The NDLEA said an investigation has revealed that Kyari is a member of a drug syndicate which operates across the globe.
The National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) has declared the suspended head of the Police Intelligence Response Team (IRT), DCP Abba Kyari, wanted over suspected links with an international drug cartel.
This was made known by the spokesperson for the NDLEA, Femi Babafemi, during a press briefing held at the agency’s headquarters. The NDLEA said an investigation has revealed that Kyari is a member of a drug syndicate which operates across the globe.
The shocking revelation comes amid the police chief’s controversial involvement with self-confessed Internet fraudster, Ramon Abbas, popularly known as Hushpuppi. In July 2021, the United States Federal Bureau of Investigation revealed how Kyari allegedly collaborated with Hushpuppi to jail one of the latterās associates after a dispute over a $1.1 million scam on a Qatari businessman.
The FBI also alleged that the embattled social media celebrity sent money to Kyari via a third personās bank account and hosted him in his Dubai apartment. According to the US Department of Justice, a criminal complaint initiated the prosecution of Hushpuppi as court documents showed that Abbas, 37, pleaded guilty.
The United States Attorneyās Office, Central District of California, had issued an arrest warrant against Kyari. Hushpuppi has since pleaded guilty to the charges and if convicted risks a 20-year-jail term, three-year supervision upon completion of jail term, and monetary restitution to the tune of $500,000 or more.
The court documents also outlined a dispute among members of the Hushpuppi conspiracy, which allegedly prompted him to arrange to have an individual identified as āco-conspiratorā Kelly Chibuzor Vincent, jailed in Nigeria by DCP Kyari.
Following the allegations, the top detective was suspended and a panel was set up by the Inspector-General of Police to probe the FBI allegations. But Kyari denied the allegations, claiming that his āhands are cleanā.
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