Ogun State Governor, Prince Dapo Abiodun, has rubbished a viral report that he admitted to the conviction for an alleged wire fraud in the United States in 1986.
The Governor, through his Commissioner for Information and Strategy, Alhaji Waheed Odusile, said there was no iota of truth in the report which, he said, only existed in the infantile imaginations of the authors and purveyors.
A member of the All Progressives Congress, APC, Mr. Ayodele Oludiran, had reportedly submitted a petition to the national chairman of the party, Senator Abdullahi Adamu, seeking Governor Abiodun’s disqualification from the Ogun State gubernatorial election over an alleged wire fraud conviction in America.
The petitioner also cited alleged “inconsistencies” in the forms filed by Abiodun for the 2019 governorship poll.
But reacting to the alleged petition, Abiodun’s lawyer, Chief Afe Babalola, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, SAN, through his law firm, Afe Babalola & Co., described the allegations as “baseless”, and urged the national leadership of the party to thrash them.
In the letter dated April 19, 2022, and received on behalf of Adamu by Ambassador Samuel Jimba on April 26, 2022, the law firm described the petition by Ayodele Oludiran as brimming with “spurious and unfounded allegations”.
Afe Babalola & Co., in the letter, also posited that the petition was, among others, “a deliberate move to deprive him (Governor Abiodun) of the opportunity to set the records straight and knowing full well that the petition was characterised by falsehood and malice”. (Read the full text of Afe Babalola’s letter).
On the viral report that Governor Abiodun reportedly admitted to committing the crime, Odusile noted that there was no place in the 14-page letter where Abiodun admitted to the conviction of any crime.
In his press statement, a copy of which was made available to The Crest, Odusile advised journalist to be faithful at all times to the ethics of their profession as the publication of truth at all times is the hallmark of standard and credible journalism.
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