Court strikes out forgery case against Ozekhome as Tinubu govt withdraws charges

The Federal Capital Territory High Court, Maitama Division, has struck out an alleged forgery case against Mike Ozekhome, after AGF Lateef Fagbemi dropped the charges.
The office of the AGF had, on January 26, 2026, taken over the three-count allegedforgery suit filed by the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission on January 16 against Mr Ozekhome.
Rotimi Oyedepo, the government’s lawyer, had on the last adjourned date, said the case will be prosecuted with “the highest standard of efficiency, effectiveness, diligence and compliance with due process of law”.
However, at the resumed hearing on Tuesday, which was scheduled for the arraignment of Mr Ozekhome, Mr Oyedepo moved an application to withdraw the case.
He noted that the office of the AGF would need time to review and consolidate the issues that cut across different investigating agencies, adding that this would help strengthen the case.
Following his request, Peter Kekemeke, the presiding judge, struck out the case.
Mr Ozekhome was accused of knowingly presenting forged documents, including a Nigerian passport, to support his claim of ownership of a property located at 79 Randall Avenue, London NW2 7SX, during proceedings before the London First-Tier Tribunal.
Named in the property dispute in London are Mr Ozekhome and Jeremiah Useni, a retired lieutenant-general.
The United Kingdom property tribunal dismissed attempts to transfer ownership of the North London house linked to Mr Useni to Mr Ozekhome, and other claimants, after concluding that false identities and forged documents were at the heart of the case.
The property was bought in 1993. Evidence presented to the tribunal revealed that Mr Useni, a former FCT minister and an ally of the late dictator Sani Abacha, was the actual purchaser of the property.
Mr Useni later admitted in oral testimony that he acquired the house with his own funds but registered it under the fabricated name ‘Tali Shani’. The former FCT minister, who served under Mr Abacha, never explained why the home was not registered in his true name.
In 2021, a transfer document surfaced suggesting the property had been conveyed to Mr Ozekhome.
The lawyer argued that Mr Useni, acting through the alias Tali Shani, had passed the house to him either as a gift or in recognition of legal services he claimed to have rendered. Based on that document and the accompanying powers of attorney signed in 2019 and 2020, Mr Ozekhome requested that both the tribunal and the chief land registrar register him as the new owner.
Mr Ozekhome could have successfully got the transfer of ownership to his name done, but a dispute escalated when, in 2022, a woman presenting herself as ‘Ms Tali Shani’ challenged the transfer. The woman asserted that she was the rightful owner of the house and insisted that she had never authorised its conveyance.
At one point, the woman was reported to have died in October 2024, only for her supposed son, Ayodele Damola, and cousin, Marcel Obasi, to continue pressing the case on her behalf.
However, in its judgment delivered on September 11, 2025, the tribunal rejected her account in its entirety.
Judge Ewan Paton stated that the materials she relied on, including identity papers, utility bills, and even a death certificate later produced by supposed relatives, were riddled with inconsistencies and, in many cases, outright forgeries. Investigations carried out by Nigeria’s National Identity Management Commission and the police confirmed the documents were fabricated, with addresses and identification numbers traced to non-existent or unrelated persons.
The judge described testimony given by individuals claiming to be her relatives as “wholly unconvincing, dishonest and at times almost comical”, concluding that both the supposed female owner and the male ‘Tali Shani’ cited by Mr Ozekhome were fictitious identities.
While dismissing the rival objection, the tribunal also refused to recognise Mr Ozekhome’s claim. It ruled that since Mr Useni (who died on January 23, 2025) was the genuine buyer, albeit using a false name, the property now belongs to his estate following his death earlier this year (2025).
“The final outcome of this case, therefore, is that both parties have failed,” the judge said. “Neither ‘Tali Shani’ was who they said they were, and neither was the person who purchased this property in 1993. The real owner, via a false name, was General Jeremiah Useni.”
The tribunal ordered the chief land registrar to cancel Mr Ozekhome’s attempted registration and made clear that it will be up to Mr Useni’s lawful estate representatives to decide what steps to take regarding the London house.
“This is a decision made in public proceedings, which shall be published,” Mr Paton stated, leaving open the possibility of further action by British or Nigerian authorities in relation to the frauds uncovered.
We have recently deactivated our website's comment provider in favour of other channels of distribution and commentary. We encourage you to join the conversation on our stories via our Facebook, Twitter and other social media pages.
More from Peoples Gazette

Agriculture
FG tasks ECOWAS on leveraging financing strategies for agroecology
The federal government has urged stakeholders in the agriculture and finance sectors in the West Africa region to leverage financing strategies to enhance agroecology practices

Politics
Katsina youths pledge to deliver over 2 million votes to Atiku
“Katsina State is Atiku’s political base because it is his second home.”

States
Oyo Abduction: Freed teacher says terrorists released victims before security operatives arrived
Abducted on May 15, the Oyo schoolchildren and their teachers were freed on June 10, after 56 days in captivity.

States
Residents lament deplorable road in Ondo community, seek government intervention
Residents of the agrarian community described the road as a death trap.

NationWide
Stakeholders in Osun, Ondo, Ekiti call for broader participation in constitutional reforms
They also appealed to Nigerians to pay equal attention to all constitutional amendment bills, rather than focusing on the state police proposal.

Economy
SEC set to deliver sustained zero trade fail rate in T+1 settlement cycle: DG
The DG said the focus would be on full delivery-versus-payment discipline across custodians, brokers and the Central Securities Clearing System Plc (CSCS).

Lagos
Lagos residents decry soaring corn prices
A corn trader, Justina Odion, blamed the high retail price on increased wholesale costs.

NationWide
Afam Okeke wins NBA general secretary election with 8,478 votes
The live results portal showed that a total of 82,167 voters were accredited for the general election held on Saturday.





