cheque of N100 million to another client in the course of doing business
together, thereby breaching financial laws.
“Yes, he has been with us and we are talking to him on all the issues in
the petition written by a Lagos-based businessman, who claimed he was
defrauded of N2.3 billion and another who lost N100 million to the same
suspect,” a source in EFCC said last night.
A competent source said that the agency was aware of the several claims
that the suspect is well rooted within the security agencies and the
corridors of power, saying that the commission would do its job in
accordance with the laws.
Those who reported Badamasi to the EFCC, said they did that because of
the no-nonsense posture of the EFCC Chairman, Ibrahim Magu, who has
vowed to deal ruthlessly with corrupt individuals and organizations.
Another source described Badamasi as someone not new to the security
agencies who has always found his way around.
It will be recalled that the Office of the National Security Adviser, in
conjunction with the Ministry of Defence, had raised a high-powered
panel to investigate suspected illegal bunkering activities of Shehu
Badamasi’s vessel, known as M.T Al- Khaf, early this year.
However, the suspect became elusive and the work of the NSA panel died
naturally and nothing was ever heard about it again despite claims that
the vessel was deeply involved in oil bunkering in the Niger Delta
region. The vessel had earlier been arrested by the Nigerian Navy in
2010 for illegal bunkering but released under questionable circumstances
in 2012.
It was learnt that the EFCC had secured a warrant to keep the suspect
for 17 days to enable the operatives question him extensively on all the
issues raised against him by aggrieved persons. It was not clear if he
would be granted administrative bail or charged to court based on
available evidence at the disposal of his interrogators.
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/08/oil-tycoon-efcc-net-n2-3b-scam-n100m-dud-cheques/
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/08/oil-tycoon-efcc-net-n2-3b-scam-n100m-dud-cheques/
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