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| Yahaya Bello. |
The trial of former Kogi State Governor, Yahaya Adoza Bello, continued on Thursday, February 5, 2026, before Justice Emeka Nwite of the Federal High Court, Maitama, Abuja, with the Eight Prosecution Witness, PW8, Gabriel Ochoche, testifying how the sum of N46,505,000( Forty Six Million, Five Hundred and Five Thousand Naira) was transferred into the account of American International School.
Bello is
being prosecuted by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, on a
19-count charge bordering on money laundering to the tune of
₦80,246,470,088.88.
The
prosecution called Prosecution Witness 8 (PW8), Gabriel Ochoche, a compliance
officer with First City Monument Bank (FCMB), who testified pursuant to a
subpoena.
Led in
evidence by Olukayode Enitan, SAN, the subpoena was tendered without objection
from the defence and was admitted by the court as Exhibit 36.
PW8 told
the court that among several payments there were payments to educational
institutions, including a ₦30 million transfer on November 1, 2021, to American
International School / Abdul Bashir, as well as another transfer of ₦16,505,400
to American International School.
PW8 also
confirmed that he was in court with the statement of account, certificate of
compliance and account opening documents of Kunfayakun Global Limited, Account
No: 7819613011
, covering
transactions from June 1, 2021, to August 31, 2022. The documents were admitted
in evidence as Exhibit 37 without objection.
When asked
to confirm the period covered, the witness stated: “The period covered is from
June 29, 2021, to December 31, 2024.”
Explaining
the structure of the statement of account, PW8 said it contains seven columns,
namely: date, reference, description, value date, deposit, withdrawal and
balance.
Reading
from Exhibit 37, PW8 identified several major transactions, including an NIP
transfer of ₦700 million from Keyless Nature Limited on December 15, 2021, and
an RTGS inflow of ₦400 million on December 17, 2021, from Access Bank, by order
of the same company. He explained that RTGS is a transfer carried out by one
bank on behalf of a customer.
On
November 2, 2021, PW8 confirmed multiple inflows from Gadonkaya Global Concept
into Kunfayakun’s account—₦10 million, ₦10 million and ₦8.96 million—alongside
another outflow of ₦34,506,600 to American School and China Payment / Abdul
Bashir.
PW8 also
told the court that on February 18, 2022, there were six separate NIP transfers
of ₦100 million each from Ejadams Essence Limited, totaling ₦600 million.
Asked to
confirm the total inflow, the witness said: “Yes, my lord, I confirm that ₦600
million was received from Ejadams Essence Limited.”
He further
identified an RTGS inflow of ₦325 million on February 21, 2022, with a value
date of February 18, 2022, from Access Bank, by order of Ejadams.
Earlier in
the proceedings, Prosecution Witness 7 (PW7), Olomotane Egoro, a compliance
officer with Access Bank, continued his testimony under cross-examination.
Defence
counsel drew his attention to Exhibit 33(8), particularly an entry of June 22,
2022, which the witness confirmed was an outflow of ₦20 million for the supply
of educational materials. When asked if it was a cash withdrawal, Egoro
replied:
“No, my
lord.”
He also
confirmed that he could not identify the beneficiary from the document.
Egoro
acknowledged multiple cash withdrawals made by Yakubu Siyaka between January 9,
2019, and December 30, 2022, totaling over ₦552 million.
Explaining
the bank’s obligations, he said: “The customer can use his money as he likes;
however, the bank has a reporting obligation where transactions do not fit the
customer’s profile or fall under money laundering typologies.”
He further
confirmed that Access Bank filed a Suspicious Transaction Report (STR) to the
Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit (NFIU), but stated that by law, its
contents could not be disclosed in court.
When
defence counsel J.B Daudu SAN attempted to question the witness on the contents
of the STR, Kemi Pinheiro, SAN, objected, arguing that questioning a document
not before the court contravened the Administration of Criminal Justice Act
(ACJA).
Justice
Nwite upheld the objection, ruling that: “Counsel cannot ask questions on the
contents of a document not before the court.”
Following
the rectification of payment receipts, the Certified True Copy (CTC) of
proceedings from Justice Obiora Egwuatu’s court dated May 12, 2025, was
admitted in evidence as Exhibit 35(D2) without objection.
Additional
documents admitted included: Exhibit 34(1): Kogi State Government House account
opening package, exhibit 34(2): Kogi State Government House Administration
account and exhibit 33(6): E-Traders International Limited account opening
package and statement of account.
PW7
confirmed signatories, transaction patterns and Access Bank’s compliance
oversight across its branches.
With no
re-examination by the prosecution, Justice Nwite discharged PW7 from the
witness box and adjourned the matter to March 3 and March 9, 2026, for
continuation of trial.

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