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Abia court acquits ex-finance commissioner of graft

By Gordi Udeajah, Umuahia
22 February 2022   |   2:41 am
Former Abia State Finance Commissioner and serving Provost of the State College of Education (Technical), Arochukwu, Dr Phillips Nto, has been acquitted and discharged by Abia State High Court

Okezie Ikpeazu

Former Abia State Finance Commissioner and serving Provost of the State College of Education (Technical), Arochukwu, Dr Phillips Nto, has been acquitted and discharged by Abia State High Court from the three corruption charges levelled against him by the Independent Corrupt Practices Commission (ICPC).

The verdict was delivered Friday in Umuahia by Hon Justice Thompson Adiele on suit HU/2C/2017 between FGN v Philips Nto and two others namely, Consolidated Business Network Ltd and its Managing Director, Mr Ikechukwu Onu, who are the second and third respondents

The court ruled that the prosecution failed to prove its charges against Dr Nto.

It, however, ordered the 2nd and 3rd defendants to within 30 days after the judgment, pay back to the state government, the sum of N550 million to make up the N700 million excess bank charges they collected from Keystone bank for the state government.

The court declared that it was wrong for them to have collected N700 million from the bank and paid only N150 million to the state government in the name of the commission.

The Court further declared that the Nto was not guilty of count two, which bordered on conspiracy to confer undue corrupt advantage on an associate, because it was not proved that the 2nd and 3rd defendants were his (Nto’s) associates.

Similarly, on the 3rd count bordering on making a false statement on the amount recovered from the bank when Nto held office, the court held that Nto was not guilty because the signatures on the contentious documents were forged.

Reacting to the judgment, Nto said his vindication has again proved that the court is the hope of the common man.

He consequently demanded an unreserved apology from the ICPC within 48 hours to be published in two national dailies for tarnishing his image during the years that the case lasted in the court, lamenting that despite the fact that he served the state honestly and diligently, some people colluded with ICPC to mar his reputation.

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