I have shamed my wife and two young children – Driver arrested over N27m Nestle products
The suspects.
| credits: Kunle Falayi
| credits: Kunle Falayi
It was a flawless plan and nothing could go wrong, 42-year-old Idowu Jimoh had thought.
The fair complexioned trailer driver,
whose cool mien belied the criminal plan that was supposed to make him a
millionaire, probably was already dreaming of driving the car he
intended to use the N5m proceeds of his alleged crime to buy.
But that was not to be.
Jimoh did not waste time putting his plan
together when he got a job as a driver for trailers transporting Nestle
products from Ota in Ogun State to other parts of the country.
He got the job just four months ago but
Jimoh said long before then, he had already heard of how trailer drivers
make so much money diverting the goods of the companies they work for.
But he seemed to realise that his plan would not work if his motor-boy was not on board.
“I personally contracted Godwin Emeka,
because I knew him from a place I had worked before in Awka, Anambra
State. I knew things were hard for him and he would not have any problem
agreeing to the plan.”
Twenty two-year-old Emeka would later
explain that he was indeed in a very bad situation economically and
thought the money from the deal would help his family.
One would have thought that Jimoh simply
wanted to sell off the products and run away. But the plan seemed to be
more sophisticated than that.
“You don’t run away when you divert a
product,” he said assuredly. But how does one make a whole trailer-load
of goods disappear? “You simply go back to the company and tell them you
had an accident,”Jimoh explained.
Jimoh said he contacted a friend, who had
once diverted a company’s products, which he was supposed to deliver to
another location.
Unfortunately for him, the friend he contacted was a police informant.
A Special Anti-Robbery Squad operative of
the Ogun State Police Command, who was part of the sting operation that
nabbed Jimoh told our correspondent, “The informant was arrested when
he also diverted some products and was sent to jail. But he was reformed
from prison and became our informant. As soon as he (Jimoh) contacted
him, he called us.”
Jimoh’s ‘experienced’ friend told him that he had located a buyer, who would later turn out to be a SARS undercover operative.
The negotiation went back and forth, the
police said. Driver and buyer communicated regularly, enabling the
police to put in place a web of network in which Jimoh was caught.
The goods were destined for Suleja area
of Abuja but he was apprehended along with his motor-boy by SARS
operatives around Ibara Orile area of Ogun State where he was supposed
to link up with his buyer.
He told our correspondent, “Other drivers
have been doing it. I did not think there was any way I would be
caught. When I sell off the goods, I intended to leave just a little in
the trailer, then crash the vehicle to fake an accident.
“My intention was to tell them at work
that robbers had looted most of the goods if I was asked where the goods
in the truck were. I would have used the money to buy a car and do some
other things for my family.”
Jimoh insisted that the devil and his
greed pushed him into the crime. He was droopy-eyed and said he was
sorry for his crime. “I have shamed my wife and two young children.”
For Emeka (Jimoh’s motorboy), he could
only rue the day he met his boss. “I just wanted to help my family. I
did not want to go along with his plan but he convinced me, telling me
that nothing would go wrong.” The young man was on the verge of breaking
down.
Emeka plaintively explained how, he was
expecting to get between N1m and N1.2m from the deal after Jimoh told
him that the goods were to be sold for N5m.
But Jimoh said that even though he did
not tell his motor-boy how much he was going to pay him, he planned to
pay him N1.5m after the goods were sold.
“Please, help me to plead with the
police. Going to jail will destroy my father because I am the only son.
My family in Awka is really poor. I would have used part of the money to
buy a tricycle for my father.”
Spokesperson for the Ogun State Police
Command, Mr. Muyiwa Adejobi, who commended the SARS operatives who
carried out the operation in which the suspects were apprehended, said
the police has been liaising with Nestle to determine what could be done
about the goods in case some of them are perishable.
“The SARS in Ogun State are known for
professionalism and this case attests to the fact that the squad has
been doing really well. The goods will be handed over to the owner
soon,” he said.
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