A suspected assassin has confessed to the police that he and
his gang was paid to kill the Deputy General Manager of Ecobank in Enugu
State, Ogbonne Ogeri Nnachi Ibiam.
Obinna
Onyekulujie, the 43-year old suspect, also known as Obaino refused to
disclose the name of the person who contracted his gang to kill Ibiam
but confessed to the police that he was a member of the Enugu-based
robbery gang.
According to police sources at the Federal Special
Anti-Robbery Squad, FSARS, in Lagos, southwest Nigeria, the suspect
claimed he received N1.5 million out of the N15 million paid to his
five-man gang to assassinate the bank manager.
Onyekulujie
confessed that he along with others now at large robbed and killed Ibiam
on 14 December, 2012. Ibiam was the Ecobank Deputy General Manager and
Regional Head (Retail) on Liberty Estate Road, Enugu State, southeast
Nigeria, when he was killed.
The suspect also admitted that he
carried out the crime with members of his gang Ogechukwu Uzor, a.k.a.
Don Whisky, now detained at the Enugu State Police Command SARS Office
for other robbery incidents, as well as another suspect, Emmanuel
Nwankwo, a.k.a. Nwonovo, Chidi and OG, now at large.
Weapons
recovered from the house of the suspect include one cut-to-size double
barrel gun, one English barretta pistol, four brownie pistols, 18 live
cartridges and 13 rounds of AK- 47 ammunition.
Police said the
suspect was arrested following a written petition from the wife of the
late bank manager (name withheld) to the Inspector-General of Police,
Mohammed Abubakar.
The wife of the victim was not satisfied with
the investigation of the murder of her late husband by the Enugu State
Police Command and that the murder be investigated by another police
formation outside Enugu State for her to get justice.
Following
the approval of the petition by the IGP, the Commissioner of Police,
FSARS Lagos, CP Mohammed Gana, was directed to send his men to the Enugu
State Police Command to bring the case file of the murder and the
arrested suspects to Lagos.
In
his confessional statement to the police, Obinna allegedly wrote: “I am
a member of a five-man gang that specialised in snatching exotic cars
from their owners in Enugu and reselling them to buyers in Onitsha and
Nnewi in Anambra State.
On 12 December, 2012, my partners in crime
and gang leader Ogechukwu Uzor, Nwankwo Emmanuel and others now at
large contacted me that they have a job to do and as the gang’s driver, I
obeyed them and drove them to the place of operation.
We traced
our target on 14 December, 2012 to the Liberty Estate Road in Enugu
State and Ogechukwu Uzor shot severally at a man inside a Camry car and
we collected two phones in the car.
We drove off after we
confirmed that he was dead. After the operation, Emmanuel gave me N1.5m
with the stolen handsets and I gave one to my girlfriend. Emmanuel later
told me that someone paid them N15 million to do the job.
I don’t know the person that paid the money. It is only Emmanuel Nwankwo that can identify the sponsor, if arrested.
I
was arrested by the police through my girlfriend with the stolen phone.
We have also, prior to the operation, invaded Global filling station
and Jezco Oil & Gas on Amaechi Road Enugu to rob and I used my share
from the operation to build a house in my village.”
After
investigation by Inspector Oluwamimo Banjoko and his team , Obinna was
taken back to Enugu State and arraigned before the Enugu Magistrates’
Court on an eight-count charge of felony, to wit, armed robbery, murder
and unlawful possession of firearms.
The offences, the prosecutor,
ASP Emmanuel Akpa, said contravened sections 6(b) 1(2) (a) of the
Robbery and Firearms (special provisions), Laws of the Federation of
Nigeria, 2004 and sections 324 and 319 of the Criminal Code of Enugu
State of Nigeria.
The plea of the accused was not taken because
the lower court lacks jurisdiction to try the matter. The presiding
magistrate, J. Mbe ordered that the accused be remanded in prison
custody pending the advice from the office of the Directorate of Public
Prosecution (DPP) on the matter.
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