A London
estate agent who appeared on the BBC’s Homes under the Hammer has been named in
an investigation into alleged corruption by a former Nigerian oil
minister
known as ‘The Madam’.
Court
documents filed in the US allege King’s Cross estate agency, Daniel Ford,
helped to buy millions of pounds worth of properties for Diezani Alison-Madueke
in London.
Daniel
Ford’s sole director is Adeyemi Edun, UK company records show. He has been seen
on the TV series offering advice on buying and renovating flats.
Documents
show that Mr. Edun has acted for the controversial Mrs. Alison-Madueke who was
Nigeria’s oil minister from 2010 to 2015, the first female president of the
OPEC oil cartel and a former executive for Shell in Nigeria.
The
Cambridge-educated politician has faced investigations in the UK, US and
Nigeria for allegedly receiving lucrative kickbacks for oil deals she
sanctioned as a minister.
In 2015 it
was reported she was arrested in the UK on suspicion of bribery and money
laundering offences and released on conditional police bail, pending further
investigation.
Her lawyer,
who was named at a court hearing in late September, did not respond for
comment. She has previously denied allegations of any wrongdoing.
The Nigerian
government is trying to recover billions of pounds it believes were looted from
the country during the presidency of Goodluck Jonathan between 2010 and 2015.
As part of
these efforts, civil asset recovery proceedings have been separately filed in
the UK, US and Nigerian courts.
While the UK
proceedings have been withheld from the public, the U.S. court papers say
Daniel Ford ‘assisted in the purchase’ of three London properties linked to the
probe, an investigation by Finance Uncovered and The Mail on Sunday has found.
There is no
suggestion in the documents that Daniel Ford or Mr. Edun committed money
laundering or that they were aware of such activities.
The papers
filed in Texas in July allege the property spree in London formed part of a
series of disguised payments to Mrs. Alison-Madueke in 2011.
According to
the documents, three Nigerian businessmen bought three homes near Regent’s Park
over a six-day period in March that year for £8.3million.
The US
investigators allege the properties were ‘provided’ to 56-year-old Mrs.
Alison-Madueke ‘for the corrupt purpose of inducing her to use her influence
within the Ministry of Petroleum Resources… to direct the award of business
opportunities’.
The
businessmen’s companies all received oil deals, the papers say. They are also
alleged to have funded a lavish lifestyle for Alison-Madueke.
Between
December 2012 and July 2014, one of them allegedly paid a chauffeur company
nearly £400,000 for her use.
The US
investigators allege the properties were bought using offshore companies in the
Seychelles and the British Virgin Islands. Two of the properties were frozen by
the UK’s Crown Prosecution Service last year.
A separate
court application filed by Nigerian investigators in Abuja in August this year
claims ‘one Adeyemi Edun’ received more than $5.5 million in cash from
Alison-Madueke to be used to buy properties for her in Lagos in May 2011.
The Nigerian
investigators allege money was moved through two bank accounts in Nigeria
before being transferred to buy upmarket apartments in Lagos.
Contacted by
telephone, Mr. Edun said he could not discuss the Alison-Madueke matter because
‘it was subject to ongoing investigation’. He added: ‘Everything is done within
the ambit of regulation, that I can say.’
When asked
about the Nigerian court papers, Mr. Edun said: ‘You have to be very sure the
name you are referring to is actually mine, because it is common in a country
of 180 million people.’
The Nigerian
filings show that a Daniel Ford email address was used to issue payment
instructions for the Lagos apartments.
They also
include Mr. Edun’s Nigerian passport and a UK mobile number that he used to
answer our call.
According to
his social media accounts and land registry documents, Mr. Edun, 46, appears to
have links to other Nigerian politicians and has attended dinners for the
country’s expats at luxury hotels in London.
Former
Arsenal and Nigeria football star, Nwankwo Kanu, has praised his work,
reportedly saying in 2012 that Daniel Ford ‘helped grow my London property
investment despite my tight schedule’.
There is no
suggestion of wrongdoing or any further link to the company by Kanu.
Estate
agencies are required by law to conduct enhanced due diligence on politically
exposed persons, or PEPs, to establish the source of their proposed funds used
to buy UK property, and to monitor them on an ongoing basis.
It is an
offence not to report suspicion of money laundering to the National Crime
Agency.
When asked
to detail what checks Daniel Ford carried out on the properties allegedly
bought for Mrs. Alison-Madueke in London, Mr. Edun said he was under legal
advice not to comment.

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