CP Fakorede; moves to sabotage River Park Committee, defies FCT Minister, Attorney General and IGP directives

Akin Fakorede, Head of the IGP Monitoring Team, Abuja, Commissioner of Police,  has made a controversial claim on the ownership of the disputed River Park Estate in Abuja — a step which undermines the ministerial committee recently inaugurated by the FCT Minister, Nyesom Wike, on the matter. 
Fakorede's ownership claim contained in a letter he wrote to some FCT agencies also flouted the directive of  Kayode Egbetokun, Inspector-General of Police, IGP,  who had directed a further probe into the matter in July 2025.
The development was made public on July 20, 2025 in widely publicized media interview between Force PRO ACP Muyiwa and a media house, when he confirmed that the IGP had directed a fresh probe into the matter during a meeting with the parties held at Force Headquarters on July 2nd, 2025.
The Special Investigation Panel, SIP, report provided a thorough, evidence-based analysis and contradicts the now-controversial conclusions reached by Fakorede’s monitoring unit.
 "But in a brazen and unprecedented move,  Fakorede has launched a covert bid to undermine the Ministerial Committee recently inaugurated by FCT Minister Nyesom Wike on the estate," a source said. 
Documents showed that on August 7, 2025, Fakorede issued a letter (Ref: IGP MONITORING UNIT/ABJ/VOL.79/25) to the Director of Land Administration, instructing that all official dealings concerning River Park be directed solely to Odili’s company, Paulo Homes Nigeria Limited. 
The letter, also copied to Director of AGIS, Director of Development Control, and Odili himself, appears designed to preempt and predetermine the outcome of the committee’s work.
This directive flies directly in the face of Minister Wike’s public caution during the committee’s inauguration just days earlier. 
As reported widely in August 2025, Wike stressed that “the Committee must be shielded from vested interests.” 
Fakorede’s letter, coming before the committee’s first sitting, represents a clear attempt to insert vested interests into the process. 
"The selective copying of Fakorede’s letter to Abuja Geographical Information System (AGIS) and the Development Control Department — two agencies capable of altering land records — raises concerns about possible evidence tampering while the committee’s work is still in progress." 


Fakorede’s interference letter hence suggested either desperation or a calculated move to launder a disputed claim through bureaucratic channels, sources revealed. 
It would be recalled that the meeting by the IGP on July 2, 2025, provided clarity on the role of the police in the estate matter. 
The IGP had reaffirmed that the Nigeria Police Force had no legal authority to investigate or adjudicate land disputes or company ownership, as the matters fall exclusively under the jurisdiction of the courts. 
Furthermore, the IGP was briefed by CP Akin Fakorede, who admitted that investigations concerning allegations of forgery remain incomplete and under active review by the Attorney-General’s office. He acknowledged that further witness testimonies were still pending.

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