The EFCC on Friday arraigned popular social media influencer Okoro Blessing Nkiruka, better known as Blessing CEO, before a Federal High Court in Ikoyi, Lagos, on a two-count fraud charge totalling N36 million.
The arraignment, which was conducted before Justice D.I. Dipeolu, marks a dramatic turn in the public life of the influencer who has built a formidable brand dispensing relationship advice and lifestyle commentary across Nigerian social media platforms. On Friday, however, it was not followers hanging on her every word; it was a court of law.
Blessing CEO faces two distinct but interrelated charges. The first alleges that between July 14 and 17, 2024, she obtained the sum of N36,000,000 from one Mrs. Ifeyinwa Nonye Okoye under the pretense of leasing a six-bedroom detached duplex located at No. 1B, Tunbosun Osobu Street, off Kuboye Road, Lekki, Lagos State, a representation prosecutors allege she knew to be false at the time it was made.
This count is brought pursuant to Section 1(3) of the Advance Fee Fraud and Other Fraud-Related Offenses Act, 2006.
The second count alleges that within the same period, she fraudulently converted the said N36 million property belonging to Mrs. Okoye to her own personal use, contrary to Section 383 and punishable under Section 390 of the Criminal Code Act, Cap C38, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004.
In plain terms, prosecutors allege that a high-profile Lekki property was dangled before a prospective tenant, money was collected, and no lease was ever legitimately executed.
Friday’s proceedings were not without drama. Before the charges could even be read, defense counsel P.I. Nwafor rose to address the court, informing Justice Dipeolu that his client had already returned N24 million of the N36 million allegedly collected and that negotiations were underway to settle the outstanding N12 million balance.
“The defendant approached the nominal complainant and refunded N24 million out of the N36 million,” Nwafor told the court. “We are asking for a short adjournment to resolve the outstanding balance. The nominal complainant agreed that if the balance is paid, they can prevail on the EFCC to drop the case.”
It was an argument that carried the weight of a settlement in progress, but prosecution counsel S.I. Suleiman was unmoved.
“The complainant here is the Federal Government of Nigeria, and we are here for the arraignment,” Suleiman responded sharply. “We urge that the defendant take her plea, as that is the business of the day.”
Justice Dipeolu sided with the prosecution on the procedural question, ruling that any discussions between the defense and the nominal complainant could continue even while the case remained before the court, but that they would have no bearing on the day’s proceedings. The defendant, the judge ordered, would take her plea.
When the charges were read to her, Blessing CEO entered a plea of not guilty on both counts, a standard response at this stage of criminal proceedings and one that sets the stage for what could be a closely watched trial.
Following the plea, prosecutor Suleiman applied for a trial date and urged the court to remand the defendant to a correctional facility pending the commencement of trial, a standard prosecutorial move in high-profile financial crime cases.
Defense counsel, however, pushed back on the severity of the remand request, noting that his client had only been served with the charge sheet as recently as Thursday, May 14, 2026, barely 24 hours before Friday’s arraignment, and that a formal bail application was still being prepared.
Justice Dipeolu, threading a middle path, granted the defense’s alternative prayer: Blessing, CEO, is to be remanded in EFCC custody rather than a correctional facility pending the perfection of her bail conditions. The matter was adjourned to a later date.
The case against the Blessing CEO arrives with particular irony. For years, she has cultivated a public persona rooted in calls for integrity, financial independence, and self-worth, amassing a loyal online following, particularly among Nigerian women. Her brand has been built, in no small part, on trust.
That trust is now at the center of a federal prosecution.
It is worth noting that at this stage, the charges represent allegations, and the defendant has pleaded not guilty. The burden of proof lies with the prosecution, and Blessing CEO is entitled to the full presumption of innocence until and unless a court of competent jurisdiction determines otherwise.
What is certain is that the case will be watched with keen interest not only for its legal dimensions but also for what it says about accountability in an era where social media influence and real-world consequences are increasingly and inescapably intertwined.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Popular Nigerian social media influencer and relationship commentator Blessing CEO (Okoro Blessing Nkiruka) has been arraigned by the EFCC before a Federal High Court in Lagos over an alleged N36 million property lease scam.
She is accused of collecting the sum from a private individual under the pretense of leasing a Lekki duplex that was never delivered. While she has reportedly refunded N24 million and is negotiating the outstanding balance, the court proceeded with her arraignment regardless.
She pleaded not guilty and has been remanded in EFCC custody pending her bail application.
















