The DSS revealed that it has concrete evidence against the judges in
its custody, and vows to go after more judicial officers.
The Department of State Service (DSS) has concrete evidence of monumental corruption against the judges in its custody, Vanguard reports.
Details
of what necessitated the DSS sting operations over the weekend against
judges of the Supreme, Appeal and High courts have emerged.
The
newspaper quoted a competent source, a DSS official, to have disclosed
that some of the judges used their wives, children's names and pictures
to open accounts in various banks, where billions of Naira were saved.
According
to the source, these family members were unaware such accounts existed
in their names - the Bank Verification Number (BVN) system exposed the
accounts.
"As we speak now, we have
incontrovertible evidence of brazen corruption against the seven judges
in our custody and we are ready to charge them to court, even tomorrow,"
the source said.
"When we brought in most of the
children, wives and relatives of the suspects based on the papers we got
from the banks, they did not even have an idea that their names had
been used by the judges to open such accounts.
"But
you see under the Bank Verification Number, you must put in your
passports, name, signature and others. So, for some of the judges, who
used fake names and their wives names to open the accounts into which
they paid in the proceeds of crime, they foolishly appended their
signatures or used their pictures, something that gave them out.
"From
what we have found out, some of the suspects acted foolishly in
committing the offence because they cannot prove that even if their
children were to earn N1 million monthly since they were born till date,
none of them can accumulate the amount of money we have traced to their
accounts and the type of property they have.
"Look,
it may interest you to know that one of the two Supreme Court judges in
our custody has a property worth N1.5 billion in one of the South-South
states. If we may ask, where did he get the money to set up such
project?”
"As far as we are concerned, there is
nothing unusual in arresting corrupt judges and taking them to court
because it would be an offence against the nation to continue to turn a
blind eye to mounting corruption in the judiciary."
It
was also revealed that another judge disguised as a shopper in one of
the supermarkets in the country and collected bribes in Dollars from an
undisclosed person. The transaction was said to have been caught on
CCTV.
The source said that the National Judicial
Council (NJC) which is supposed to be responsible for tracking and
punishing corrupt judges, has seemingly looked the other way on the
being perpetrated by the judges.
The source cited the case of the three judges who were arrested on Friday as a typical example.
"The
NJC, having been satisfied that the three judges demanded and collected
heavy bribes, merely recommended the retirement of the one who took a
bribe of N200 million and asked him to be paying back in bits to the
complainant. So, we ask, what happens to the proceeds of crimes? No
answer was given until we stepped in."
"Similarly,
the two other judges were retired with full benefits, smiled away.
Since then, the NJC has not been cooperating with us and we cannot allow
the rot to continue in the interest of Nigeria," the source said.
The source, however dared several persons and organizations condemning the raid to take the agency to court over the matter.
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