Olawale Garuba |
A Lagos State High Court on Thursday
sentenced a banker, Mr. Olawale Garuba, to 39 years imprisonment for
stealing from the dead. He will, however, spend only three years in
jail.
The convict was arraigned before Justice
Oluwatoyin Ipaye alongside six others in July 2015 for conspiring among
themselves to steal over N30m from the bank account of a deceased
customer of a bank where the convict works.
The fraud was uncovered by the bank when
they discovered that some of their employees, including the convict had
connived with proxies to steal from a dormant account of one of the
bank’s customers.
Upon the discovery of the fraud, the
bank apprehended the employees and handed them over to the Economic and
Financial Crimes Commission for investigation and prosecution.
Upon their arraignment, they pleaded not
guilty to 18 counts of fraud. Subsequently, Justice Ipaye refused their
bail application and remanded them in prison custody.
However, on June 2, 2016, the convict
changed his plea from ‘not guilty’ to ‘guilty’. He was immediately
convicted by Justice Ipaye, who adjourned the case till Wednesday for
sentencing. Counsel representing the convict, Olanrewaju Ajanaku,
pleaded with the court to tamper justice with mercy in sentencing his
client. He told the court that his client was a remorseful first time
offender with a young wife and two little children.
However, prosecution counsel, Abba
Mohammed, urged the court to consider the three-way traffic while
tampering justice with mercy. That is the interests of the court, the
victim and the convict.
After listening to the prayers of
counsel, Justice Ipaye said despite the remorse shown by the convict,
she has no sympathy for him as he compromised his position as a banker
to steal from a deceased customer whose money would have been used by
the family she left behind.
She added that the convict allowed his
greed to overcome him and risk losing the job that thousands of job
seekers were craving. She found the convict guilty on 13 of the 18
counts, and sentenced him to three years imprisonment on each count. The
sentences are to run concurrently from the date of his first detention,
which is July 24, 2015.
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