The Department of State Services (DSS) raid on some judges has been the issue in the media
since Saturday when the news was made public.
Nigerians,
including legal practitioners, have been divided over the operation, but
the presidency has tried to justify the action of the secret police, saying it
was aimed at ridding the judiciary of corruption.
While some have been
released others are currently in detention. Below is a lowdown on judges
affected in the first of such operation, as the DSS has vowed to carry out
more.
ADENIYI ADEMOLA
Adeniyi is a judge of the
federal high court, Abuja. He is the grandson of Adetokunbo Ademola, whom the
colonial masters appointed chief justice of Nigeria in 1958. He remained in
that position till 1972, making him the longest serving chief justice in the
history of Nigeria.
TheCable understands that
Ademola has been very controversial even among lawyers who often question how
he arrives at his judgments.
Adeniyi was the judge in
whose court the DSS arraigned Sambo Dasuki, former national security adviser.
He also presided over the forgery case which the federal government brought
against Senate President Bukola Saraki, Ike Ekweremadu, his deputy, and that
which sacked Ahmadu Fintri as acting governor of Adamawa state. Adeniyi
comes from Ogun state
SYLVESTER NGWUTA
Ngwuta is a supreme court
judge who hails from Ebonyi state. Having served at a high court in Abia state,
and the appeal court, he was elevated to the supreme court in 2011. He has been
a member of several election petition tribunal, governorship and legislative
house election petition tribunal since 1999.
He was a member of the
Nasarawa state tribunal, which sat in Lafia, the state capital in February
1999, the national assembly election petition tribunal,
Plateau state, in Jos in April 1999, among others.
He presided over the ruling
that affirmed Olusegun Mimiko as governor of Ondo state in May 2013 and also
presided over the ruling of the Supreme Court that affirmed Kayode Fayemi as
governor elect of Ekiti state, and recently he affirmed the election of Yahaya
Bello, governor of Kogi state.
INYANG OKORO
Inyang Okoro is an indigene
of Akwa Ibom state. He was a judge of the high court of Akwa Ibom. Okoro got
elevated to the position of justice of the court of appeal in 2006. Eight years
later, the senate confirmed his appointment as a justice of the supreme court
justice, and he was sworn in by Aloma Mukhtar, the first female chief justice
of Nigeria in November.
In January, he delivered
judgment on a friction involving factions of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)
in Anambra state. Okoro’s panel held that the Ejike Oguebego-led PDP executive
had the sole right to hold the primary election in Anambra. Back then, the
judgment was misinterpreted to mean that Andy Ubah and Stella Oduah, two
senators from the state had lost their seats since they emerged through primary
elections that were conducted by another faction. The issue was later resolved with
the explanation that the apex court was silent on the aspect involving seats of
the lawmakers.
NNAMDI DIMGBA
Dimgba was in the top
two of his class at the University of Nigeria. He was called to the
Nigerian Bar in September 1999. He holds a BCL degree from the University of
Oxford (Worcester College), a Certificate in US Law and Legal Methods from
Suffolk University in Boston, USA and a PhD in Competition Law from the
University of the West of England (UWE), Bristol, where he was also a law
lecturer in corporate and competition law until 31 August, 2006. President
Muhammadu Buhari appointed him a federal high court judge in November.
A day to his arrest, Dimgba chided the DSS for flouting an order to remand Umar
Mohammed, a retired air commodore, to prison. Mohammed was ordered to be
remanded in Kuje prison on Thursday and on Friday, the DSS failed to produce
him at a hearing for his bail application.
KABI AUTA
Auta is an indigene of
Borno state. A graduate of Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, he was called to bar
in 1977. Auta was the attorney-general of Borno between 1988 and 1989. After a
year in office, he was appointed a chief judge. He was the national president,
Magistrate Association from 1986-1988. He was also the chairman, civil
disturbances tribunal, Port-Harcourt in 1995.
In 1999, he chaired the
national assembly election tribunal for Anambra State 2010. He was later
appointed a judge at the Kano state high court. Two weeks ago, the National
Judicial Council (NJC) recommended Auta for prosecution over an allegation of
collecting N197m from one Kabiru Yakassi who wrote a petition to the NJC.
NJC also asked Abdullahi
Ganduje, governor of Kano state, to dismiss him, and also recommended that Auta
should be handed over to the assistant inspector-general of police, zone 1,
Kano, for prosecution.
MUAZU PINDIGA
Pindiga is a judge of the
Gombe state high court. He was the chairman of the Rivers state election
petition tribunal, but was replaced following a petition that he had been
bribed by a key actor in the election.
MOHAMMED TSAMIYA
Tsamiya was born on
December 31, 1949. He was a judge of the court of appeal in Ilorin. Before his
posting to Ilorin, he served as a justice of the high court, Sokoto. Citing a
petition written against him based on election appeal panel in the Owerri division
of the court during the 2015 general election, the NJC asked President Buhari
to compulsorily retire him. One Nnamdi Iro had accused the judge of demanding
the sum of N200m on three different occasions to influence the court ruling.
INNOCENT UMEZULIKE
Umezulike, the immediate
past chief judge of Enugu state, was born in Rivers state on September 21,
1953. He obtained a bachelor’s degree in law from the University of Lagos in
1976, and was appointed a legal adviser in the Nigerian Television Authority (NTA)
that same year. He lectured at the Nnamdi Azikiwe University, where he rose to
the position of an associate professor. The federal government nominated him to
serve in the supreme court of the Gambia.
The judicial council
recommended him for sack over allegations of corruption. He was accused of
delivering judgment in a case 126 days after final addresses were adopted by
parties. During his book launch, he was said to have allegedly received a
donation of N10m from a businessman, Arthur Eze, while two cases in which Eze
was said to have had vested interest, were in the judge’s court.
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