EFCC To Auction 80 Seized Vehicles, Others In Ibadan Tomorrow

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The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) said it will on Tuesday (tomorrow) commence the physical inspection and auction of 15 vessels and 649 forfeited vehicles located across nine states and the Federal Capital Territory Abuja.

The agency also said it would auction 39 mobile phones, 11 laptops and other devices. The exercise will be carried out by the commission’s appointed auctioneers.

The anti-graft agency, in a public notice, said there would be physical and e-auction of the items, which were subject of final forfeiture orders in accordance with its Establishment Act, 2004; Public Procurement Act, 2007; and the Proceeds of Crime (Recovery and Management) Act, 2022.

The exercise, which will be held variously and simultaneously across the affected states and the FCT, is scheduled to end with the physical auction in Sokoto and Ilorin, respectively on December 20, 2022.

Lagos has the highest number of vehicles for auction with 438; followed by Ibadan, Oyo State, with 80 vehicles; Port Harcourt, Rivers State, 45 vehicles; and the Federal Capital Territory, with 35 vehicles.

Others include Benin, Edo State, with 20 vehicles; Uyo, Akwa Ibom State, 11 vehicles, Enugu, nine vehicles; Ilorin, Kwara State, seven vehicles; while each of Kano and Sokoto have two vehicles available for auction. Some of the vehicles up for auction include exotic cars, expensive sport utility vehicles, trucks, buses and saloon cars.

Some of the choice brands include Mercedes Benz G-Wagon GLK, 4matic, ML and CLA models; BMW X6, 525i and other models; Range Rover and Land Rover SUVs; Porsche, Toyota Land Cruiser, Toyota Prado, Lexus LX 570, RX 350 and other expensive models.

Among the long list are different models of Toyota, Lexus, Mercedes Benz, Honda, Acura, Mitsubishi, Volkswagen, Audi, Nissan, Infinity, Mazda and several other SUVs, space wagons and saloon cars.

The advertorial also indicated that laptops, including Apple Macbook, iPhones, Samsung phones and several others would be auctioned.

“The auction is open to the general public throughout Nigeria for the duration of the bidding period, except staff of the commission and persons, groups or organisations against whom the forfeiture order was made.

“Asset viewing is free at the asset locations; assets will be sold ‘as is’ and ‘where is’ and no asset will be sold below the reserved price. A winning bid can only be equal or above the commission’s reserved price,” the agency stated.

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