JUDICIARY
FCT CJ Expresses Concern over Negative Effects of Social Media on Administration of Justice

The Chief Judge of the FCT, Justice Hussenini Baba- Yusuf on Monday, expressed concern over the negative effects of social media on the administration of justice.
Declaring the 2023/2024 Legal Year open, Baba-Yusuf said that the essential task of the judiciary is to make independent and impartial decisions on disputes brought before them.He added that the goal of the judiciary was to uphold the the principles of openness, transparency and accessibility in administering justice.” I consider that it is pertinent to draw the attention to one social evil that confronts the administration of justice frontally in this jet age of technology. I refer here to the menace of the social Media .” The rights of other persons are often breached with recklessness, misinformation, disinformation, fake news, cyber bullying, online harassment, etc,have become the order of the day.” The alarming rates at which unverified allegations and malicious attacks on or against innocent persons are recklessly posted and spread around on social media denotes how so low civility has declined in our society at large.The truth, he said, remains that when institutions are maligned and debased,its evil effects percolate on the entire society.” To bring me to my specific remarks today on this point, coming from my role as the head of an institution dedicated to the administration of justice,I find it worrisome to see these trends transposed .” Sometimes in ways we notice, sometimes in ways we may not see, into the judicial sphere.” These acts must never be found,let alone encouraged, in the nobleprofession that prides on conservatism, he said.The FCT judiciary, he said, received 5,952 and 7,354 cases respectively in 2022/2023 legal yearBaba-Yusuf noted that for the effectiveness of the functions of judges, they have to be respected, regarded and protected.“Moving on to the 2022/2023 legal year, the FCT high court assigned 5,,952 new cases, consisting of both civil and criminal matters, while the the44 magistrates received 7,364 cases.” In the course of the year, the courts successfully determined 4,293 cases representing 72..4 per cent . Meanwhile, the Magistrate Courts successfully determined 7,328 cases, encompassing both civil and criminal matters,and thereby achieving an outstanding completion rate of 99.6%.” As the 2022/2023 legal year wound up,there were 13,996 pending cases, covering both civil and criminal matters, at the Magistrate Court” he said.He said the FCT judiciary wants to deliver an exemplary justice that can repose confidence in the members of the public amid several challenges . (NAN)CRIME
Music Teacher Bags Life Imprisonment For Defiling 9-year-old Pupil

An Ikeja Sexual Offences and Domestic Violence Court on Wednesday sentenced a 35-year-old music teacher and counselor, Anthony Okeh, to life imprisonment for defiling a nine-year-old, JSS 1 pupil name withheld)
That Justice Abiola Soladoye in her judgment held that the prosecution had successfully discharged the burden of proof of the charge of defilement against Okeh.
According to her, Okeh is a pathological liar, soulless man without any iota of shame, and everything a teacher should not be for having unlawful sexual intercourse with his pupil.
Soladoye said the case was a direct evidence as the survivor was in court to narrate her sexual ordeals in the hands of the music teacher; a sexual predator.
She added that the evidence of the survivor was lucid, cogent, unequivocal and compelling and the denial of the convict did not hold waters.
“To the mind of this court, the denial of the convict is a form to distance himself from the crime.
“The convict is a pathological liar whose evidence is an after thought and I do not believe him at all.
“I do not believe the other three defence witnesses as well, because their evidences were devoid of truth and they were tainted witnesses.
“Cases are not won on the number of witnesses presented to testify before the court but on the quality of evidence adduced that are credible, convincing and compelling,” the judge said.
The judge added that the survivor in her testimony had narrated how the convict called her upstairs into the music room, where he showed her different nude pictures, claimed to be a cultist and threatened to kill her if she ever told anyone.
“The survivor recognised the man in the box as her music teacher who defiled her more than two times in the music room.
“The testimony of the Investigative Police Officer (IPO) is corroborated by the testimony of the survivor when she said that the mother of the girl noticed her reluctance to go to school and she later confessed to her mother what the convict had been doing to her.
“The IPO said that the mother of the survivor (nominal complainant) reported the case to the police.
“Statement of the nominal complainant was admitted into evidence,” Soladoye added.
She therefore convicted Okeh of the one-count charge of defilement and consequently sentenced him to life imprisonment.
Soladoye also ordered that the convict’s name be registered in the Lagos State Sexual Offences Register.
She also called on school proprietors and proprietress to recruit teachers with high moral standards to teach in their schools so as to avoid dent on their institutions.
“All stakeholders in the administration of criminal justice must form a strong collaboration in combating sexual violence offences so as to protect the dignity, mental health, physical and psychological trauma of survivors in such cases,” she said.
The State Counsel, Miss Abimbola Abolade presented two witnesses; the survivor and an investigative police officer while the Defence called four witnesses.
Abolade told the court that the convict committed the offence on Sept. 6, 2022 at Lachez O International School, Agege, Lagos.
The prosecution submitted that the convict had unlawful sexual intercourse with the minor by penetrating her vagina with his penis.
According to the prosecution, the offence contravenes Section 137 of the Criminal Laws of Lagos State, 2015. (NAN)
CRIME
Court Remands Man For Allegedly Killing His Father

An Iyaganku Magistrates’ Court in Ibadan on Wednesday, ordered that a 27-year-old man, Musa Lamidi should be remanded in a correctional facility for allegedly killing his father, Rufai,
The police charged Lamidi, whose address was not provided with murder.
The Magistrate, Mr Olaolu Olanipekun did not take the plea of Lamidi for want in jurisdiction.
He directed the police to return the case file to the Director of Public Prosecution (DPP) for legal advice.
He adjourned the case until July 10, for mention.
The Prosecutor, ASP Musbau Lawal, told the court that Lamidi committed the offence on May 11, at about 11 p.m, at Eruwa, Oyo State.
He alleged that Lamidi hit his father with a stick on the forehead, which caused his death.
He said the offence contravened the provisions of Section 319 of the Criminal Laws of Oyo State, 2000. (NAN)
JUDICIARY
Teenager Gets 10 Strokes Of Cane For Stealing Electric Cables

A Kaduna Magistrates’ Court, on Wednesday ordered that a teenager, be given 10 strokes of the cane for breaking into a house and stealing electrical cables worth N450, 000.
The Magistrate, Ibrahim Emmanuel, gave the sentence following a guilty plea by the 18-year-old now convict who resides at Kinkinau Kaduna.
Emmanuel said that the light punishment was because the convict saved the court from a prolonged trial, adding that he hoped that it would serve as a deterrent to others.
He also ordered that the recovered electrical cables be returned to the complainant, Sadiq Yusuf.
Earlier, the Prosecutor, Insp. Chidi Leo, told the court that the convict committed the offence on May 17 at Ungwan sarki Kaduna.
He said the convict and one Mohammed Sani, now attack large, broke into the complainant’s house and stole the electrical cables worth N450, 000.
Leo said the convict was arrested when a neighbour to the complainant saw him coming out of the house with the stolen items.
The prosecutor said the offence contravened the Penal Code of Kaduna State, 2017. (NAN)