The Department of Justice executed a forfeiture order Thursday on
$401,931 in a Massachusetts brokerage fund traceable to an allegedly
corrupt former Nigerian governor.
The forfeiture was the first victory for a fledgling Justice
Department initiative dedicated to seeking out assets in the U.S. linked
to high-level foreign corruption.
Prosecutors filed court papers in April 2011 targeting a $600,000
Maryland home and a Massachusetts brokerage account belonging to
Diepreye Peter Solomon Alamieyeseigha, governor of Nigeria’s
oil-producing Bayelsa State from 1999 to 2005. According to prosecutors,
Alamieyeseigha’s assets were the proceeds of corruption. Alamieyeseigha
denied the allegations in court filings.
Earlier this month, a federal district judge in Massachusetts granted
a motion for default judgment and civil forfeiture on the brokerage
account. Prosecutors executed the forfeiture order Thursday.
“With a declared income of less than $250,000, Mr. Alamieyeseigha
accumulated millions of dollars worth of property over a six-year
period,” Assistant Attorney General Lanny Breuer said in a news
release. “Today’s announcement – the first forfeiture judgment obtained
under our Kleptocracy Asset Recovery Initiative – sends a powerful
message about the United States’ commitment to rooting out corruption
far and wide.”
A Nigerian court sentenced Alamieyeseigha to two years in prison in
2007 for failing to declare assets in Nigeria, South Africa and the U.S.
Prosecutors said he bought more than $8 million in properties with
bribes he received from contractors while serving as governor.
Alamieyeseigha also pleaded guilty to money laundering on behalf of two
companies he controlled — Solomon & Peters Ltd. and Alamieyeseigha
and Santolina Investment Corp.
In 2006, the High Court of Justice in London found that three of
Alamieyeseigha’s properties there, as well as accounts held by
Santolina, represented bribe money or were traceable to bribes
Alamieyeseigha took from contractors in Nigeria. After he was arrested
at Heathrow Airport in 2005, police found about $1.6 million in cash in
his house.
A lawyer for Alamieyeseigha didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
In civil forfeiture cases, the Justice Department can file complaints
in federal court against property, rather than individuals, linked to
foreign corruption. The forfeiture against Alamieyeseigha’s Maryland
house is pending in federal court in Maryland.
The Justice Department didn’t say where the forfeited funds would be
directed. According to the news release, “where appropriate [the Justice
Department will] return those proceeds to benefit those harmed.” A
Justice Department spokeswoman didn’t immediately respond to an inquiry
about whether or not the funds would be returned to Nigeria.
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