Secrets Reporters
Findings by SecretsReporters have raised fresh concerns about judicial integrity and compliance with ethical standards, Hon. Justice Jude O. Onwuegbuzie of the Federal Capital Territory High Court in Apo, Abuja, stands accused of violating provisions of the Code of Conduct Bureau Act by maintaining directorship in a private company while presiding over sensitive high-profile cases.
Corporate Affairs Commission records confirm that Bondbrief Limited, incorporated in May 2010 and now inactive, lists Justice Jude Ogochukwu Onwuegbuzie and Adanma Nkemdilim Onwuegbuzie as directors, with the company’s address in Area 11, Garki, Abuja.
Under the Fifth Schedule of the 1999 Constitution and the Code of Conduct for Public Officers, judicial officers are strictly prohibited from engaging in private business activities that could compromise their impartiality or create conflicts of interest, a breach that typically warrants investigation by the Code of Conduct Bureau and possible disciplinary action by the National Judicial Council.
On Monday, May 25, 2026, the same judge delivered a ruling granting bail to former Skye Bank chairman Tunde Ayeni but imposed extraordinarily stringent conditions that legal experts and observers have described as deliberately impossible to fulfill, effectively keeping the defendant in prolonged detention despite the bailable nature of the charges.
Ayeni, arraigned by the EFCC on allegations of criminal breach of trust and misappropriation involving over N15.6 billion from the defunct bank’s suspense account, had spent more than three weeks in custody before the hearing. While the court set bail at N200 million with two sureties in like sum, the terms required the sureties, restricted to Grade Level 16 Federal Civil Servants in Abuja, to each own properties worth at least N500 million in the FCT backed by Certificates of Occupancy, surrender detailed employment and identity documents, and provide one bank guarantee of N15 billion forfeitable to the government if Ayeni absconds.
Ayeni was also ordered to surrender his international passport, with the court warning of immediate revocation upon any hint of interference.
These conditions have drawn sharp criticism for undermining the constitutional presumption of innocence under Section 36(5) and the right to bail, turning what should have been conditional release into what many view as a disguised remand order. Ayeni’s legal team had argued that he was denied administrative bail despite presenting credible sureties earlier. The ruling comes against the backdrop of Ayeni’s long-standing legal battles linked to the Skye Bank crisis, which led to the lender’s nationalisation and rebranding as Polaris Bank amid massive financial irregularities uncovered in the sector.
The apparent conflict arising from Justice Onwuegbuzie’s business registration, combined with the severity of the bail terms in a financially sensitive case, has intensified calls for the Code of Conduct Bureau to immediately investigate whether the judge properly declared his interests and complied with restrictions on judicial officers engaging in commercial activities. Such violations, if established, could erode public confidence in the judiciary’s handling of anti-corruption prosecutions.
