Michael Nash, the Chicago lawyer representing Olalekan Ponle in the United States court, has revealed the reason for the dismissal of the complaints against his client.
Mr Ponle, nicknamed
Woodberry, is facing charges bordering on wire fraud conspiracy at a United
States District Court sitting in Illinois, after he was arrested at the United
Arab Emirate on June 10.
According to the
complaint against Mr Ponle, an unnamed Chicago company was tricked into sending
wire transfers totalling $15.2 million.
Companies based in
Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, New York and California were also listed as victims of
the alleged fraud, prosecutors say.
PREMIUM TIMES
reported how the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) nabbed the 29-year-old
through details accessed from his WhatsApp, iPhone and Bitcoin transactions. He
was extradited to the United States on July 2.
A report of the
grand jury, a group of lawyers empowered to conduct legal proceedings and
investigate potential criminal conduct, indicted him.
The jury summed up
the allegations against him to an eight-count charge of wire fraud, which
violates section 1343 of the United States Codes.
Temporary relief
Meanwhile, this
newspaper reported that the complaint against Mr Ponle was dismissed on Tuesday
after the United States filed a motion requesting such.
In the court order
issued by Judge Robert W. Gettleman on Tuesday, the government’s motion to
dismiss complaint without prejudice was granted.
“Without objection
the complaint against defendant Ponle is dismissed without prejudice. Motion
presentment hearing set for 7/23/2020 is stricken,” Mr Gettleman ruled.
When a case is
dismissed with prejudice, it is over and done with, once and for all, and
cannot be brought back to court but when it is dismissed “without prejudice”,
like in the case of Mr Ponle, the dismissal is temporary and can be revisited.
Reason
While responding to
PREMIUM TIMES’s enquiries on Thursday night, Mr Nash said the case was
dismissed because the government charged him with a slightly different crime.
“The government
dismissed the case because it charged him with a slightly different crime. In
the long run, no difference.”
He, however, failed
to provide clarifications to what he meant by a ‘slightly different crime’.
When contacted on
Thursday night, Assistant U.S. Attorney, Joseph D. Fitzpatrick, who spoke on
behalf of the plaintiff, said although the complaint is dismissed, but the
grand jury indictment is still active.
indictment (charging
8 counts of wire fraud) is still active. We cannot comment on the dismissal of
the complaint, but I wanted to make sure you knew the indictment is still
active,” he told this newspaper.
He said Mr Ponle
“has now been charged by indictment, instead of being charged by the complaint
by FBI”.
The accused remains
in the custody of the U.S. Marshal as of the time of reporting.
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