By Sam Bennet
Nigeria’s justice system is once again under international scrutiny as the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) prepares to arraign Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Chief Mike Ozekhome, on Monday, January 26, 2026, over alleged fraud and forgery connected to a disputed high-value property in London.
The arraignment before the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) High Court in Maitama, Abuja, follows a detailed and highly critical judgment by a United Kingdom property tribunal which dismantled claims advanced by Mr. Ozekhome and other parties over ownership of the property and made far-reaching findings on forged identities and false documentation.
Because the case originated in a foreign court and involves judicial findings already tested in an international forum, it has attracted attention well beyond Nigeria’s borders, with legal, diplomatic and asset-recovery communities closely watching how Nigerian institutions respond.
At the centre of the case is a residential property located at 79 Randall Avenue, London NW2, whose ownership became the subject of protracted litigation before the UK First-Tier Tribunal (Property Chamber).
In the UK proceedings, Mr. Ozekhome claimed that the property had been gifted to him in 2021 by an individual identified as Shani Tali. To support this claim, documents including identity papers and transaction records were placed before the tribunal.
However, after reviewing the evidence, the UK tribunal rejected the ownership narrative in its entirety. The court found that the alleged donor lacked lawful title to the property and therefore could not have transferred ownership. More significantly, the tribunal concluded that the identity relied upon to anchor the claim did not exist in reality and that documents presented in support were fabricated.
The judgment went further to reconstruct the true ownership history of the property, finding that it had been acquired in 1993 by the late Nigerian general and politician, Jeremiah Useni, using a false name. On that basis, the tribunal ruled that all subsequent claims derived from that false identity were legally void and ordered the cancellation of Mr. Ozekhome’s application to be registered as proprietor.
The tribunal’s language, unusually blunt for a property dispute, drew international attention, particularly because it involved a senior member of Nigeria’s legal profession and findings of deliberate deception after a full evidentiary hearing.
Following the UK judgment, Nigeria’s anti-corruption agency commenced its own investigation. The ICPC has since filed a three-count criminal charge against Mr. Ozekhome, accusing him of knowingly receiving the London property, creating or procuring forged Nigerian identity documents in the name of Shani Tali, and using those documents in pursuit of the property claim.
The Commission has said its investigation was triggered by petitions and materials arising from the UK proceedings, including findings relating to false identities and forged documents. Prosecutors are expected to rely on documentary exhibits, testimony from ICPC investigators and officials of the Nigerian Immigration Service to establish the alleged offences.
Mr. Ozekhome has not been convicted of any offence and is expected to enter a plea when he is arraigned.
The case has attracted sustained interest outside Nigeria because it sits at the intersection of property law, identity fraud, asset recovery and cross-border enforcement. Legal practitioners note that the UK tribunal’s findings are already part of the public record and have been widely circulated in international legal and policy circles concerned with illicit financial flows.
Although foreign civil judgments are not binding on Nigerian courts, the fact that a UK tribunal conducted a full trial, tested evidence and reached firm factual conclusions has made the Nigerian proceedings a point of reference for international observers assessing Nigeria’s commitment to accountability in transnational cases.
Diplomatic and asset-recovery sources say the matter is being followed as a practical test of cooperation between jurisdictions and of Nigeria’s willingness to act on adverse findings made by foreign courts involving Nigerian nationals.
Within Nigeria, the case has generated intense debate, largely because it involves a SAN and raises questions about professional integrity, document fraud and the use of foreign systems to advance contested claims.
Analysts say the international dimension has heightened the stakes. How Nigerian courts handle the case — including adherence to due process, transparency and evidentiary rigor — is expected to influence perceptions of the country’s justice system at a time when Nigeria is seeking stronger cooperation on asset recovery and financial crime enforcement.
For many observers, the issue is no longer limited to the fate of a single defendant but has become a measure of institutional credibility.
The FCT High Court is expected to take Mr. Ozekhome’s plea on Monday and consider preliminary applications, including bail. No timetable has been announced for the trial.
As proceedings begin, attention remains fixed not only on the courtroom in Abuja but also on how Nigeria’s institutions respond to a case that has already been examined, judged and widely discussed on the international stage.














































