The trial of Danjuma Goje, former governor, Gombe State and a serving senator, on charges of financial misappropriation, came up on Tuesday, before Justice B. Quadri at the Federal High Court, Jos, with the 24th prosecution witness testifying.
Goje is being prosecuted by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, in relation to alleged financial impropriety, including the contract on food supply to the state government house during his tenure as well as loan facilities taken from Access and Union Banks.
He is standing trial alongside Aliyu El-Nafaty, S. M. Dokoro and Sabo Muhammad
At the sitting, counsel to the EFCC, Wahab Shittu, filed an amended 21-count charge against the defendants and they were all served, though yet to take their pleas.
Meanwhile, Chris Owobu, an operative of the EFCC and a member of the team that investigated the alleged offence gave a blow-by-blow account of how the resolution purported to have been passed by the Gombe State House of Assembly to authorise the approval of the N5billion facility from Access Bank was forged.
The PW24 stated that when Danjuma Goje was governor, he got a N5billion facility from Access Bank without the approval of the Gombe State House of Assembly.
He added that Goje under investigation claimed that he got approval from Gombe State House of Assembly via a resolution passed by the House, but investigation revealed that on said day, the House did not sit nor pass any resolution regarding any loan as claimed by the former governor.
Owobu further told the court that it was the House that informed EFCC that the purported resolution was not from them.
He said that the resolution, which has the name of the Clerk of the Gombe State House of Assembly, was later discovered to be forged.
“In the course of investigation, we invited the Clerk to confirm whether he was the one who signed the resolution. His response was that there was no record of the House which had such resolution mandating the governor to access any loan from Access Bank.
“The clerk further told the investigators that the signature on the resolution was not his own, that it was forged.
“We went further to collect specimen signature from the Clerk and send same with the one on the resolution to forensic expert for analysis. The report from the forensic expert revealed that the signature on the resolution is different from the specimen collected, thereby justifying the claim by the Clerk that his signature on the purported resolution was forged”, Owobu stated.
Thereafter, the judge, adjourned to April 10 – 11, 2018 for continuation of trial.