A Lagos Division of the Federal High Court on Tuesday ordered a
temporary forfeiture of two properties valued at $4.7 million (about
N1.5 billion) allegedly belonging to Diezani Alison-Madueke, the former
Petroleum Minister.
The judge, Mojisola Olatoregun, ruled that the properties – Penthouse
21 building 5, Block C, 11th floor (Bella Vista Estate) Banana Island,
Ikoyi, and Penthouse 22, Block B (Admiralty Estate) also in Ikoyi,
Lagos, be forfeited to the Federal Government pending the conclusion of
investigation by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission into the
ownership of the properties which it reasonably believes were procured
with proceeds of crime.
The judge’s decision came months after multi-billion naira properties
and funds running into millions of dollars allegedly linked to the
former minister were forfeited to the Nigerian government.
On August 7, a federal judge ordered the permanent forfeiture of a $37.5 million property on Banana Island, Lagos, allegedly belonging to Mrs. Alison-Madueke.
Two weeks later, another court ordered an interim forfeiture of 56 houses valued at over N3 billion allegedly bought by the former minister between 2011 and 2013.
On August 28, a judge ordered the permanent forfeiture of N7.6 billion suspected to belong to the ex-minister.
In September, there was another forfeiture proceeding on four properties in Lagos, Abuja, and Rivers State involving Mrs. Alison-Madeke.
In the latest ex-parte application for the forfeiture of two
properties, the EFCC listed Mrs. Alison-Madueke, Donald Amagbo,
Schillenburg LLC, and Sequoyah Property Limited, as respondents.
Anselm Ozioko, the EFCC counsel, also asked the court for an order
prohibiting any disposal, conveyance, mortgage, lease or sale of the
properties as well as an order authorising the commission to appoint a
competent person or firm to manage them.
In an affidavit deposed to by an EFCC investigator, Abdulrasheed
Bawa, the commission stated that during investigation into the ownership
of the two properties, YF Construction Development and Real Estate
Limited, a certain Fadi Basbous, volunteered an extra-judicial statement
where he stated that the two properties were sold at $3.570 million and
$1.194 million, and owned by Sequoyah Properties Limited and
Schillenburg LLC.
The deponent said payments for the two properties were made by Angela
Jide-Jones, the wife of Jide Omokore, a close ally of Mrs.
Alison-Madueke, and Atlantic Energy Drilling Concept Limited, a company
registered by Mr. Omokore.
After payments, Mr. Omokore was said to have directed the sellers to
sign agreements with Schillenburg LLC and Sequoyah Properties Limited,
both of which are also linked to Mrs. Alison-Madueke.
The EFCC investigator also stated that Schillenburg LLC was
registered in Hongkong and transferred on March 30, 2012, to Mr. Amamgbo
as sole owner, while Sequoyah Properties Limited was registered in
Nigeria on October 11, 2011, with fictitious names of Chukwudima Nwako
and Olisa Eloka as shareholders and directors.
Mr. Amamgbo in his extrajudicial statement to the EFCC was said to
have stated that he incorporated Schillenburg LLC and submitted same to
Mrs. Alison-Madueke for the transaction.
After listening to the EFCC lawyer, the judge granted the application
that the two properties be temporarily forfeited to the Nigerian
government.
The judge, however, refused to grant the order authorising the
anti-graft agency to appoint a competent person or firm to manage the
two properties.

