PENTAGON RELEASES NEW BATCH OF UFO FILES SHOWING UNEXPLAINED UAP ENCOUNTERS, INCLUDING MILITARY VIDEOS AND EYEWITNESS REPORTS. (PHOTO).

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 Pentagon releases new batch of UFO files showing unexplained UAP encounters, including military videos and eyewitness reports    The Pentagon has released another batch of declassified UFO-related materials, continuing a rolling disclosure of once-classified files ordered by President Donald Trump for public release. The latest drop includes more than 50 videos and documents involving unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAPs), the government’s official term for UFOs, adding to a growing archive of material that has fueled public interest and debate about unexplained aerial activity. Among the newly released records are multiple military and surveillance videos showing unexplained objects in flight. One clip, recorded by a U.S. Coast Guard infrared sensor in April 2024, appears to show an object moving near an aircraft over the Southeastern United States. Another, labeled “Syrian UAP instant acceleration,” was captured in 2021 by a U.S. military platform and later uploaded ...

ALLEGED $1.043MILLION FRAUD: EFCC SEEKS SUPREME COURT’S ORDER TO REVOKE AJUDUA’S BAIL. (PHOTO). #PRESS RELEASE


 Alleged $1.043Million Fraud:  EFCC Seeks Supreme Court’s Order  to Revoke Ajudua’s Bail

 

 

The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), has approached the Supreme Court of Nigeria seeking an order to revoke the bail granted to Lagos socialite,  Fred Chijindu Ajudua, by the Court of Appeal of Nigeria sitting in Lagos.

 

In a notice of appeal dated February 20, 2026 and filed at the apex court in Abuja, the anti-graft agency is challenging the entire ruling of the appellate court delivered on January 30, 2026, which admitted Ajudua to bail.

 

The Commission, through its counsel S.K. Atteh argues that the Court of Appeal erred in law when it dismissed the prosecution’s preliminary objection and proceeded to grant bail to the defendant.

 

According to the EFCC, the appellate court failed to properly interpret the earlier judgment of the Supreme Court delivered on May 9, 2025 in related appeals involving Ajudua. The Commission argued that the apex court had effectively foreclosed further consideration of bail when it ordered that the respondent remain in custody pending the speedy trial of the charge.

The EFCC particularly faulted the Court of Appeal for allegedly holding that the Supreme Court did not order Ajudua’s continued detention, describing the lower court’s position as contrary to the doctrine of judicial hierarchy and the finality of Supreme Court’s  decisions.

 

Central to the dispute is the interpretation of portions of the Supreme Court judgment where the apex court discussed the relationship between jurisdiction and bail.

 

The EFCC maintained that the Court of Appeal failed to address passages in the apex court’s decision which, in its view, meant that the issue of bail had been conclusively determined and could not be revisited by any lower court.

It further argued that by granting fresh bail, the appellate court violated Sections 235 and 275(1) of the 1999 Constitution (as amended), which make decisions of the Supreme Court final and binding on lower courts.

Medical Grounds for Bail Challenged

The anti-graft agency also attacked the appellate court’s reliance on Ajudua’s medical report dated November 19, 2025 as constituting changed circumstances warranting bail.

The EFCC claimed the respondent had been diagnosed with kidney-related ailments since 1987 and had repeatedly relied on the condition to delay trial since the charge was filed in 2005.

It further alleged inconsistencies in medical reports issued by the same consultant, arguing that the Court of Appeal failed to properly evaluate the evidence before admitting the defendant to bail.

 

The Commission warned that allowing Ajudua to remain on bail would frustrate the Supreme Court’s directive for speedy trial. It cited an earlier case in which, despite being on bail, only one prosecution witness had been called over an extended period.

 In specific terms,  the EFCC is praying the  apex court revoke the bail granted to Ajudua by the Court of Appeal on January 30, 2026; and

restore the trial court’s ruling of November 20, 2025 which refused bail.

No hearing date has yet been announced at the Supreme Court.

Ajudua is standing trial for allegedly defrauding  Palestinian businessman, Zad Abu Zalaf the sum of $1.043million.

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