Showing posts with label LEGAL. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LEGAL. Show all posts

Tuesday, 8 March 2016

Hulk Hogan takes Gawker website to court in $100m privacy lawsuit after they post secretly recorded sex tape of him having an affair


HULK HOGAN has taken American website Gawker to court in a $100m privacy lawsuit after they posted a secretly recorded video of him involved in a sex act.
The reality TV star and former World Wrestling Entertainment champion is seeking $100 million in damages from Gawker for posting the nearly two-minute video of him having sex with the former wife of his then-best friend, radio shock jock Bubba the Love Sponge.
Hogan's lawyer Shane Vogt told jurors in Florida that the online gossip site was motivated by power and brand promotion at Hogan's expense.
Vogt, noting that 2.5 million people had viewed the clip during the six months it remained online, said: "They (Gawker) have essentially replaced sticks and stones with clicks and phones."
Attorneys for Hogan, who will go by his legal name, Terry Bollea, for the court proceedings, say he had a right to expect privacy in a private bedroom and the video was filmed without his knowledge.
Gawker argues that its 2012 post is protected free speech under the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, and contends it was reporting on a celebrity who has publicly discussed his sex life.
Gawker's founder, Nick Denton, sat in the front row of the courtroom along with a former editor involved in the posting, A.J. Daurlieo.
Seth Berlin, a lawyer representing Gawker, said ahead of the trial: "That is a high-stakes proposition, not just for Gawker, who is right now in the crosshairs, but for all of the people who exercise First Amendment rights."
A loss could put Gawker out of business, but Berlin confirmed that the website will appeal an unfavourable verdict, he said.
Hogan is expected to be the first witness to take to the stand, and a judge has given Hogan special permission to wear his signature Bandana in court.

Thursday, 3 March 2016

NIS scam: Court grants ex-minister Abba Moro bail on self-recognition


ABBA MORO: FORMER INTERIOR MINISTER


Justice Anwuli Chikere of the Federal High Court in Abuja has granted bail to former interior minister, Abba Moro, who is facing charges over the 2014 tragic Nigeria Immigration recruitment in which more than a dozen job seekers died.


Mr. Moro was given bail on self-recognition, and without conditions.

The judge said the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission failed to prove that Mr. Moro would interfere with his trial.


The judge, however, ruled that two other defendants should pay N100 million each with a surety in like sum. The sureties must be of the directorate cadre in the civil service.


The sureties and the defendants are to submit two recent passports as well as their international passports, and the sureties must also have landed properties worth the amount in any part of the country.

Mr. Moro and four others are facing an 11-count charge of money laundering.


They are accused of defrauding 676, 675 applicants of the sum of N676, 675, 000, being the aggregate of N1000 paid by each applicant to Drexel ahead of the recruitment.

Mr. Moro was earlier held at the Kuje prison in Abuja pending the determination of his bail application.

While he was detained, Anastasia Daniel-Nwobia, a former permanent secretary in the Ministry of Interior, was permitted to continue her administrative bail


Arms Scandal:Violation of Court Order, FG scares Investor away from Nigeria - DASUKI



DASUKI


Embattled former National Security Adviser, NSA, Col. Sambo Dasuki (rtd), has told a Federal High Court in Abuja that investors confidence in the country is being negatively affected by Federal Government’s refusal to obey court orders.
Dasuki, who was speaking through his counsel, Mr. Joseph Daodu SAN, on Thursday, urged the Justice Adeniyi Ademola-led court to halt his trial until the government complied with its order granting him bail.
“How will the government look like at the end of the day? Will investors be confident in this country when court make orders, but they are not obeyed?” he said.
It would be recalled that Justice Ademola had in November, 2015, granted Dasuki bail, but he was rearrested immediately after his release from Kuje prison by the Department of State Services, DSS. On February 16, Dipo Okpeseyi SAN, counsel to the DSS, had announced to the court that the prosecution was ready for trial to commence.
But Daodu said that the defence counsel was not ready to proceed with the trial because the federal government was still keeping the accused person in detention despite an order of the court granting him bail.
“We cannot be ready for trial until the defendant enjoys his constitutional rights,” he had said.
“We apply that we should be given time to prepare the defence. The conduct of the prosecution has not enabled him to enjoy his constitutional rights.
“The worst is that for about seven weeks we do not know where he is.
 “Any of us here who proceed to defend an accused person in this circumstance may lose his license of practice.”
However, counsel to the DSS argued that the prosecution was not stopping Dasuki from enjoying his freedom, but quickly pointed out that the accused person was not being allegedly held for the charges before the court.
He therefore asked the court to reject the request for adjournment and to commence trial.
At the resumption of proceeding on Thursday, both parties argued for and against Dasuki’s application for discharge with the prosecution restating its position that the accused person was being held for a different offence.
The court, thereafter, fixed April 4, 2016 for ruling on the application.

Ese Oruru returns Home


Abuja — Some minutes before 8:00 p.m. yesterday, the trauma of the family of Charles Oruru was almost over. They received their daughter, Ese, who was allegedly kidnapped by one Yunusa to Kano State. The Bayelsa State Police Commissioner Peter Ogunyanwo confirmed the arrival of Ese and her mother in Bayelsa from Abuja .

However, an assistant inspector general (AIG), commissioner and two superintendents of police are among officers to face a panel of inquiry set up to examine their role in the abduction of the 14-year-old Ese.

The young girl was allegedly abducted by one Yunusa, from her mother's shop in Yenagoa Local Government of Bayelsa State on August 12, 2015 and taken to Kano State.

The journey home was facilitated by the Inspector General of Police (IGP) Solomon Arase who bought three flight tickets for the child-bride, her mother and a female police escort to ensure they are easily transited to Bayelsa State via Port Harcourt, Rivers State. The mother was said to have come to Abuja by road the previous day to reclaim her child. The alleged abductor and other suspects in the saga are being held in police custody in Abuja.

Addressing journalists yesterday morning at the Force Headquarters in Abuja, the Force Public Relations Officer (FPRO), Olabisi Kolawole, flanked on her left by the mother of the abducted girl, Mrs. Rose Oruru, said Ese's abduction was reported since August last year, but police investigation into the matter towards effecting her release to her parents seemed compromised and was rather slack and below expectation due to what she called "some bureaucratic and complex intertwining factors" before the intervention of the police leadership.

She declared that consequently, the IGP had "ordered an in-house administrative enquiry designed to review the professional conduct of the officers responsible for the initial investigation of the case. Any officer indicted for professional dereliction will be firmly dealt with, accordingly."


 






Explaining the police side of the story from the time it was first reported in Ekiki Police station in Yenagoa last year, Kolawole said a follow-up on information obtained from other suspected collaborators revealed that the girl was in the custody of the Kano State Sharia Commission, from where the Zone 1 AIG, commissioner of police, divisional police officer in Kura Local Government and other officers failed, despite supposed civil efforts within these months, to secure her release.

The leadership of the police was said to have condemned the seeming negligence or ineptitude on the side of the Kano Command and did not find it convincing that its officers could not facilitate the release of the allegedly abducted girl until the IGP had to step in, after the case was blown open to become a national issue.

Kolawole also told journalists that the teenage girl would be handed over to her parents as soon as she (Ese) was through with counseling for psychological and emotional stability by the gender and child protection unit, and medical examination by the relevant department.

According to her, the suspected girl-child abductor, Yunusa Dahiru (alias Yellow) is already taken into custody by the police and would face criminal prosecution along with all the collaborators. "I can assure you that the abductor and all other actors in this abduction saga will be brought to deserved justice. This is the only way this nation can make a clear statement in unison that any individual that violates the sanctity of the rights of our children shall be dealt with."

The FPRO explained that due to respect for the privacy of the teenager and other protective rights of the girl and her family, she must not be exposed, thence the decision to shield her from camera and prying eyes.

Although the police spokesperson declined to answer questions from journalists, she allowed the mother to say something. Mrs. Oruru, speaking in Pidgin English, common among Nigerians in the Niger Delta region, said: "I thank all of you, the press people, all the Nigerian people in short, just work hard so that I can get my daughter back. Now I don get my daughter back, na to go house. I thank everybody, including the policemen, everybody wen e work so, now I don carry my pikin, I will go with am. God bless everybody."

The trio of Mrs. Oruru, Ese and a female police officer, who has been detailed to be by the side of the mother, had slept the previous night in an undisclosed hotel in Abuja.

When confronted later, after the briefing, with rumour of the girl being pregnant, Kolawole denied knowledge of Ese's status in that regard, saying "I don't know about that, who ever reported that knows where they got the information from."

However, it was apparent something was amiss with Ese when she arrived at the Force Headquarters on Tuesday afternoon, as she wore her hijab, folding her hands around the abdomen as if she was concealing a budge.

Yesterday, she was not allowed to show her face, as even the mother was ushered into the small conference room on the 4th Floor of Louis Edet House through the fire escape back door.

A source told The Guardian that "she is actually pregnant, but you know it is too sensitive for that information to go out now. Certain aspects of her rights must be protected, so the information is classified for now.

"That was one of the first tests that were conducted, but you know the results cannot be immediately revealed because she's a teenager, her parents are expected to make decisions and speak for her. It is now their responsibility, the police have done their part," the source said.

Kolawole had said "a team from the medical department of the force is also extending medical attention to the girl and upon certifying her medical status and emotional state," she would be released to her parents. The police medical team checked the teenage girl as directed by the IGP.


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