THE Federal Government has requested the issuance of a bench warrant against Mr Hathiramani Ranesh, Managing Director of Dana Air, for his failure to appear before a Federal High Court in Abuja in connection with an N1.3 billion fraud.
The request, made on Thursday, and reported by the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), sought to compel Mr. Ranesh’s appearance in court for his arraignment on the fraud charges.
Mojisola Okeya, counsel to the Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF), made the oral application before Justice Obiora Egwuatu to issue the warrant, citing Ranesh’s repeated absence.
The federal government alleged that Mr Ranesh has refused to appear for his arraignment in the alleged N1.3 billion fraud. The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the federal government, through the AGF, had filed a six-count charge against Mr Ranesh and two others.
In the charge marked FHC/ABJ/CR/101/2021 and filed by Moshood Adeyemi, Deputy Director of Public Prosecutions in the office of the AGF and Minister of Justice, Dana Group PLC and Dana Steel Ltd were joined as the second and third defendants, respectively.
In count one, Mr Ranesh and the two companies, alongside others at large, were alleged to have committed a felony between September and December 2018 within the premises of DANA Steel Rolling Factory in Katsina.
They were alleged to have conspired to remove, convert and sell four units of industrial generators “i.e. three (3) units Ht of 9,000 KVA and 1 unit of 1,000 KVA; all valued at over N450 million, which form part of the Deed of Asset Debenture that were charged as collateral security for a bond issued in your favour, which Deed is still subsisting at all material times.”
In count three, the defendants and others at large at House No. 116, Oshodi-Apapa Expressway, Isolo-Lagos between April 7 and 8, 2014, were alleged to have conspired to fraudulently divert N864 million.
The money was said to be part of the bond proceeds from Ecobank, meant to resuscitate production at Dana Steel Rolling Factory in Katsina for other unapproved uses.
In count five, the defendants and others at large were alleged to have “conspired to fraudulently remove and transfer to one Atlantic Shrimpers Account No: 0001633175 with Access Bank and divert the sum of Sixty Million Three Hundred Thousand Naira (N60,300,000)”.
The money was said to be part of the bond proceeds from Ecobank, meant to resuscitate production at Dana Steel Rolling Factory in Katsina for other unapproved uses.
The cumulative sum of the amount involved in the charge is N1.4 billion (N1,374, 300,000).
All the offences are said to be contrary to and punishable under Section 516 of the Criminal Code Act, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004.
NAN observes that Mr Ranesh had not appeared in court in the previous proceedings.
However, when the matter was called on Thursday, Mr Okeya told the court that though the case was scheduled for arraignment of the defendants, Mr Ranesh was not in court.
The AGF’s lawyer then urged the court to issue a bench warrant for Mr Ranesh’s arrest.
But the defence lawyer, B. Ademola-Bello, disagreed with Ms Okeya.
He argued that they had filed a preliminary objection challenging the jurisdiction of the court to hear the matter and that the prosecution had already been served.
Ms Okeya, on her part, objected to taking the preliminary objection on the ground that the defendants ought to be arraigned first before the court could entertain any other application.
But Mr Ademola-Bello, who insisted that his objection had to be decided before his clients’ arraignment, cited some previous cases to back his argument.
Justice Egwuatu then asked Mr Ademola-Bello to refer the court to any section of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA), 2015, that makes provision for his request.
The judge subsequently adjourned the matter until 4 November and ordered the parties to address the court in the next adjourned date on whether the preliminary objection ought to be taken before arraignment.
Source: NAN
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