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How Former Nigerian Petroleum Minister, Kachikwu Smuggled Stolen Car From UK To US—Report

U.S. government insisted that the stolen vehicle was subject to forfeiture in line with federal laws.

Former Minister of Petroleum, Ibe Kachikwu smuggled a car stolen from Jaguar’s United Kingdom assembly into the United States, court documents sighted by Peoples Gazette have revealed.

A U.S. court has ordered the confiscation of the stolen vehicle found in Kachikwu's possession. The order for forfeiture came after the ex-minister tried to smuggle the stolen vehicle into the U.S.

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According to Peoples Gazette, the vehicle, a 2007 Jaguar XKR, was stolen from a Jaguar assembly facility in Birmingham, England. In the complaint sheet, the car manufacturer explained that the vehicle was made for use in the Czech Republic as it did not meet the safety standards set out by the U.S.

It also told the U.S. court that the stolen XKR was shipped to Lagos.

The XKR was seized on June 15, 2011, at the Los Angeles/Long Beach seaport after Kachikwu planned to bring it into the country. The documents stated, “Kachikwu caused the defendant vehicle to be exported to the United States from Nigeria.”

In a consent judgment signed by Consuelo B. Marshall for the Central District of California, the U.S. government insisted that the stolen vehicle was subject to forfeiture in line with federal laws.

“United States of America (“plaintiff” or the “government”) filed a complaint for forfeiture against one 2007 Jaguar XKR. The government alleged that the vehicle was subject to forfeiture pursuant to 19 U.S.C. §§ 1595a(c)(1)(A) and 1595a(c)(2)(A),” the documents added.

Kachikwu admitted to the forfeiture of the vehicle and agreed to pay $10,000 instead of the vehicle being confiscated, though he claimed he was not a party to the theft.

“Claimant has acknowledged that the government had probable cause for the seizure of the defendant vehicle. 

“The theft of the defendant vehicle from the manufacturer, as alleged in the complaint, occurred before claimant’s acquisition of the vehicle from a dealership and did not involve claimant," the documents said.

The newspaper also disclosed that Kachikwu was given two months to take the vehicle away from the U.S.

Kachikwu, an ExxonMobil Nigeria executive at the time of the forfeiture, did not return requests seeking comments.

He was NNPC’s group managing director between 2015 and 2016 and the minister of state for petroleum resources between 2015 and 2019.

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CRIME Scandal