Home NEWS CRIME Diezani Fails To Show Up At UK Court; Her 27,000 Pounds Seized

Diezani Fails To Show Up At UK Court; Her 27,000 Pounds Seized

Diexani alison madueke

Former Nigeria Minister of Petroleum under the Goodluck Jonathan’s administration, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, failed to show up today at Westminster Magistrates Court 10, in the United Kingdom as scheduled.

Information reaching us showed that the embattled former minister was neither in the court premises nor her mother, Beatrice, even as an application was made for detention of cash seized under the Proceeds of Crime Act under which she was first arrested last Friday in UK by Serious Organized Crime Agency (SOCA).

The court granted the application for seizure of her 27,000 pounds. The cash was seized under Section 295 of Proceeds of Crime Act 2012.

By granting the application, which was filed by the UK’s National Crime Agency, the money would be held in the custody of the court until April 5, 2016.

Reports said a separate application was also made against Ms. Agama for the seizure of an undisclosed amount of money.

Information had it that the money seized by the court was found recently with Mrs. Alison-Madueke as the National Crime Agency applied for the seizure within 48 hours.

An overview of the Proceeds of Crime Act says: “The Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 (“POCA”) sets out the legislative scheme for the recovery of criminal assets with criminal confiscation being the most commonly used power.

“Confiscation occurs after a conviction has taken place. Other means of recovering the proceeds of crime which do not require a conviction are provided for in the Act, namely civil recovery, cash seizure and taxation powers.

“The aim of the asset recovery schemes in POCA is to deny criminals the use of their assets, recover the proceeds of crime and disrupt and deter criminality.

“Since 2010, more than £746 million of criminal assets has been seized (to 2013/14) across all four methods of recovery – a record amount.

“Over the same period, assets worth more than £2.5 billion have been frozen denying criminals access to these resources and £93 million has been returned to victims.” [myad]