Nwaukoni convicted in ₦31M land fraud, as illegal sales ravage Azagba Ogwashi-Uku

A Magistrate Court in Ogwashi-Uku Delta State, has convicted Joseph Nwaukoni, elder brother to embattled businessman, Mike Nwaukoni, for defrauding a businesswoman of ₦31 million in a land scam that exposes the growing crisis around the illegal sale of communal land in Azagba Ogwashi-Uku, a vital territory under the Obi of Ogwashi-Uku’s traditional authority.

The land, located in Azagba Ogwashi-Uku, is part of a communal land overseen by the Obi-in-Council.

Nwaukoni, alongside Joseph Izegbue and Charles Osadebe, was found guilty in Charge No. MO/106C/2023 of conspiracy and obtaining money by false pretenses after collecting money for 400 plots of land from Pauline Okonkwo, a businesswoman from Onitsha.

The transaction, the court found, was done in bad faith, with the defendants fully aware that the land was not legally theirs to sell.

The court heard from four prosecution witnesses and reviewed extensive payment records before delivering a guilty verdict. Though the convicts claimed they only received ₦18.5 million, the court ruled that the full ₦31 million was unlawfully obtained.

“This wasn’t a case of confusion—it was a deliberate act to defraud” a legal observer said.

Meanwhile, Joseph Nwaukoni’s conviction is just the tip of a larger crisis. His younger brother, Mike Nwaukoni, is currently facing serious criminal charges at the Federal High Court in Asaba for his alleged role in an October 2023 attack on the Obi of Ogwashi-Uku at the palace. Mike is being tried on terrorism and attempted murder charges, accused of leading a violent group that stormed the palace in a bid to destabilize the traditional institution.

While the Magistrate stopped short of sending Nwaukoni and his co-convicts to prison citing their age and alleged health condition, the court ordered them to refund the ₦31 million or serve one year in custody. But days after the ruling, the convicts were mysteriously released on bail by Justice K.O. Okpu of the High Court in Ogwashi-Uku. Despite that twist, the underlying conviction stands—and the people of Ogwashi-Uku are demanding that this case mark a turning point in how communal land is protected and respected.

However, The case shines a harsh light on the widespread and illegal appropriation of communal lands in Azagba Ogwashi-Uku, a situation traditional leaders and residents say is spiraling out of control. Rogue elements, often with political or criminal backing, have been selling land in bulk without the consent or knowledge of the Obi of Ogwashi-Uku, the traditional owner and overlord of all lands in the kingdom.

Read also: Otulu Ogwashi-Uku suspect, Samson Eleme sentenced to death by hanging

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