Surety Known to Me, Unknown to Nigerian Law

By Douglas Ogbankwa

Douglas Ogbankwa Esq, A multifaceted lawyer with exemplary quality


In the course of my job as a lawyer, I have come across several cases where Law enforcement officers arrest people because they signed a purported commitment called, “Surety Known To Me”, which is not a crime encapsulated in any written law , any where in Nigeria.


To situate the issues better, one of the components of the Rule of Law, is legality: that is to say enforcement of the law must be contingent on the existence of a crime in a codified (written ) law. It is codification of a crime that establishes same.


What does the word “know” mean?


Meaning of the word “Know”:


To have developed a relationship with someone through meeting and spending time with them; be familiar or friendly with.Example is “He knew and respected Laura.


How can it possibly be that “to

have developed a relationship with someone through meeting and spending time with them; be familiar or friendly with” possibly be a crime known to law in Nigeria?


To know a person is not a crime, it is a social skill. Let us not turn Law enforcement into a joke or some thing that occurs according to our whims and caprices. It will dimish the respect that individuals and institutions have for law enforcement agencies in Nigeria.

Purposeful Douglas Ogbankwa Esq 


The leadership of law enforcement agencies in Nigeria should therefore give instructions to all their formations to stop this very embarrassing occurence. The grant of bail is as provided for by law and that law does not even give agencies the powers to impose conditions .


The Administration of Criminal Justice Law, (2015 ) on the grant or refusal of Bail provides thus:


Section 158 Administration of Criminal Justice Act 2015 When a person who is suspected to have committed an offence or is accused of an offence is arrested or detained, or appears or is brought before a court, he shall, subject to the provisions of this Part, be entitled to bail.


The provision of the law, as indicated above, is the only thing that the law allows law enforcement agencies to do.


Bail is not a privilege, it is a constitutional right, it is provided for in Section 36, Chapter 4 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 (as amended).


As earlier indicated, for a person to be arrested, you must have committed a crime provided for by law. In a Particular case , Romanus Okafor Esq., of the NBA Benin Branch, got damages against some law enforcement agents for him being held for about 2 hours for the non existent crime of “Surety Known to Me.” The Court granted him 200 thousand naira as damages , 100 thousand Naira per hour. While executing the garnishee order granted later in the case, the court granted him an additional one million Naira for enforcement of the judgment, which was now to be borne by the Law Enforcement Agents.This will now be the case in Nigeria, if law enforcement agencies do not clean up their houses .It is indeed now case law that  there is no crime known as "Surety Known To Me".To know a person is not a crime .Let us not trivialize Law Enforcement.


On the illegality of ‘Surety Known to me ‘, Section 36 (8) of the Constitution of Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 (as amended ), provides thus:


8. No person shall be held to be guilty of a criminal offence on account of any act or omission that did not, at the time it took place, constitute such an offence, and no penalty shall be imposed for any criminal offence heavier than the penalty in force at the time the offence was committed.


From the analysis espoused above, it is obvious that there is no crime in the Nigerian jurisprudence with the appellation “Surety Known To Me.” This practice must stop forthwith and this can only be done by way of a circular , memos or orders  by the heads of agencies to their subordinates.  The leadership of law enforcement agencies in Nigeria should therefore give instructions to all their formations to stop this very embarrassing occurrence. The grant of bail is as provided for by law and that law does not even give agencies the powers to impose conditions . This anomaly must be halted to stem the tide and stop the illegal harassment and intimidation of innocent citizens.


Nigeria is a Society guided by Laws and not the whims and caprices of people who are bestowed with powers by our Laws.The Administration of Criminal Justice Act  (Federal ) and Laws (State ), give citizens the right to sue an errant Investigating Police Officer and his bosses directly in their individual capacities , if they  violated the law or cut corners .


The Courts should also strive to protect citizens' rights as that is  the only safeguard against lawlessness and impunity. Citizens are vulnerable to the trampling of power of security agencies.Some of them are so weak that they lack the capacity to challenge the system. The State must step in by finding a way to interrogate the Policing Processes in order to give succour to weak and tame strong.


The Bar Association should  as of neccesity formulate policies and set up bodies to interface with the system to curb some of these excesses. This is in symmetry with the main objective of the Bar Association which is Protecting the Rule of Law


As Chief Gani Fawehimwin SAN of Blessed Memory said:


The Legal Profession ought to be and must strive to remain the dependable bastion of hope , help and succour to the repressed, the oppressed and the surpressed in our Society

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