Four suspects paraded in connection with the recent
bank robbery in
Ikorodu, Lagos State, have dragged the Inspector General of Police before a Federal High Court sitting in Lagos, saying that their alleged confessional statements given out to journalists, was extracted from them behind their lawyer.
Ikorodu, Lagos State, have dragged the Inspector General of Police before a Federal High Court sitting in Lagos, saying that their alleged confessional statements given out to journalists, was extracted from them behind their lawyer.
The four suspects had reportedly confessed to playing different
roles in the robbery while three Sport Utility Vehicles allegedly bought from
the proceeds of the robbery were recovered from them.
The suspects – Agbojule Bright, Promise Abiwa, Monday Omoboye
and Monday Ikuesan, were on July 6, 2015, paraded by the police in connection
with the robbery of the Ipakodo branches of First and Zenith Banks in
Ikorodu, where an 18-man gang, which they allegedly belonged to, made away with
about N80 million on June 24, 2015.
In their fundamental rights enforcement suit filed before
Justice Mohammed Yunusa, counsel, Akanbi, claimed that the police violated the
right of the suspects to remain silent or to avoid answering any questions
until consultation with a legal practitioner or any person of their choice as
stipulated by Section 35(2) of the 1999 Constitution.
Akanbi in the suit said that the suspects “made confessional
statements to newsmen under duress,” arguing that the police had no right to
parade the suspects to be interviewed by the press “unless such a suspect
wishes to give interview after the matter has been charged to a court of
competent jurisdiction.”
According to him, the suspects might not be able to get fair
trial in court since they have “already suffered prejudice in the eye of the
public due to unfair publicity and unprofessional acts of the defendants.”
He claimed that the police had neither allowed him nor the
family members of the suspects to see them since their arrest, adding; “The
applicants’ counsel were not allowed to see the applicants even to have a brief
interview when they visited the defendants on July 15, 2015.
“The applicants’ constitutional rights under Section 36 of the
1999 Constitution are at stake because the defendants have already taken a bias
position by denying the applicants’ family or their counsel their right of
visiting them in police custody.
“It will be in the interest of justice if the applicants are
brought before this honourable court so that the court can ascertain whether
the applicants are still alive.
“It will be in the interest of justice if the applicants can be
charged by the defendants to court since they have already spent over 24 hours
in custody and failure to do this will amount to usurpation of the constitutional
powers of the judiciary.”
According to him, the suspects were entitled to damages for
their unlawful detention, urging the court to award N5million against the
defendants in their favour.
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