Lagos Public Prosecutions to arraign Briton for $8.8m fraud
The Lagos State
Directorate of Public Prosecutions has filed criminal charges against a British
citizen, Deepak Khilnani, for fraud.
Sources said the
state might soon file a request for his extradition to face criminal charges in
Nigeria.
Khilnani, an
Indian-Briton chartered accountant, was said to have, along with one Dr. Sushil
Chandra, duped his Nigerian partner, Green Fuels Limited, to the tune of $8.8m
in 2008.
The DPP, last
week Thursday, filed a charge marked ID/1544c/15 before the Lagos State High
Court in Ikeja against the suspects.
The charge
contains four counts bordering on conspiracy, cheating, stealing and false
representation.
It was learnt
that Khilnani had since last year absconded to the United Kingdom after he was
granted an administrative bail by the police.
In one of the
counts, the prosecution alleged that the suspects “fraudulently tricked Green
Fuels Limited to pay greater sum for machinery purchased from Gentec Limited
than it would have paid for such machinery.”
They were also
accused of making false statements to the Corporate Affairs Commission “knowing
same to be false, with intent to defraud the shareholders and members of Green
Fuels Limited.”
The offences,
according to the prosecution, contravene sections 390(6), 421, 422 and 436 of
the Criminal Code Law, Cap C17, Vol.2, Law of Lagos State, 2003.
Khilnani, it was
learnt, is an ex-convict in the UK.
A conviction
certificate dated November 13, 1998, issued by the British Crown Court at
Blackfriars indicated that Khilnani was jailed for 18 months after being
convicted for “trading with intent to defraud creditors, false accounting and
making false statement to auditors.”
The UK court
document marked, T19970811, and signed by J. Jordan stated that Khilnani was
disqualified for six years under Section 2, Company Directors Disqualification
Act 1986.
He was also
ordered by the court to pay the prosecution cost of £15,000.
Punch
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