The assets confiscation
hearing of the former governor of Delta State, James Ibori has taken a dramatic turn as the
Judge, Anthony Pitts, granted the crown prosecution’s request to adjourn for
retrial in order to call more evidences against the former governor after both
the prosecution and defence have made their submissions in the hearing which
entered its last day today.
Reacting
to Judge Anthony Pitts’ judgment in favour of the prosecution asking for a halt
of the court proceeding after all parties have made their submissions, James
Ibori said ‘after 8 years of criminal
investigations, five adjournments and over fifty trips to Nigeria, the
prosecution failed to provide any tangible evidence to support their claim that
I defrauded Delta State, their case collapsed to such an extent that on the
last day of a three weeks hearing, they were humbled into making an application
to the judge for permission to start again which he Judge unceremoniously
granted’.
Judge
Pitts acceding to the request of the prosecution and adjourning for the case to
go to retrial said ‘I feel that this case inevitably
requires decision that is probably based on proper evidence. This matter must
proceed in a way to make proper decision….it seems to me to hear some more
evidence’. Giving the crown prosecution the green light for his
support for a need for the prosecution to go for more evidence to support their
confiscation claim Judge Pitts said ‘I need to be in a much better
position more than I am now to make a better position. I am going to adjourn
this proceedings till early next year’.
As
the confiscation hearing opens this Monday, the lead counsel to the former
governor, QC Krolic as part of his skeleton legal argument before the judge
against the guilty pleas of James Ibori during the trial said ‘the
making of confiscation determinations is governed by different procedural
requirement from trial procedures and different standard of proof to be
applied’.
Krolic
who maintains his ground nonetheless of James Ibori’s guilty pleas at trial
said ‘when it comes to trial and
sentencing, the court is not concerned with numbers’. Judge Pitts cuts in
‘number is also considered’. Explaining to the Judge, Krolic said ‘in
confiscation, difference in number is important because the issues in
confiscation are quantitative’.
The
judge, Anthony Pitts, sensing QC Krolic was discrediting the evidence put
forward during trial by the prosecution to prosecute Ibori, and knowing fully
well that it lacks sufficient evidence to support the prosecution claims, Judge
Antony Pitts cuts in again ‘I fully agree that we are not bound
by the pleas of guilt here….but we are in a different situation’.
The
Judge drawing from QC Krolic arguments that Ibori’s guilty pleas have to be
supported with quantitave evidence as to his benefits in the prosecution’s
allegation as set out in section 73 as the basis for consideration in this
assets confiscation hearing Judge Anthony Pitts said ‘I am being asked by you to ignore his guilty pleas and
look again if he is actually guilty, I know you are not saying that, but it
really seems so close’.
QC
Krolic unmoved by the Judge’s position went on to cite many authorities to
support his case that a guilty plea in Confiscation does not mean that the
defendant has the full benefits of the guilt, he said ‘the
burden lies on the prosecution to proof to what extent the defendant has
benefitted from the offence and in this case, we are relying on the
prosecution’s own evidence that is set out in section 73 as provided in their
63,000 pages evidence before this court from the start of this proceedings’.
In
his argument, Krolic relying on the the authority in the case of Mcintosh and
Rezvi 2010 said ‘the court held in paragraph 22 that
a plea of guilty did not amount to an admission from which a conclusive
inferences can be drawn pursuant to section 10CJA 1967′. Krolick
went on to say ‘where the defendant has pleaded
guilty, it is important for the prosecution to prove their case, I have shown
you that what the prosecution has put forward in their 63,000 pages trial
bundle is not supported by any evidence’.
The
lead Crown prosecutor Sasha Wass, who only turned up for the day’s proceedings
after the court’s lunch break and briefed by her junior counsel, Esther
Schutzer-Weissmann that the Judge was intending to adjourn the case for more
evidence to reach a conclusion, Crown Prosecutor, Sasha Wass said ‘your honour we will ask that these proceedings are brought
to a halt and list it for another hearing so that we may call more witnesses’.
QC
Krolick not satisfied with the crown prosecution’s request for a halt of the
court proceedings and allow for a retrial, he urged the Judge to continue to
hear the case and give judgement based on the submissions made by both the
prosecution and the defence.
QC
Krolick said ‘we do not say that the conviction
should go, we do not attack the conviction, we are only concerned by what has
been obtained by Mr Ibori in connection to the charge. Trying to persuade the Judge not to
adjourn for retrial as being pushed for by the prosecution having found out
that they do not have the evidence to back up their confiscation claim, Krolick
said ‘we are not even suggesting that
witnesses are required…we are only saying that Ibori did not obtain what he has
been accused of obtaining and that the prosecution do not have evidence to link
funds from Delta State to him and that the court should make its decision on
that basis’.
James Ibori’s lead counsel’s subtle persuasion could not
persuade Judge Anthony Pitts against granting the prosecution’s request for
adjournment and retrial in order to call more evidences against James Ibori. The court adjourns till Dec 19th 2013 for
preliminary direction of the confiscation proceeding.
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