An EFCC witness, Stanley Ani, on Tuesday told an FCT High Court that N36.5 million was not remitted to the Joint Admission and Matriculation Board (JAMB) as revenue.
The EFCC charged Mrs Philomina Chieshe, a revenue officer with the board and her boss, Samuel Umoru, the state coordinator in Makurdi office, with eight counts bordering on conspiracy, breach of trust and misappropriation.
Umoru and Chieshe were accused of allegedly conspiring among themselves between August 2014 and July 2016 and misappropriated funds belonging to JAMB, an agency of the Federal Government contrary to Section 97 (2) of the Penal Code Law.
The defendants, however, pleaded not guilty to the charges preferred against them which were read in the open court.
At the resumed hearing on Tuesday, while testifying for the prosecution, Ani said that based on a petition from JAMB, EFCC investigated the alleged scam and discovered that between 2014 and 2016, a total of 144,913 e-facility cards were received by the Makurdi office of the Board.
He said that the office sold a total of 124,180 at the cost of N1,000 each, adding that the sum of N124.1 million was to be remitted to the Board by the office.
“But unfortunately, we discovered that the Makurdi zonal office remitted N88. 7 million, leaving a shortfall of N35.4 million,” the witness told the court.
He added that the office equally received a total of 10,210 change of course cards within the same period, informing that only 3,210 was sold at the cost of N2,500 each.
“By this, the office supposed to remit a total of N8,025,000 but unfortunately they remitted N7 million, leaving an unremitted balance of over N1 million,” he said.
Ani said that the first defendant, Umoru, received the cards at times directly from JAMB headquarters and some other times delegated his officials to collect them.
The consignments of cards, the witness further informed, were handed over to Chieshe to sell and they did reconciliation among themselves.
He informed the court that during interrogation, the second defendant narrated to EFCC how she collected the cards from the first defendant and sold them by herself at times and through other agents and had money remitted into her salary account with Zenith Bank and her other account with EcoBank.
According to him, Chieshe informed interrogators that she made withdrawals from the accounts on the instruction of her boss and handed over the money to him and how the first defendant collected what the term IOU from the proceeds for both personal and official use “without authorization from headquarters.
“The money left the accounts by bulk withdrawals by cheques issued in her name as well as multiple ATM withdrawals in the ratio of N10,000, N20,000 and at times N40,000 per day at the directive of the first defendant,” Ani said.
He added that the second defendant told interrogators that at a point she became uncomfortable with the whole transactions and warned her boss that it was high time they stopped but he refused to listen and the fraud continued.
Two other witnesses, Helen Akinloye and Joseph Ugbema, earlier testified for the prosecution.
Akinloye stated that she sold cards for the second defendant and remitted money to her in cash, while Ugbema, who said he was in the Account Department in the Makurdi office and assisted in the sale of the e-facility cards, told the court that he also remitted money to the second defendant in cash.
Justice Peter Affen thereafter adjourned the case till March 17 for the continuation of trial.