Tuesday, 20 August 2013

How we stole 700M at Ikeja Airport-K-Money

In February 2012, a gang of heavily armed robbers attacked the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Ikeja.
They carted away N700 million from a bureau de change operator. Each member, including the informant, a cart pusher at the airport, got N90million, an amount that could have turned their lives around. But barely one year after that operation, Felix Sunday, a.k.a. K-Money, a native of Delta State became broke and went back to robbery.
The 32 year old man, who is currently cooling off at the Specail Anti-Robbery Sqaud, SARS, Ikeja, narrated to Vanguard how he robbed with the notorious Southwest robbery czar, Abiodun Ogunjobi, a.k.a. Godogodo and how he lavished his N90million share of the loot. 
My name is Felix Sunday. I am a resident of Lagos State and  I was a commercial bus driver. I joined my first robbery gang in 2009 and  was the gang’s driver. Members of my gang then were old men and all of them are dead now.
They were killed in a robbery operation at Ajah area, but before then, a member of my gang had introduced me to Emmanuel Ehianeta, a.k.a. Arab, who is also a notorious robber. After their death I joined Arab and we began to operate together.  Arab specialized in car snatching and we stole many cars at gun point. After each operation, he usually gave the car  to  a man who would drive it into Benin Republic to deliver to some of our buyers.
We did that for some time before we had issues. I stopped working with him because he was cheating me. He usually gave me peanuts after receiving proceeds from the cars we stole. I relocated to Ondo State and  formed a new gang.
There, I had  Chiboy and Okey as members  and we specialized in house visiting. We robbed  people of their  valuables each time we visited their homes. We did that until 2011 when Chiboy was killed by the police in Ondo State. I quickly moved out of that state because the police were  also looking for me. I relocated to Oyo State, where I became a commercial bus driver.
I vowed never to return to robbery and was contented with what I was making. But there was this man who usually sent me to the prison to deliver some items to his younger brother who was locked up there.
The man was paying me very well and I was happy doing the job for him. However in one of my numerous visits to the prison, I asked his brother what brought him to the  prison and he said he was arrested for robbery, I felt sorry for him and told him that I was also a robber but  had  quit the job because it is  dangerous.

He looked at me and laughed. Thereafter he described me as a small time robber. He asked if I could  ignore a big job that could fetch me a million naira. I thought about it for a while and  said, I  would only do it if it would  make me rich and pull me out of  poverty. He told me to be patient adding that he would give my number to someone who would link me to the job.
In January 2012, I got a call from a man who identified himself as OJ and  he explained that he got my number from Destiny, the guy I had been seeing in prison.  OJ later told me that there was a job for me at  the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos, and he would want me to come to Computer Village in Lagos, to meet other members of the gang.
When I got there I met Asiwaju, Atoba, Eso and OJ. There OJ told me that they had concluded plans to strike at the airport and the only thing they needed  then were  rifles for the job. I told them not to worry that I knew someone who could provide us with some rifles.
I  contacted one Ore, who used to be close to Arab and  asked him how to get a rifle. He told me that Arab had  two AK 47 rifles given to him in Benin Republic by his receivers in exchange for some cars. I called Arab. At  first he was mad at me and  asked why I was calling.  I told him of the job at the airport that the foreign currencies were being exported unguarded and all we needed was to steal it. He doubted me but I managed to convince him to meet other members of the gang and he was taken to the airport and  shown how the monies were being exported

By February of that year I, Atoba, Eso, Arab and Asiwaju drove to the airport around 7:pm. I was the one driving. I parked near the barbed wire and waited in the car  while four of them went into the airport for the money. Arab and Eso held the Ak 47 rifles while Asiwaju held a pistol.
I was told that when they got to the spot where the money was Arab shot sporadically into the air to scare passersby and Atoba went straight for the bags containing the money. In less then 10 minutes, they were through with the operation and entered my  vehicle with the money while I drove off. We escaped through Lagos-Ibadan Expressway and when we got to Ijebu-Ode we entered into a bush to share the money.
Threat to kill everyone
Before then Arab had asked Eso and Asiwaju to hand over the pistol and rifles to him so he could keep them safe from the police. But when we began to share the money Arab corked one of the rifles and threatened to kill everyone. He said he wanted to leave with the whole money but I begged him not to do so and agreed that he should take any amount he wanted as his share.
He then asked me to bring a bag and said I should load the money into it until the  bag was full and I did so. After that he ordered us to share the remaining money equally among ourselves including the informant and the middle-man that brought the job. I gave Eso, Asiwaju, Atoba and myself N90million each and kept N45million for  the informant and another N45 million for OJ, who was the middle-man.

Asiwaju offered to deliver the money to the informant and the middle-man. We all went our separate ways from there. The first thing I did was to contact a lawyer to help me register a company because I wanted to sell cars. The lawyer  took about N500, 000 from me and also leased a land for me for about N1.6million which I used as show room. I went to Benin Republic and bought many cars which I kept in my show room. I also bought many landed property at Ijebu-Ode.
Since I was a transporter, I decided to open a transport company, I bought three Toyota Sienna space buses and  took them to Maza-MazaMotorPark, where I wanted them to be used for inter-state transportation. One of the Sienna buses had an accident on it first journey and all the passengers including the driver died in the process.
Things were moving smoothly for me until the police in Oyo State stumbled on the rifles we used for the airport operation. They found it in the home of a man Arab gave them to keep. The man told the Oyo SARS operatives that I was very close to Arab so they stormed Ijebu-Ode and they started looking for me. They didn’t find it difficult locating me because my sudden wealth and business empires gave me out. They stormed my home and looted all my property  and they went to my show room and took all the cars in it. I was left with no other option than to run out of the state and I relocated to Calabar, Cross River State. I lived in Calabar for about three months but life in that state was too expensive. My money was dwindling seriously and the man who was managing my transportation company stopped remitting money to me, so I decided to come to Lagos State. I went to Ikorodu, but I was very scared.
I was moving from one hotel to the other and spending too much money. A girl who was very close to me became pregnant  and I decided to marry her. We didin’t  even have a house of our own then and I didn’t  have enough money to rent an apartment. Then I decided to sell the Toyota Corolla I was using for N1.6million and  bought a Peugeot 406 for N400, 000.  I used the balance to rent an apartment and  furnished it. I became almost broke at that time, and then  started working my phones, calling other members of my gang to ask if there was any job.
Luckily I was told that plans  were on ground to rob a bank in Osun State and what  they  were working on was to pick a suitable date for the job. But on December 18, 2012, Asiwaju asked me to meet him at Ijebu-Ode,  from where we proceeded to the bank.
My gang wasn’t the only one that was involved in that operation. Paul, an Igbo boy was also leading  a gang of  Igbo boys from the south east. As usual I drove  my gang to the scene and we succeeded in that operation. We carted away a huge sum of money from the bank .
Since  the number of men involved in that  job was much, I was given just N200,000  and I took it home to my family.   By January 2013, Asiwaju, called  again to say  there was a job in Kwara State and the operation was being coordinated by Godogodo.
We struck at two banks in that state and I got about N500,000 as my share  and life  began to become normal for me again.  Godogodo also brought a bullion van job for us again at Ijebu-ode  and we succeeded in carting away all the money in the bullion van which included  foreign currencies. My share in that job was N150,000.
Godogodo and other big time robbers like Paul, Odun and others took the larger share of it.    But in March 2013,  Asiwaju  who had  three Ak47 rifles  then called a meeting of all members of the gang and said we have to   rob  the airport again.  This time we sidelined the Alhaji and OJ, and went to the  MMIA ourselves to survey how the money was being moved.
Movements of the money
On Wednesday, March 13, 2013, we struck at the airport, but  before we got there we encountered a little traffic  on our away.  Two members of our gang who we had stationed earlier to monitor the movements of the money called us and said the money was already moving and by the time we arrived at the airport, the money had been moved from the car park into the departure lounge of the airport.  We shot sporadically  into the air to cause panic and distraction  but some policemen who were at the airport to escort some expatriates shot at us and they killed Eso.
But Asiwaju, Atoba faced them, rained bullets  and killed two of them.  Before we knew what was happening the money had moved beyond our reach. We couldn’t do anything, we descended on  the bureau de change operators at the airport and we carted away the  sum of N10 million.
That operation turned out to be my last. I went home to my family but one week later I got a call from a member of our gang, a Pastor, who prepared the charms and oath we took before the operation. He said that  he needed to see me for a job.  I didn’t know that he was with the police and when I came out to see him, I was arrested.   I regret getting  back to armed robbery  and would  have stuck to my vows.”
Vanguard

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