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CCT: Supreme Court fixes date for ruling on Saraki’s case

The Supreme Court has set July 6 as date for delivering judgment in an
appeal filed by the Senate President, Dr Bukola Saraki, challenging
the ruling of the Court of Appeal which asked the Code of Conduct
Tribunal (CCT) to try him on three of the 18 counts brought against
him by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

The apex court fixed the date on Thursday in Abuja after hearing the
appeal and cross-appeal filed by the Senate President and the
anti-graft agency over allegations of false asset declaration.

Senator Saraki is contending that there is no prima facia case against
him and as such, the apex court should uphold his no case submission
which was upheld by the CCT.

Counsel to the Senate President, Mr Kanu Agabi SAN told the court that
the law was not followed in filing the case against his client.

He added that section 15 of the Code of Conduct Bureau (CCB) Act
stipulates that only an authorised person can verify whether a
person's asset declaration was properly done or not.

Agabi maintained that, in the extant case, all four witnesses
presented by the prosecution at the CCT did not meet the requirements
stipulated by law.

He, therefore, asked the court to uphold his appeal and dismiss all
the charges against him.

The prosecuting counsel, Mr Rotimi Jacobs SAN, who filed a
cross-appeal, asked the court to quash the no case submission upheld
by the CCT and ask the tribunal to retry the Senate President on all
18 counts preferred against him.

Jacobs argued that the section of the law relied on by the Senate
President was not mandatory and that based on a whistleblower
information or petition, the Attorney-General felt there was a breach
of the law and ordered the investigation which led to the prosecution
of Saraki.

When asked if Saraki was invited based on the findings of the
investigation, the prosecutor answered in the affirmative, and when
asked who the Senate President made a statement to, he told the court
that it was the EFCC and not the CCB.

He, however, insisted that the Senate President had a case to answer
and as such, his cross-appeal seeking to quash the no-case submission
upheld by the CCT should be allowed.

DAILY POST reports that the appellate court in December 2017 agreed in
part with the lower court but held that he had a case to answer in
counts 4, 5, and 6 which had to do with the purchase of properties in
the Ikoyi area of Lagos State.

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