TDA viral claim circulating on social media alleging that the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) discovered $5 billion in cash, pre-written 2027 election results, ₦1 trillion worth of gold necklaces, and 200 exotic cars during a raid on the residence of former Abia State Governor, Theodore Ahamefule Orji, is false.
The claim originated from an X (formerly Twitter) post by user @anthonyabakporo.
Abakporo alleged that the EFCC carried out the operation after Orji allegedly ignored several invitations from investigators and went into hiding for months.
However, checks show there is no evidence to support the sensational allegations.
According to available information, the EFCC has not issued any official statement, press release, or public announcement confirming such a raid or the recovery of the purported assets.
Operations involving seizures of this magnitude are typically accompanied by official disclosures and extensive coverage by credible news organisations, none of which exists in this case.
Further examination also shows that the images accompanying the viral post are unrelated.
The photographs include generic images of wrapped cash, luxury vehicles, buried coins and an old portrait of the former governor, all of which have appeared in unrelated posts and previous online hoaxes.
The monetary figures cited in the post are also implausible.
Financial analysts note that $5 billion in physical cash would amount to an extraordinarily large volume of currency, making storage inside a private residence highly impractical.
The amount also far exceeds the annual budgets of Abia State during Orji’s administration between 2007 and 2015.
The misinformation appears to exploit genuine public knowledge of existing corruption allegations involving the former governor.
Theodore Orji, his son and other former officials have indeed faced investigations and court proceedings by the EFCC over alleged diversion of public funds amounting to tens of billions of naira.
Those cases, however, are separate from the viral claim and do not involve the alleged discoveries of billions of dollars, future election results or hundreds of luxury vehicles.
Fact-checkers note that similar exaggerated claims have repeatedly circulated online against prominent Nigerian politicians, often using misleading photographs and fabricated figures designed to attract attention and generate engagement.
Verdict: The claim that the EFCC recovered $5 billion, pre-written 2027 election results, ₦1 trillion worth of gold jewelries and 200 exotic cars from the Umuahia residence of former Governor Theodore Orji is false.
There is no official confirmation from the EFCC or credible evidence supporting the story.
The post is a viral hoax that combines fabricated claims with recycled images to mislead the public.














