EFCC Spokesman Unable To Confirm ‘Discovery Of $9 Million’ At Boroh’s Residence

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The Spokesperson for the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Wilson Uwujaren, is unable to confirm a report that anti-graft operatives allegedly recovered $9 million dollar after a search at the home of Paul Boroh, the recently sacked head of Presidential Amnesty Programme.
“I am not aware of such discoveries,” Wilson Uwujaren told PREMIUM TIMES by telephone Wednesday morning.
THEWILL had published the story, which claimed that that detectives from the EFCC and the Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA) raided the home of the former head of Presidential Amnesty Programme on Tuesday morning in Abuja, based on the report by THISDAY.
It would be  recalled that President Muhammadu Buhari sacked Boroh from office over corruption allegations and other malfeasance, marking an inglorious end to his three-year reign at a department created to address Niger-Delta grievances but which has been dogged by mismanagement since inception.
The president named Charles Dokubo, a foreign policy expert, as Mr. Boroh’s replacement with immediate effect.
Reacting, Boroh’s wife, Ibinye, and Olusola Oke, the family’s lawyer, denied the report of the discovery of the funds at a press briefing but admitted that the house was raided.
She decried the untold embarrassment the report had inflicted on her family and demanded immediate retraction and apology.

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