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Nigerian High Court Limits ICPC’s Power To Freeze Bank Accounts From One Year To 72 Hours

According to the court, allowing the Commission to freeze accounts for up to one year, as provided by the ICPC Act, is “totally unreasonable and usurps the powers of the Court”.

A Federal High Court in Abuja has reduced the period that the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) can freeze suspicious bank accounts to 72 hours.

According to the court, allowing the Commission to freeze accounts for up to one year, as provided by the ICPC Act, is “totally unreasonable and usurps the powers of the Court”.

Delivering judgment in a suit filed by the Lawyers Network Against Corruption (LNAC), Justice James Omotosho held that although the rights of citizens to movable property and the privacy of their bank accounts are not absolute, allowing the ICPC to freeze an account for up to one year is likely to lead to abuse of powers by the Commission as “power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely”.

The judgment arose in a suit filed by Abuja-based lawyer, Mr. Ezenwa Anumnu, on February 21, 2024, on behalf of the LNAC complaining that the ICPC and its Chairman have unilaterally directed that the bank accounts of citizens be frozen without court orders or recourse to the courts and that they have ordered banks and financial institutions to withhold the monies and properties of Nigerians found guilty of committing any criminal offence indefinitely without any court order.

Complaining that these directives have resulted in untold hardship and caused injustice to innocent Nigerians, the LNAC asked the court to declare “that having regard to section 36(1) and (2) of the 1999 Constitution, as amended, the ICPC is not empowered to make an order restraining dealings on money or property of a person that is in the custody of a bank or other financial institution”.

It also called for a “declaration that Section 45(1) of the ICPC Act, 2020 is inconsistent with Section 36(1) and (2) of the 1999 Constitution and is, therefore, invalid, null and void”.

Among others, it urged the court to give an “order of perpetual injunction restraining the ICPC and its Chairman, either by themselves, their agents and their privies from making any order restraining dealings on money or property of a person that is in custody of the bank or other financial institution”.

In his judgment, Justice Omotosho noted that every citizen of Nigeria has a fundamental right to own movable and immovable property in Nigeria pursuant to Section 44(1) of the Constitution, but added that although the right is guaranteed, it is not absolute and can be curtailed under several circumstances.

He noted that the idea behind section 44(2)(k) of the Constitution is to give enforcement agencies the powers to seize properties which are suspected instruments or proceeds of crime, and that this helps them to carry out thorough investigations on such properties and prepare cases for prosecution.

Observing that Section 45(1) of the ICPC Act empowers the ICPC to simply order banks to freeze bank accounts under investigation, the judge however questioned if the provision is consistent with the provisions of the Constitution.

He cited Section 36 of the Constitution, which guarantees each person the right to fair hearing, and explained that the provision “entails that before decisions are made concerning a person, he must be afforded the opportunity to be heard”.

He stressed that the provision “emphasizes on the need for granting persons the opportunity to make representations before decisions are made and where a law gives no such opportunity, it is liable to be invalidated.”

According to Justice Omotosho, allowing the ICPC chairman to “give directives to banks to freeze accounts without court order is capable of working injustice to the owners of such accounts” adding that the “power is liable to being abused as the freezing may last longer than is necessary and throughout the period of such freeze, the owners of the accounts will be left in limbo which may cripple their personal or commercial interests.”

Rejecting the argument of ICPC’s lawyer, Mr. L.C. Iledunnu, that the order to freeze a bank account may be varied by the ICPC Chairman and lapses after 12 months, the judge said: “A year in the life of a person or a business is a long time and asking them to wait for that long may be inimical to progress,” especially considering the fact that the investigation may not lead to a charge being filed, which would have wasted the time of the owner of the accounts.

But Justice Omotosho acknowledged the duty of the ICPC to fight crime in Nigeria, saying it is sacrosanct and must be balanced against the rights of citizens.

Justice Omotosho reasoned that the intention of the drafters is to ensure that withdrawals cannot be made on a suspected account for at least 72 hours, pointing out that “Without this power, a person with a suspected account can easily transfer or use up the funds in the account before the Commission approaches a Court.”

He, therefore, ruled: “Freezing an account for up to one year, as argued by the Respondents’ counsel, is totally unreasonable and usurps the powers of the Court. Furthermore, it is likely to lead to an abuse of powers by the Respondents. Like the saying goes, power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely.”

He therefore held that the ICPC Chairman has the powers to freeze suspected bank accounts under Section 45(1) of the ICPC Act but ruled that such orders are only valid for 72 working hours after which they will lapse until extended by a court of law where investigation has not been completed.

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