The legal team of the Peoples Democratic Party presidential candidate, Atiku Abubakar, is planning to file a motion to challenge President Bola Tinubu’s plea for Chicago State University not to release privileged documents in his academic records.
The Special Adviser to Atiku on
Public Communications, Phrank Shaibu, disclosed that the legal team had up to
48 hours to respond to the motion in the US court.
Atiku had earlier secured an order for CSU to
make the president’s academic records available to his legal team.
A magistrate, Jeffrey Gilbert,
had last week ordered Tinubu’s alma mater to provide all relevant and
non-privileged documents to the applicant within two days.
Atiku is currently challenging
the victory of the former Lagos State governor at the 2023 presidential poll
and his recent affirmation by an election petition court in Nigeria.
The documents sought by the PDP
candidate, through his counsel, Angela Liu, include the record of admission and
acceptance at the university, dates of attendance including degrees, awards,
and honors attained by the former governor of Lagos State at the university,
among others.
But as the deadline given by
Gilbert drew nearer on Thursday, Tinubu’s lawyers approached Maldonado, arguing
that the earlier decision by Gilbert needed to be reviewed by a district judge.
The request for a review and
delay of the order till Monday was eventually granted by the US district judge.
Tinubu’s application, filed by
his lawyers, Oluwole Afolabi and Christopher Charmichael, advanced two reasons.
First was that his academic
records in issue are not useful in Nigerian courts as claimed by Atiku because
the Nigerian election proceedings and the Nigerian courts have explicitly been
unreceptive to the discovery.
The second reason given was
that Atiku’s request is unduly intrusive because it allows Applicant (Atiku) to
conduct a fishing expedition into intervenor’s private, confidential, and
protected educational records.
When asked on Wednesday to confirm if Atiku
has filed the suit as he earlier threatened in Monday, Shaibu reassured our
correspondent that the former vice president would submit the motion before
midnight.
He said, “I am sure you have
seen his application. We are working on our response. We have up till midnight
today (Wednesday) to respond to them. And we will.”
On when they expect the court
to rule over the matter, Shaibu stated that “It is after we have responded to
the court, that it will fix the date and inform the parties.”
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