There are moments in the life of a man when the forces aligned against him appear so vast, so coordinated, and so shamelessly well-oiled that only a fool would still speak of hope. Then there are moments when Providence, in its quiet but unmistakable majesty, interrupts the script of the wicked and reminds all concerned that even the most carefully choreographed oppression can collapse in the hands of one upright judicial officer. That, in essence, was the drama that unfolded after Ojo Ajisafe was whisked away to the SWAT offices at Alagbon on Wednesday, March 11, 2026, in relation to a matter already pending before Court 5, Akure, in Ondo State, the court of Justice Fasanmi. One would have thought that once a matter is already before a competent court, even the most enthusiastic persecutors would exercise a little restraint. But then again, restraint is not exactly the preferred language of those who confuse vendetta with justice.
By the following day, before Ojo Ajisafe’s counsel, High Chief Femi Akinbinu, could wrestle his way through the sadistic Lagos traffic to the SWAT office, at Alagbon, Ikoyi, the real script had already been activated. Ojo had been hurriedly bundled to Magistrate Court 10/17 at Igbosere, Lagos Island, complete with a neatly packaged 30-day remand application, as though liberty had become some cheap commodity to be suspended at will. The stage had been set. The actors were in place. The expectation, evidently, was simple: keep Ojo Ajisafe out of circulation for a convenient period, create room for unrestrained access to the poor bricklayer’s inheritance, and then perhaps let the law catch up later, if it ever cared to. It was the kind of arrangement that only thrives when institutions are weak and conscience is on leave.
But heaven, as it turned out, was not on sabbatical.
For standing between that ugly ambition and its execution was Magistrate T. O. Abayomi, a woman who apparently still believes that a courtroom is not a theatre for executive brigandage. In what must have come as a rude interruption to the fantasies of Ojo’s tormentors, the presiding Magistrate refused to play along. She saw through the arrangement with the clarity of a woman who knows the difference between prosecution and persecution. And then she did something rather scandalous in our time: she asked questions. Hard questions. Uncomfortable questions. The sort of questions that make badly rehearsed conspiracies begin to sweat through their collars.
She wanted to know, first, by what audacity a man could be arrested at the premises of the High Court in Ondo and then ferried to Lagos as though the Nigerian federation had suddenly become a lawless plantation. She asked about jurisdiction. She asked why a supposed offence committed in Ondo State had to be prosecuted, or rather paraded, in Lagos. She asked the most embarrassing question of all: whether there were no courts of competent jurisdiction in Ondo State. It was, in every sense, a judicial interrogation of what increasingly looked less like law enforcement and more like a dirty arrangement for oppression wrapped in police paperwork.
The Investigating Police Officer, we are told, was left gasping under the weight of questions he clearly had not been trained to answer. In fact, at a point, the officer reportedly became so flustered that he hurriedly distanced himself from the very operation, denying involvement in the arrest in Ondo when confronted with the brazen irregularity of the entire process. What a sight it must have been: a state-backed drama so badly assembled that even one of its own actors suddenly wanted the audience to know he was merely an extra.
And then came the moment that should be framed and hung in every public institution where power has grown too arrogant for its own good.
The Magistrate, visibly displeased by the sordid spectacle before her, reportedly made it clear that her court could not and would not be used as an instrument for the perpetration of evil. Without fanfare, without theatrics, and with the kind of moral clarity that now feels almost revolutionary, she threw out the police application and ordered that the matter be returned to the appropriate jurisdiction. Ojo Ajisafe was freed. Just like that. One gavel. One conscience. One refusal to lend judicial robes to executive mischief.
May God bless that virtuous woman.
May HE bless her courage, preserve her clarity, and reward her refusal to allow her court become an annex of land speculators in official clothing. In a country where too many institutions are routinely rented out to the highest bidder, such moments of integrity deserve more than applause. They deserve memorial.
Yet, even in the middle of this drama, one name, we are told, kept surfacing with suspicious regularity. A highly placed and widely respected human rights defender, revered in many circles for his principled interventions, was repeatedly invoked by Fred Akinnuoye as the invisible hand behind his confidence and, indeed, as the supposed sponsor of his coveted nolle prosequi. We shall not mention his name here, not because we do not know it, but because we know enough of his antecedents to be persuaded that he would never knowingly lend himself to anything so grubby. If anything, the more plausible explanation is that he was sold a dummy by desperate merchants of manipulation, men who have made a profession out of weaponising half-truths before honorable elders. Our considered position remains that if this distinguished defender of rights were ever confronted with the full factual matrix of this sordid affair, he would more likely lead the charge against Ojo Ajisafe’s tormentors than lend them cover. On that note, wisdom compels restraint. We shall say no more for now.
Meanwhile, reality eventually caught up with the charade at Alagbon.
By about 9 p.m. last night, High Chief Femi Akinbinu had walked out of the SWAT offices in Lagos with his client, Ojo Ajisafe, without paying so much as a kobo for bail. No inducement. No “logistics.” No emergency appeasement of the gods of procedural confusion. Just documents. Genuine documents. Real records. Verifiable judicial history. The sort of materials that have an unfortunate tendency to ruin beautifully arranged falsehoods.
And yes, the emphasis on ‘genuine documents’ is deliberately.
Because, to their own embarrassment, the police reportedly discovered that some of the documents earlier paraded by Fred Akinnuoye appeared to have been simulated, forged, tampered with, or otherwise massaged beyond recognition. They were said to be materially at variance with the authentic records in the custody of the Magistrate Courts, the High Courts, and indeed the Court of Appeal in Ondo State. Imagine that. A man crying wolf with papers that cannot survive comparison with the official record. A crusade against a peasant bricklayer now wobbling under the weight of suspect exhibits. One almost pities the architects of the plot, except that pity is difficult when the intended victim could so easily have been buried beneath the rubble of their lies.
High Chief Femi Akinbinu, having dismantled the fiction in Lagos, reportedly returned to Ondo in the wee hours of this morning, arriving at about 2:45 a.m. It was no doubt an exhausting journey, but perhaps less exhausting than the burden of watching institutions repeatedly tested by men who mistake influence for omnipotence.
And then came the sobering reflection from the learned silk himself.
If only some of our highly placed men and women, people of genuine pedigree and impeccable character, would resist the temptation of sentiment, step back from emotion, and conduct a little due diligence before taking positions in matters like this, the world, he suggested, would be far better for all of us. It was a gentle but devastating rebuke. Because in a society such as ours, elders are not merely older; they are reference points. They are moral signposts. In the legal profession especially, they are the lanterns by which younger practitioners find their path. When such figures are misled into lending their names, aura, or assumptions to dubious causes, the consequences can be severe, and sometimes irreparable.
But perhaps the larger lesson here is this: Ojo Ajisafe may be poor, but he is not forsaken.
God has not forsaken him.
He may be a carpenter. He may be peasant enough for the powerful to think him disposable. He may lack the luxury of convoys, the arrogance of title, or the vulgar protection of state-sponsored bullies. But what he appears to possess, in terrifying abundance to his enemies, is something far more dangerous: destiny.
And destiny, unlike influence, cannot be bribed.
For every trap they set, he somehow slips through. For every lie they manufacture, truth appears with irritating punctuality. For every institutional ambush arranged in the dark, a light seems to come on at the precise moment of execution. A magistrate asks the wrong questions. A lawyer arrives with the right documents. A forged narrative collapses under the weight of authentic records. A man they hoped to disappear walks out free.
At some point, even the wicked must begin to ask themselves the obvious question:
What if this man is not merely surviving because he is lucky, but because heaven has signed his file?
Ojo Ajisafe, whatever else anyone may call him, is proving himself to be what the Yoruba would describe, without exaggeration, as a child of destiny.
And those who have made a career of pursuing him may soon discover that there are some battles in which the victim is not truly alone.
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