Senator Adeleke all smiles as court grants him 2m bail and case is adjourned till June 24th
Get link
Facebook
X
Pinterest
Email
Other Apps
Senator Adeleke all smiles as court grants him 2m bail and case is adjourned till June 24th
Senator Adeleke all smiles as court grants him 2m bail and case is adjourned till June 24th. SenatorAdemola Adeleke has been granted a bail of two million nairas by the Abuja High Court today following his arrest and detention yesterday by the Police after he honored an invitation and subsequently arraigned before Mpape Magistrate Court, Abuja.
According to Nathaniel Oke (SAN), one of Adeleke’s lawyer, he was arraigned on five count charges relating to certificate and result in forgery. Oke said: “He was arraigned on five-count charge relating to certain already existing alleged offenses in terms of testimonial issues in the former school where he graduated.
And asides from that, they equally arraigned him that the result even the testimonials he presented when he was contesting were fake ones.” He noted that Adeleke’s lawyer raised an objection to the competency of the court in hearing the case but the judge overruled the objection saying that he has the right to be arraigned before the court.
Oke said that Adeleke pleaded guilty to all the charges and was granted bail by the court. “He was formally arraigned, his plea was taken and he pleaded not guilty to all the counts as read against him. He was granted bail of two million nairas and one surety in the like sum and the surety must be a resident in the jurisdiction of this honorable court.”
The judge adjourned the case to 24th of June 2019, for the purpose of prosecution presenting their witnesses for trial. Senator Ademola Adeleke was arrested by men of the Nigeria Police Force on Monday evening. Adeleke’s arrest was affirmed by the force spokesman, Mr. Frank Mba.
He said: “Senator Adeleke is currently in police custody. He was taken into custody in the evening of today 6th May 2019 in connection with ongoing criminal investigations touching on his person
• ~24.5 min Trubel had been lingering outside the nondescript metal door for nearly two hours, appearing to study the door and the faded sign above it. The Deli , it read in dusty script. Her coat was wrapped as tightly around her as the fraying fabric allowed, but still, the cold air dug through it. The cold was not enough, however, to drive her out of the elements and through the door. Once or twice she approached it, hand shaking as it neared the handle, only to draw back at the last second as if the handle were a snake. It should have been easier to enter the door the longer she waited, but it seemed to only grow immeasurably more difficult. It did not help that in her entire time waiting no one had entered or left the building. Had someone sallied up, opened the door, and safely entered into a cloud of inviting warmth, it may have lured her in. Similarly, the safe exit of any sort of person would have assured her that one could brave whatever lay beyond. But the road was emp...
Ubloo, The Reason Why I Try Not To Sleep Ubloo, Part One Note:This is part one of a four-part story. The next three parts will be posted over the next three days. Enjoy! In a past life I was a psychiatrist. Well, let me rephrase that. Before my life fell to pieces I was a psychiatrist, and a damned good one too. It’s tough to really say what makes a psychiatrist “good” at what they do, but I started in my field early, got great experience my first few years in the business and not before long I almost had more clients than I could handle. I’m not saying someone would walk into my office suicidal and do a complete 180 in one day, but my clients trusted me and felt that I genuinely helped them, so I came very highly recommended, and my rate was admittedly steep. That being said, I was used to a “higher tier” of patient. I’m not sure how the Jennings family found me but I assume they were pointed in my direction from their previous psychiatrist, as that’s sometimes the...
Answering a simple “How are you?” with an honest detailed answer may lead to an awkward silence. After all, it’s often just longhand for “hello”. But the government’s official number-crunchers at the Office for National Statistics genuinely care about the response. Next week, they’ll publish their statistics into how people across the country are feeling about their lives. Have they gone soft? Not quite. They’ve realised that how we’ve traditionally measured living standards or economic well-being isn’t up to scratch.
Comments
Post a Comment
Comment your thought