Wednesday, June 26, 2013

OPM fraud: Kazinda to spend five years in prison


Kazinda moments after being sentenced

SMILING TO JAIL: Kazinda walks out of court after being sentenced. Photo by Abubaker Lubowa 
By ANTHONY WESAKA & JULIET KIGONGO

KAMPALA – The former Principal Accountant in the Office of the Prime Minister (OPM), Geoffrey Kazinda has Wednesday been sentenced to 5 years in prison by the Anti Corruption Court sitting in Kampala.


Justice David Wangutusi handed Mr Kazinda 5 years for abuse of office, 2 years for forgery and another two years for unlawful possession of government stores.
The judge said the sentences will run concurrently.


On Wednesday last week, Justice Wangutusi found Mr Kazinda guilty of 29 counts of fraud with one count of forgery being an alternative count.
The judge however, reserved the sentencing for today.


Core to this fraud is that Mr Kazinda who has been on remand since October last year was found guilty of forging 26 signatures of his then boss and former Permanent Secretary in the Office of Prime Minister (OPM), Mr Pius Bigirimana with the intention to defraud the OPM of billions of shillings.


Court relied on circumstantial evidence to squarely link Mr Kazinda to forgery since there was no witness who saw him forge Mr Bigirimana’s signature.


The documents that he forged included; Security Papers and Withdraw Forms (both very high sensitive documents that are used in transfer of huge sums of money), were recovered by police from the home of Kazinda’s mother in Bukoto, Kampala after a search.

  
However, no money was lost in this case although prosecution says he had intentions of defrauding the OPM if the situation had not been arrested early.


During mitigation, Principal State Attorney, Ms Jane Frances Abodo, asked court to hand Mr Kazinda the maximum custodial sentence of seven years to send a strong signal to those involved in corruption since it is on the rise.


Ms Abodo noted that the fact that Mr Kazinda had in possession of government property at his mother’s home, indicated that there was an intention to defraud donor and the tax payers’ money.
She also asked court to put into consideration the fact that the office of the Prime Minister is a sensitive office since its accommodates the Prime minister Amama Mbabazi and the First Lady, Ms Janet Museveni.
In rebuttal, defense lawyers led by Mr Augustine Idoot, asked court to give their client a lenient sentence, preferably a fine instead of the custodial one.


Mr Idoot explained to court that no money was lost in this case.

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