Veteran journalist, Dele Momodu has accused the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, of โmisfiringโ in the ongoing case against former Kogi governor, Yahaya Bello.
Momodu said the EFCC failed to do due diligence during their investigation against Bello.
Speaking during an Instagram Live, the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, chieftain faulted EFCCโs claims of Bello using government funds to pay his children school fees upfront before the expiration of his tenure.
He faulted EFCCโs conduct in its attempt to prosecute Bello, stressing that the commissionโs Chairman, Ola Olukoyede should have learnt from the cases of his predecessors, who he said were โbooted out ignominiouslyโ.
According to Momodu: โWhen they brought in the new chairman, I thought oh, you will have the benefit of learning from your predecessors.
โAll of them were booted out ignominiously and if I were in the shoes of the current chairman, what I will simply do is make sure I do my job as meticulously, as professionally, as efficiently as possible. And, you will never go wrong if you obey the rule of law.
โI watched the EFCC chairman, I think either last week or the week before the last, I was almost crying because the way he went on and on..if I donโt do thisโฆ spitting fire and all.. you donโt have to do media trial.โ
Asked if the EFCC was lying about Bello, Momodu said: โI have no idea, I donโt work for EFCC but from all the things that I have read, a lot of them, they misfired. That is the honest truth. They misfired. They didnโt do their due diligence.
โWhen you said a man took out money and paid for his childrenโs school fees, just as he was about to leave power, and you go and check the documents and you see that these things started happening from 2021, 2022 (laughs); I am not an illiterate.โ
The EFCC had accused Bello and three others of alleged money laundering to the tune of N80.2 billion while he was governor.
Olukoyede also accused Bello of withdrawing $720,000 to pay for his childrenโs school fees before leaving office.
This, the former governor denied.