The FORMER Goldman Sachs banker, Elias Preko, was yesterday, sentenced to 4-1/2 years in prison by a London court for laundering $5 million on behalf of James Ibori, the former Governor of Delta State, James Ibor Nigeria.
Ibori is serving 13 years in a British jail after pleading
guilty last year to 10 counts of fraud and money laundering.
He is the most senior Nigerian politician to be held to
account for the corruption that has blighted Africa’s most populous country and
top oil producer, where the case is being closely watched.
Harvard graduate Preko, 54, became the fifth of Ibori’s
associates to be jailed for assisting his corruption after the former
governor’s wife, mistress, sister and lawyer were all convicted by British
courts in previous trials.
The cases have been tried in London because some of the
money was laundered in Britain and some of the defendants were based there.
Attempts by Nigeria’s own anti-corruption agency to prosecute Ibori, dating
back to 2007, have foundered.
A jury at London’s Southwark Crown Court unanimously
convicted Preko, a Ghanaian national, of two offences of money laundering
between March 2003 and April 2008 when he was arrested.
He was charged with assisting Ibori in channeling stolen
money through a web of offshore trusts and shell companies.
Preko had left Goldman Sachs before he committed the
offences and the bank is not accused of any wrongdoing. The court heard Preko
tried to open accounts on Ibori’s behalf when he was still working there but
this was not authorised by the bank.
The Delta governor from 1999 to 2007 lost immunity from
prosecution after he left office and was extradited from Dubai to Britain in
2011.
In sentencing Preko, Judge Anthony Pitts said: “The evidence
against you in this case was very clear. You knew what Ibori was doing and you
were actively assisting him.
“You are a man of considerable ability and intelligence,
highly educated, capable of making lots of money perfectly legitimately.”
The court had heard that in a decade at Goldman Sachs, where
he was in charge of private clients in sub-Saharan Africa, Preko had made $12
million in salary and received a severance payment of $3 million when he left
the bank.
“You had the ability to walk away (from Ibori). You chose to
involve yourself with him as a professional man, against the code of upstanding
conduct for men in your position,” Pitts said.
The judge noted that the sums Preko had helped Ibori launder
were “relatively small amounts in a case where the amounts are almost beyond
belief”.
Ibori’s total fortune was not known. During his sentencing
in April 2012, Pitts puts the amount of stolen money covered by his guilty
pleas at £50 million ($82 million) but said this may be a “ludicrously low”
fraction of his total booty.
In a three-week hearing this year, prosecutors sought a
court order for the confiscation of £90 million in assets that they said were
the proceeds of Ibori’s crimes, but the hearing ended inconclusively and will
restart next year.
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