Two Lagos-based lawyers, Messrs Tayo
Oyetibo (SAN) and Ebun-Olu Adegboruwa, representing a former Niger Delta
militant, Government Ekpemupolo, alias Tompolo, who is on the run, have
said it is not their duty to produce him before the Federal High Court
in Lagos.
They pointed to Paragraph 3(b) of the
Federal High Court Practice Direction 2013, which provided that, “On the
date of first arraignment, the prosecutor must produce the accused
person in court.”
There is a pending 40-count of alleged
N45.9bn fraud against Tompolo and nine others before Justice Ibrahim
Buba, where the suspects were expected to take their plea.
But while his alleged accomplices had
been attending court, Tompolo had repeatedly snubbed court summons
served on him, making the judge to issue two separate warrants for his
arrest.
The Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission, which charged Tompolo to court, had subsequently declared
him wanted through a newspaper advertorial and also obtained a court
order to confiscate all his assets, pending when he would submit himself
to the authority of the court.
Oyetibo and Adegboruwa had, however,
gone before the Court of Appeal, seeking to void the arrest warrant
issued against their client.
In a statement jointly signed by them on
Wednesday, the two lawyers said it was the duty of the EFCC, and not
theirs, to fish out Tompolo and bring him to court.
The statement was issued in a reaction to the editorial of a national daily,
suggesting that the lawyers, who had been taking instructions from
Tompolo, apparently knew where he was and ought to be mandated to
produce him, since efforts by security agencies to arrest him had not
yielded any result.
The editorial had reportedly suggested
that the lawyers owed Nigerians the duty to produce Tompolo, who is on
the run, failure of which they ought to be disciplined by the court for
professional misconduct.
But the lawyers described such a
suggestion as a misconception, stressing that they had not breached any
law to warrant being sanctioned as suggested in the said editorial.
They berated the newspaper for sitting
as a judge over a matter which was already before the court and advised
it to always “seek proper legal advice before embarking on passing
judgment upon matters bordering on law and procedure so as to avoid
falling into the type of grave error of judgment they committed on this
occasion.”
They added that their client had the
right to appeal any order of court against him, citing the case of
Fawehinmi Vs Attorney-General of Lagos State (1989), where the Court of
Appeal held that accused persons were entitled in law to take their
objection to the charge, irrespective of the fact that they were not
physically present in court.
Punch

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