An Ikeja High Court on Monday sentenced a National Youth Service Corps member, Helen Bando, to one year imprisonment for using forged documents to process an Indian visa.
The judge, Justice Olutoyin Ipaye, also jailed her accomplices – Samuel Obiakor and Segun Alimi — one year each.
She sentenced the trio after they
pleaded guilty to the charge during their re-arraignment by the
Independent Corrupt Practices and other related offences Commission
(ICPC).
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the defendants had entered a plea bargain with the ICPC.
According to the deal, each of the
defendants will pay a N50, 000 fine and will be sentenced to a maximum
of six months imprisonment.
Delivering her judgment, Ipaye noted
that Section 75 of the Administration of Criminal Justice Law of Lagos
State was only to guide the court.
She said the court was not bound by the plea bargain between the defendants and the ICPC.
The judge said the desperation of the
first defendant (Bando) to travel outside Nigeria made her to conspire
with the others to submit forged documents to the Indian High
Commission.
Ipaye said the action of the defendants
had brought the country into disrepute and could lead to the denial of
visas to other Nigerians with genuine intentions of traveling.
She, therefore, sentenced them to one year imprisonment each without an option of fine on the one count amended charge.
The judge held that Bando’s sentence
would begin from the day of the judgment, while those of the other
convicts would commence in June 2014 when they were first remanded in
prison.
NAN reports that the ICPC had filed the charge on Nov.15, 2013.
The ICPC counsel, Paul Bassey,
said the defendants conspired to submit forged documents to the Indian
High Commission sometime in 2013 to enable Bando obtain the country’s
visa.
He said the offences contravened Sections 25(1) and (a), 26 (1), (a) and (c) and Section 96 (1), (a) of the ICPC Act...
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