Ude’s allegations : US Court clears Wabote , Attorney of perjury
A United States District Court has ruled that Simbi Wabote, Executive Secretary, Nigerian Development Content and Management Board, NCDMB, and Michael D. Cilento, his lawyer, did not commit perjury in court in the defamation suit ongoing in the Eastern District of Pennyslvania, contrary to claims by Jackson Ude, editor-in-chief of pointblanknews.
Judge Joseph Leeson Jr. made the order following a letter Cilento wrote to the court on January 19, 2022, requesting the court among other things, to dismiss the letter-briefs from Ude to the court dated January 14, 2022 (ECF 90), January 15, 2022 (ECF 91) and January 14, 2022 (ECF 90) and media reports on which the allegation of perjury is hinged.
Realnews gathered that on January 10, 2022, Wabote (Plaintiff) served Ude (Defendant) with responses to the laterâs âSecond Requests for Production and Interrogatories (the âResponsesâ) in compliance with this Courtâs Order of December 21, 2021 (ECF 74).â
However, Cilento, in his letter, stated: âFor the first time, on Friday January 14 at 3:33pm, Defendant raised certain issues with the Responses, requesting that Plaintiff supplement the Responses within one hour by 4:30pm that same day. Defendant then immediately filed his ECF 90 letter that same night, obviously making no real attempt to discuss or resolve the purported discovery issues.â
Because of this, counsel to Wabote urged the court to âoutright reject Defendantâs January 14, 2022 letter for failing to meaningfully confer or attempt resolution as required by Your Honorâs Policies and Procedures.â
He also explained to the court that Wabote âhas submitted responses to Defendantâs purported issues, as shown in the true and correct copy of a letter dated and sent today to Defendantâs counsel attached hereto as Exhibit A. January 15, 2022 (ECF 91) Letterâ
According to the Cilentoâs letter, which Realnews sighted, Ude and “his counselâs January 15, 2022 letter is the most recent frivolous and ludicrous attempt by Defendant and his counsel to manipulate and deceive this Court and the public, and to spin fake news narratives out of this case.
âTo be clear, Defendantâs January 15, 2022 letter accuses Plaintiff and his attorneys of âcommitting perjuryâ and âfraud on the courtâ by, Defendant and his counsel argue, failing to produce records of two bank accounts that, Defendant and his counsel allege, belong to Plaintiff. In support of these accusations, Defendant and his counsel attach a non-authenticated, fake, hearsay âpetition,â signed with a fictitious name, that purports to have discovered five banking transactions in 2018 from a bank account for the company âTee and T Concepts Nigeria Limitedâ (or the âcompanyâ).
âThe fake âpetitionâ further alleges that Plaintiff and his wife are currently directors of the company. Well, not only does Defendantâs fake evidence itself show that the bank accounts are not in the name of or maintained by Plaintiff (but rather the company), but Plaintiff has also testified, ad nauseam, that he lawfully resigned his interest and position as director of the company more than five years ago, and thus has no information about or control over the company or any bank accounts that the company may maintain. And while Defendant and his counsel have not once ever requested any documents regarding the company, instead simply relying on their fake evidence in an attempt to deceive this Court, Plaintiff here now produces certified documentation showing that Plaintiff relinquished his interest and position as director in the company more than five years ago. See true and correct copies of those corporate documents attached hereto as Exhibit B (see pages 10-19, in particular, for share relinquishment and directorial resignation). â
Cilento also attached âa true and correct copy of an article published yesterday by Defendant on Point Blank News that further spews more deception and fake news, asserting that Plaintiff has âcommitted perjuryâ and that nonexistent organizations and individuals have called for Plaintiffâs âimmediate suspension,â all based on Defendantâs counselâs January 15, 2022 ECF 91 letter to this court.â
In his plea to the judge, Cilento wrote: âYour Honor, respectfully, enough is enough. Plaintiff respectfully implores the Court to take a strong action condemning these tactics, and to sanction Defendant and his counsel for this frivolous ECF 91 letter and attempt at deceiving the Court and the public. Plaintiff respectfully further requests the Court to enjoin Defendant from publishing any further publications about this case, lest the case, the Court, and Plaintiffâs reputation be further tainted by Defendantâs and his counselâs improper and pathetic tactics of deception and manipulation in submitting frivolous letters and completely fabricated accusations,â
Realnews reports that in giving his order on January 20, Judge Leeson Jr., in his ECF 97 Order:granted Wabote’s request and ordered that Ude must sit for an additional deposition and must answer all questions that he is asked, including all questions surrounding PointBlankNews and the identities of the reporters and editors that he alleges work there and worked on the defamatory story.
Realnews reports that Ude during his earlier deposition December 21, 2021, evaded providing the names of his colleagues at the Pointblanknews.com on the grounds that they are endangered by the nature of the investigative work they do Nigeria and could be killed if their identities are known.
Also, the court ordered Ude’s attorney not to make any speaking objections during the additional deposition, adding that he should not coach the witness during deposition. Wabote’s counsel had argued with Ude’s lawyer that he was speaking during objection and trying to coach him during deposition.
In the ECF 98 Order Judge Leeson Jr., denied Defendant Ude’s requests and ordered that Plaintiff Wabote does not need to respond further to interrogatories or document requests; does not need to respond to the false allegations surrounding the Tee & T company or its bank accounts, and him and his attorneys have not committed any perjury or fraud and have acted completely proper throughout the litigation and discovery process.
Realnews reports that after considering Defendant Udeâs letter-briefs, and Plaintiff Waboteâs letter-briefs, after a telephone conference held on January 19, 2022, during which both partiesâ presented argument, Judge Leeson Jr., denied the formerâs requests and granted that of the later. Both Ude and Wabote were represented by counsels Beneth Onyema Amadi and Cilento, respectively.
The judge reminded them that they have an obligation to exhaustively address all discovery disputes among themselves before requesting the courtâs intervention, citing cases such as âSee E.D. PA. LOCAL R. CIV. P. 26.1(f) (requiring counsel seeking court intervention to certify that âthe parties, after reasonable effort, are unable to resolve the disputeâ). See also FED. R. CIV. P. 37(a)(1) (providing that a motion to compel discovery âmust include a certification that the movant has in good faith conferred or attempted to confer with the person or party failing to make disclosure or discovery in an effort to obtain it without court actionâ); Evans v. Am. Honda Motors Co., No. 2:00-cv-02061, 2003 WL 22844186, at *1 (E.D. Pa. Nov. 26, 2003) (explaining that these rules are not mere formalities; they âimpose[] a substantial obligation on counsel to resolve discovery problems before bringing them to the attention of the courtâ).â
It also noted Udeâs âobjections raised under the Pennsylvania Shield Law, which protects the disclosure of confidential sources of information, are sustained in part and overruled in part. See 42 Pa. Stat. § 5942. Defendant makes the novel argument that the Shield Law protects the identity of persons who worked on the alleged defamatory article because they are also âsources.â
However, the Judge Leeson ruled that âunder Defendantâs interpretation of the statute, every âmalicious or negligent defamer would have carte blanche to withhold from judicial scrutinyâ the identity of any person who contributed to a defamatory story so long as they were also considered a âsource.â See Hatchard v. Westinghouse Broad. Co., 516 Pa. 184, 194 (Pa. 1987).â The Court rejected this interpretation because it would âmake it close to impossible for individuals to seek redress against the media for maliciously or negligently publishing false statements that seriously damage the reputations of individuals.
âIf any reporters/editors are also sources of information for the article in this case, the Shield Law protects that fact from disclosure. Defendant does not need to link which portionsâ of the story.
The judge further ruled that âWithin 20 days of this order, Defendant must sit for an additional deposition of no more than three hours.â He directed Ude to answer all questions at this deposition unless specifically told not to by his counsel due solely to objection as to the article were sourced from reporters/editors. âDefendant does not even need to identify whether any portions of the article were sourced from reporters/editors. However, the Shield Law does not protect the identity of persons who contributed to or worked on the article and the identity of such persons may not be withheld from disclosure form of the question (during the previous deposition of Jackson Ude held on December 21, 2021, all parties stipulated at page 3 of the deposition transcript that âall objections except as to form, are reserved to the time of trialâ).
Leeson Jr., also prohibited Udeâs lawyer âfrom making any speaking objections at this deposition, and from coaching the defendant during the deposition.â