By Erasmus Ikhide
IN the hyper-connected era of Nigerian social media, ignorance often travels faster than the law. The recent legal firestorm involving Linus Williams (Blord) and Martins Vincent Otse (VeryDarkMan) has birthed a toxic narrative: the baseless allegation that the Office of the Inspector-General of Police (IGP) has been compromised by “bribery.”
To the legal mind and the seasoned observer, these claims are not just defamatory—they are mathematically impossible given the procedural reality of the case. As Blord remains remanded in Kuje Prison following his arraignment at the Federal High Court in Abuja, it is time to set the records straight.
The detention of a high-profile figure is not a sign of “police partiality”; it is the natural consequence of a case that has successfully crossed the threshold from a private dispute into a state-led criminal prosecution.
The Dual-Track Reality: Criminal vs. Civil
The most common error among “social media urchins” is the belief that a case must be either civil or criminal. This is a fundamental legal fallacy. In the Nigerian jurisprudence, a single set of actions can—and often does—trigger both tracks simultaneously.
In the case of Blord v. VDM, we are witnessing a “Perfect Storm” of legal infractions. The unauthorized use of VDM’s image for billboards and brand promotion (the tort of passing off is criminal.
The alleged forgery of flight tickets and impersonation to facilitate a N500 million “phantom” endorsement is the height of criminal manipulation. When forgery and conspiracy enter the frame, the dispute ceases to be a private matter between two individuals must change. It becomes an offense against the peace and dignity of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
Why the IGP Cannot Be “Bought” into Silence
The allegations of bribery against Olatunji Rilwan Disu are not only baseless but display a profound ignorance of how the Nigeria Police Force (NPF) operates under the Cybercrimes Act and the Administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA).
When a petition involving forgery and criminal conspiracy is submitted, the Police are duty-bound to investigate. The subsequent remand of the defendant in Kuje was not ordered by the IGP in a vacuum; it was ordered by a Federal High Court Judge. For the IGP to be “bribed” in this context would require the subversion of the entire judiciary—a claim that is as laughable as it is reckless.
The Police are simply the facilitators of the state’s interest. Once the court takes cognizance of the charges—as seen in the April 1st arraignment—the matter is firmly in the hands of the temple of justice.
The “N500 Million” Deception
The claim that Blord paid VDM N500 million was not just a marketing boast; if proven to be a fabrication supported by forged documents, it constitutes a felony. The IG’s office has acted with professional restraint by allowing the evidence to speak in open court. To mistake this adherence to due process for “taking sides” is to mistake the surgeon’s knife for a weapon.
Setting the Records Straight
A civil suit for damages can run alongside a criminal trial for forgery. Remand in Kuje is a judicial decision based on the severity of charges, not a police favor.
The IGP’s Office remains a neutral arbiter of the law, focused on the breach of state statutes rather than the egos of social media influencers.
It is time for the public to move past the influencer lens and look through the legal lens. The Nigeria Police Force, under its current leadership, is doing exactly what the law demands: ensuring that no individual, regardless of their digital footprint or perceived wealth, is above the scrutiny of the state.
The truth is not found in a Facebook comment section; it is found in the charge sheets of the Federal High Court.
Final Word: The law is a tool of order, not a toy for the loudest voice. The IGP is following the protocol of the former; the “orchins” are following the noise of the latter.
Erasmus Ikhide contributed this piece via: ikhideluckyerasmus@gmail.com