An operative of the Department of State Services (DSS), Michael Jego, yesterday told the Federal High Court in Abuja how a man, John Agbo, who threatened to attack some elite schools in Abuja, was arrested.
Jego, while testifying as the first prosecution witness in the ongoing trial of Agbo, told Justice Joyce Abdulmalik that several messages were sent by Agbo to the schools, threatening to kill their students and teachers.
The witness narrated how the defendant was trailed and apprehended by the service.
He said his agency received petitions from three schools in Abuja in 2024 about text messages from some telephone numbers, with threats to kill students and teachers, and destroy property in the affected schools. He said Agbo was found with a Tecno android phone allegedly used to send the threat messages.
Agbo was arraigned on March 17 on a two-count charge bordering on terrorism.
The DSS had filed the charge marked FHC/ABJ/CR/06/2026 under the Terrorism (Prevention and Prohibition) Act, 2022, and the Cybercrimes (Prohibition, Prevention, etc.) (Amendment) Act, 2024, against the defendant.
The agency in the case summary said the defendant was standing trial on charges of using the instrumentality of his GSM numbers: 08124412783, 08069781274, 08105715028 and 09139681108 to send SMS to some schools in Abuja.
It listed Premier International School, The Regent Secondary School and Oakland International British School as the schools Agbo sent the threat messages.
Agbo was said to have in the text messages, threatened to attack the schools and kill both students and teachers, stressing that it wouldn’t take them up to a minute to achieve that.
The DSS stated that the act constituted offences contrary to the Terrorism and Cybercrime Acts.
Led in evidence by a lawyer to the prosecution, Dr Calistus Eze, Jego said his team was instructed to investigate a petition received from Oakland International School on 28 November 2024.
The witness said his team, in the course of investigation, deployed technology to track the suspect to Otukpo in Benue, where he was arrested, and a mobile phone and a SIM card were recovered from him.
Jego further told the court that the defendant was brought to Abuja and interviewed, following which he volunteered his statement in the presence of a lawyer from the Legal Aid Council of Nigeria (LACN).
The prosecution subsequently tendered the recovered mobile phone, a Techno Android phone and petitions from the schools.
It also tendered a compact disc containing audiovisual recording of the defendant’s interview and statement-making sessions, and a copy of the defendant’s extra-judicial statement, among others.
The court admitted all documents and items into evidence in the absence of any objection from the defence lawyer, Hamza Dantani.
The defendant, who confirmed familiarity with the Tecno android phone, however, denied ownership.
While being cross-examined by Dantani, Jego said his organisation got complaints from the schools through petitions.
He said the petitions did not include the defendant’s name and that the phone numbers used to send the SMS were provided by the petitioners, who also provided the text messages.
Jego said he would not know whether the phone numbers belonged to the defendant, but that the defendant admitted he was among those who composed the text messages.
The witness added that Agbo was arrested in possession of the mobile phone recovered from him and that he admitted being part of those behind the text messages.
At the conclusion of the cross-examination, Eze sought an adjournment to enable the prosecution to call additional witnesses and present more exhibits, a request Dantani did not object to. Justice Abdulmalik then adjourned the matter until May 12 for the continuation of the trial.
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