After working with a Commissioner of Police (CP) and an Assistant
Inspector General of Police (AIG), it is expected that Mr Oliver Dike
should be a role model to those looking up to him for guidance. But
rather than become a great man in his community, Dike was sponsoring
armed robbers to snatch exotic cars. Dike, otherwise known as Mopol in
the underworld, was arrested while he was in police uniform.
He
was apprehended at Sagamu section of the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway. The
35-year-old suspect was nabbed by the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS),
Ikeja, Lagos State, led by Superintendent of Police (SP), Abba Kyari,
with a fake police identity card. A police source said: “Police started
the search for Dike in April 2015 after two armed robbery suspects –
Akinropo Ogunsina and Jimoh Akeem – mentioned his name during
interrogation that he was the receiver of the cars they used to snatch.
“Ogunsina confessed that his gang snatched two Honda Accord 230 model
cars and Sienna bus and sold to Dike. Unaware that Ogunsina had been
arrested, Dike repeatedly kept calling Ogunsina’s phone, asking if he
had another snatched car for sale.” According to Ogunsina, Dike bought
two cars for N280,000 and was requesting for Toyota Highlander ‘Jeep,’
Toyota Corolla 2014 model and Honda Accord before his arrest.
The
state Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO), Kenneth Nwosu, confirmed
the arrest of the suspects. Nwosu said it was in the process of
receiving the Toyota Highlander that Dike was arrested. According to the
PPRO, N200,000, which he wanted to use to pay for the stolen car, was
recovered from him. He said: “When the police came in contact with
him, he identified himself as a police corporal. He had a police
identity card with him. The police team went along with him to his house
in Abuja for a search. They recovered a complete police uniform.
The
police also recovered one of the cars, a Honda Accord he bought from
Ogunsina in his house.” The state Commissioner of Police, Mr Kayode
Aderanti, has ordered detectives to ensure that members of the gang are
brought to book. Dike, a father of one, said he was a motor spare parts
dealer with a shop at Zuba motor park, Abuja, before he took to crime.
He said: “In 2004, I went to sell motor parts to a Deputy Commissioner
of Police (DCP). He is now retired after being promoted to the rank of a
Commissioner of Police.
We became friends. I told him that I would
like to work for him as his driver and do some other domestic chores for
him. He agreed. I left the motor parts business for my younger brother
and started working for the DCP. “I started living in his house. I used
to drive him to work and other places. In 2005, he was sent to War
College and later became a Commissioner of Police (CP). He retired in
2012. “After he retired, all his boys, including me, were transferred to
the new CP that took over from him.
The new CP was later appointed
as an Assistant Inspector General of Police (AIG) before he retired.
Since then, I stopped working for him.” Dike confessed that the police
identity card found on him was that of the police orderly, named Udeka.
Udeka was an orderly to the first CP who retired. Dike said: “Udeka
asked me to assist him to collect his identity card from Yenagoa,
capital of Bayelsa State, where we last worked.
He said that I should
bring it to Abuja for him. But I have not given it to him. As for the
police uniform, I evacuated it from the dry cleaner who does the dry
cleaning of our master’s uniform in Yenagoa. I brought it to Abuja and
kept it in my house.” The suspect said the police arrested him because
he came to buy a Highlander ‘Jeep’ from Danjuma, otherwise known as
Ogunsina.
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