Washington, D.C. – April 13, 2025
In a landmark ruling that could have major political reverberations in Nigeria and beyond, a U.S. District Court has ordered the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) to release sealed investigative files linked to Nigerian President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s alleged involvement in a 1990s drug trafficking probe.
The decision, handed down earlier this week by Judge Beryl Howell, stems from a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit filed by American journalist and transparency advocate Aaron Greenspan. In her ruling, Judge Howell emphasized that the public’s right to know outweighs the privacy exemptions cited by the federal agencies.
At the center of the controversy are documents related to a heroin trafficking investigation in the Chicago area in the early 1990s. Tinubu, then residing in the U.S., was allegedly connected to individuals under federal investigation. Although financial records and asset forfeitures were part of the case, Tinubu has consistently denied any wrongdoing, and to date, no charges have ever been filed against him.
The FBI and DEA had resisted releasing the files, citing ongoing law enforcement concerns and personal privacy protections. However, the court ruled that Tinubu’s current position as Nigeria’s president and the enduring public interest in the case justified the disclosure.
So far, the Nigerian presidency has remained silent on the court’s directive. Tinubu’s legal team has previously described such allegations as baseless and politically driven, reiterating that he has never faced criminal prosecution in the U.S.
The ruling is likely to fuel fresh debate in Nigeria’s political landscape, where Tinubu remains a polarizing figure. With the court-mandated release of the files now imminent, both critics and allies of the president are bracing for potential political fallout.
As federal agencies prepare to comply with the court order, more details are expected to emerge in the coming days. The development marks a significant step in a decades-long saga that continues to cast a shadow over one of Africa’s most influential leaders.