US Moves to Seize 200ft Yacht, Other Luxury Properties from Kola Aluko, Others
Alison-Madueke to Kola Aluko: “If you want to hire a yacht, you lease it for two weeks or whatever… You don’t go and sink funds into it at this time when Nigerian oil and gas sector is under all kinds of watch.” – Intercepted
recording of an apparent phone conversation between former oil
minister, Diezani Alison-Madueke, and oil trader, Kola Aluko
Demola Ojo with agency reports
US prosecutors on Friday moved to seize
$144m in assets including a 200-foot yacht and a Manhattan condominium
one block from Central Park, calling them the fruits of an international
bribery scheme that involved the former Nigerian Oil Minister, Mrs.
Diezani Alison-Madueke.
The justice department action targeted
Nigeria’s oil man, Mr Kola Aluko’s vessel, Galactica Star, which its
builder bills as the “world’s largest fast displacement yacht”, along
with condominium units in Manhattan and real estate in Southern
California located just three miles from the Pacific Ocean.
From 2011 to 2015, two Nigerian oil men,
Kolawole Aluko and Olajide Omokore, alledgedly conspired with others to
bribe the country’s minister for petroleum resources, Diezani
Alison-Madueke, in order to win oil production contracts worth $1.5bn,
according to a civil forfeiture complaint. At the time, along with
controlling the country’s state-owned oil company, Mrs. Alison-Madueke,
also headed the Vienna-based oil cartel, OPEC. Nigeria’s federal high
court earlier this year charged her with money laundering and she has
previously denied any wrongdoing. After awarding government contracts to
shell companies owned by the two men, Mrs. Alison-Madueke — known as
“the madam” or “Madam D” — was rewarded with a “lavish lifestyle”,
according to the US Department of Justice.
Alison-Madueke has since denied any wrong-doing in her relationship with Kola Aluko and Jide Omokore.
A civil forfeiture complaint is merely an allegation that money or property was involved in or represents the proceeds of a crime. These allegations are not proven until a court awards judgment in favour of the US.
A civil forfeiture complaint is merely an allegation that money or property was involved in or represents the proceeds of a crime. These allegations are not proven until a court awards judgment in favour of the US.
“The United States is not a safe haven
for the proceeds of corruption,” said acting assistant attorney-general
Kenneth Blanco. “If illicit funds are within the reach of the United
States, we will seek to forfeit them and to return them to the victims
from whom they were stolen.”
Though known as “a small time trader”
who had previously earned around $500,000 annually, in less than three
years, Mr. Aluko purchased more than $87m of US property and the $82m
yacht, according to the complaint, filed in US district court in
Houston. According to the complaint, in a conversation with Mr Aluko
that prosecutors say Mrs. Alison-Madueke recorded, she criticised him
for his lavish spending. “If you want to hire a yacht, you lease it for
two weeks or whatever,” she said. “You don’t go and sink funds into it
at this time when Nigerian oil and gas sector is under all kinds of
watch.”
The two businessmen allegedly purchased
millions of dollars worth of property in and near London for the oil
minister and her family and then furnished the homes with furniture,
artwork and other luxury items from Houston-area stores that she
fancied. In January 2011, the Nigerian businessmen and unidentified
co-conspirators bought a Buckinghamshire home known as “The Falls” for
£3.25m. Two months later, as Mr Aluko was meeting with Nigerian oil
officials to discuss a contract, he arranged to buy two properties near
London’s Regent’s Parks: a £1.7m home at 39 Chester Close and 58 Harley
House on the Marylebone Road for £2.8m. The first property, upgraded
with an elevator and new stone flooring and countertops, was intended
for the use of Ms Alison-Madueke’s mother and her son, according to the
complaint. The men that month also purchased a £3.7m flat at 83-86
Prince Albert Road for the oil minister. Ms Alison-Madueke appears to
have favoured furniture stores in the Houston area, which she patronised
on periodic visits to the US oil industry capital. On a single day in
May 2012, Mr Aluko wired $461,500 from a Swiss bank account to one
furniture store and spent an additional $262,091 at a second on the oil
minister’s behalf, the complaint says.
The case was brought as part of DoJ’s
kleptocracy asset recovery initiative. Mr Aluko and Mr Omokore created
two shell companies in the British Virgin Islands — Atlantic Energy
Drilling Concepts Nigeria and Atlantic Energy Brass Development — to
handle their oil contracts. Though the companies, which prosecutors say
were “unqualified”, failed to fulfil the terms of their deals, they were
allowed to produce and sell more than $1.5bn worth of Nigerian crude
oil. The pair then created additional shell companies to launder the
proceeds through the US, prosecutors said. Mr Aluko’s last known address
was in Porza-Lugano, Switzerland, while Mr Omokore is described as a
resident of Lagos.
According to the Justice Department, the complaint announced Friday demonstrates the Department’s commitment to working with our law enforcement partners around the globe to trace and recover the proceeds of corruption, no matter the source.”
According to the Justice Department, the complaint announced Friday demonstrates the Department’s commitment to working with our law enforcement partners around the globe to trace and recover the proceeds of corruption, no matter the source.”
“Business executives who engage in
bribery and illegal pay-offs in order to obtain contracts create an
uneven marketplace where honest competitor companies are put at a
disadvantage,” said Assistant Director in Charge of the FBI’s Washington
Field Office, Andrew W. Vale. “Along with the Department of Justice,
international law enforcement partners and other US federal agencies,
the FBI is committed to pursuing all those who attempt to advance their
businesses through corrupt practices.”
The US government also stated that
Aluko, Omokore and others funded a lavish lifestyle for Alison-Madueke.
According to the allegations, they purchase millions of dollars in real
estate in and around London for Alison-Madueke and her family members,
then renovated and furnished these homes with millions of dollars in
furniture, artwork and other luxury items purchased at two Houston-area
furniture stores.
In return, the US government said
Alison-Madueke used her influence to direct a subsidiary of the Nigerian
National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) to award Strategic Alliance
Agreements (SAAs) to two shell companies created by Aluko and Omokore:
Atlantic Energy Drilling Concepts Nigeria Ltd. and Atlantic Energy Brass
Development Ltd. (the Atlantic Companies).
Under the SAAs, the Atlantic Companies
were required to finance the exploration and production operations of
eight on-shore oil and gas blocks. In return for financing these
operations, the companies expected to receive a portion of the oil and
gas produced.
However, according to the complaint, the
Atlantic Companies provided only a fraction of the agreed upon
financing or, in some instances, failed entirely to provide it. The
companies also failed to meet other obligations under the SAAs,
including the payment of $120 million entry fee. Nevertheless, according
to the allegations, the companies were permitted to lift and sell more
than $1.5 billion worth of Nigerian crude oil.
The government contends the Atlantic
Companies then used a series of shell companies and intermediaries to
launder a portion of the total proceeds of these arrangements into and
through the US.
“Today’s announcement would not have
been possible without the remarkable work conducted by a group of
dedicated investigators, attorneys and international partners who were
committed to leaving no stone unturned in this case targeting
international corruption,” said Assistant Director of the FBI’s Criminal
Investigative Division, Stephen E. Richardson.
“This case demonstrates that the FBI
will not tolerate American institutions and property being used to
launder proceeds of foreign corruption and today’s filing is an
important step towards recovering identified funds. This should serve as
a warning to other corrupt foreign officials that the United States is
not open for their business.”
Culled from Thisday
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