Ex-pension boss Maina sentenced 61 years for N2.3 billion money laundering, racketeering

The Abuja Division of the Federal High Court on Monday sentenced a former Nigerian pension management official Abdulrasheed Maina to 61 years in jail after finding him guilty of money laundering and racketeering.
But Mr Maina will spend only eight years in prison as the sentences are stipulated to run concurrently by Justice Okon Abang.
Mr Abang said Mr Maina bribed bankers at Fidelity Bank to compromise due diligence in handling heavy transactions.
He was found guilty of illegally depositing up to N2.3 billion in three installments in violation of extant money laundering regulations.

The judgement marks a major victory for the anti-graft EFCC, whose officials have spent eight years chasing the case.
Mr Maina’s son was convicted recently on a similar set of charges. Details shortly…
More from Peoples Gazette

States
Ikoyi Building Collapse: Lagos assembly seeks compensation for victims families
The speaker who pushed for compensation said “If the agencies had done the needful, we would not have this sad occurrence.”

World
Wang Yaping becomes first Chinese woman to walk in space
A former Air Force pilot, though she’s the first Chinese woman to walk in space, Ms Yaping had travelled to space back in 2013 to the Tiangong-1.

Economy
We need money from recovered loot to function: Malami
Mr Malami’s request comes amid calls for accountability and transparency in the management of recovered loots and assets.

World
Apple trails HP, Dell as third most popular U.S. laptop brand
HP has the highest U.S. market share at 35 per cent, followed by Dell with 27 per cent, and Apple trailing at 24 per cent.

Africa
Mass burial in Sierra Leone after tanker explosion leaves over 100 persons dead
The explosion happened after people ignored warnings not to scoop spilled fuel after a petrol tanker collided with a lorry.

Africa
ECOWAS bans Mali coup leaders, family members from traveling, freezes assets
The sanctions include asset freeze and travel bans on members of the transitional authority and certain members of their families.