Kola Aluko and Jide Omokore, two
Nigerian oil businessmen that are facing several fraud charges by the Economic
and Financial Crimes Commission are in trouble in the United States.
Kola Aluko, the seized Galactica yacht and Penthouse |
Diezani Alison-Madueke, who was oil
minister during the time the two men were believed to have fabulously and
fraudulently reaped from the sector may also be in trouble as well.
The U.S. Justice Department on Friday
filed a lawsuit seeking to recover assets that include a $50 million Manhattan
apartment and an $80 million yacht that it said were bought using money
generated from a scheme to pay millions of dollars in bribes to a former
Nigerian oil minister.
The Galactica, according to earlier
reports was said to be perpetually at sea.
The civil lawsuit, filed in federal
court in Houston, alleged that the two Nigerian businessmen conspired with
others to pay bribes to the minister, Diezani Alison-Madueke, who oversaw
Nigeria’s state-owned oil company, the NNPC.
The lawsuit said that in return,
Alison-Madueke steered lucrative contracts with a subsidiary of Nigerian
National Petroleum Corporation to companies owned by the two businessmen,
Kolawole Akanni Aluko and Olajide Omokore.
Despite being unqualified and in some
instances failing entirely to perform services under the contracts, these
companies received more than $1.5 billion in revenues through the sale of crude
oil, the lawsuit said.
The Justice Department said that
Aluko and Omokore then laundered their illicit revenues through the United
States and used the money to buy $144 million in assets including the Manhattan
condominium and the $80 million yacht, the Galactica Star.
The condominium is located in One57,
a skyscraper located near Central Park on a street in Midtown Manhattan that is
known as “Billionaire’s Row.”
Acting Assistant Attorney General
Blanco said in a statement that the case demonstrated the Justice Department’s
commitment to trading and recovering corruption proceeds.
“The United States is not a safe
haven for the proceeds of corruption,” he said.
Following a mortgage default, lender
Banque Havilland SA launched foreclosure proceedings on the condominium in
January. It is scheduled to be up for public auction on July 19, according to
the lawsuit.
Alison-Madueke was charged with money
laundering in Nigeria, the country’s financial crimes agency said in April. She
previously denied to Reuters any wrongdoing when questioned about missing
public funds and corruption allegations.
Lawyers for Aluko and Omokore could
not be immediately identified. They are not defendants in the lawsuit, which is
a civil forfeiture action.
The lawsuit was brought as part of
Justice Department’s Kleptocracy Asset Recovery Initiative, which seeks the
forfeiture of the proceeds of foreign corruption.
Source: NAN
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