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Court sentences retired AVM to 7 years imprisonment

Court sentences retired AVM to 7 years imprisonment
Court sentences retired AVM to 7 years imprisonment

A former managing director of Aeronautical Engineering and Technical Services Limited (AETSL), Air Vice Marshal Tony Omenyi (rtd), was yesterday sentenced to seven years in prison by the Abuja division of the Federal High Court.
He was pronounced guilty by Justice Nnamdi Dimgba for receiving N136 million bribe from Nigerian Air Force (NAF) contractors.
The said company, AETSL, is owned by the Nigeria Air Force.
Dimgba, in his judgement, said the prosecution and its witnesses proved the case against the retired officer, who could not controvert their testimonies.


Omenyi was charged to court by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) for receiving N136 million in kickbacks from Syrius Technologies and Sky Experts Limited, two contractors of the NAF.
He was charged on three counts of abuse of office and money laundering, but pleaded not guilty.
“The court did not believe that the evidence given by Omenyi in his defence was credible. The defence was a sham,” the judge held.
Dimgba noted that, if the money Omenyi received from Mrs. Theresa Etu, a NAF contractor, was a refund as he claimed, the said expenditure should have had receipts to prove it.


“For example the N15 million he said he helped her pay for refuelling of two aircraft, he should have received a receipt from those who refuelled but no receipt or invoice was tendered in court by the defence,” the judge said.
The judge wondered what motivation the defendant had in expending his own money in executing a contract on behalf of a contractor.
He further noted that it was pertinent for a public office holder to operate at arm’s length with a contractor, particularly one that was working for the office in which he had due influence over.


Dimgba wondered how the defendant could claim to have made expenditure on behalf of Etu when he was a co-owner of the business she operated and her business partner.
After reviewing all the oral and documentary evidence before him, he pronounced that: “In view of the above, I find the defendants guilty and convict them accordingly.”
The judge sentenced the convict to seven years in prison on each of the three counts preferred against him, to run concurrently with effect from Thursday.
He also ordered that the N62 million recovered from him by the EFCC be forfeited to the federal government.


The judge further made an order that the convict’s company, which was the second defendant in the suit, be wound up having being used as a conduit to perpetrate economic fraud.
Omenyi had said in his defence that the monies he received from Etu were refunds for services he undertook on her behalf.
Before his conviction, Mr. Gordy Uche (SAN) had in his alocutus, appealed to the judge to temper justice with mercy, particularly since the convict was a first-time offender and had served the country meritoriously.
Prosecution counsel, Mr. Mohammed Abubakar, confirmed that the anti-graft agency had no record of a previous conviction.
He urged the court to, in line with Section 15(4) of the Money Laundering Act, make an order winding up the second defendant, since it was a company registered in Nigeria.


In the course of the trial, the first prosecution witness, Mr. Hassan Saidu, an EFCC principal detective, informed the court that the investigation of the defendant was triggered by a letter from the Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA).
The letter had alleged that the defendant was operating suspicious accounts.

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