A court in Nigeria has sentenced a former council lawmaker, Gabriel Daudu, to 154 years in jail for corruption and money laundering.
Daudu, from central Kogi State, was found guilty of 77 charges, Nigeria’s anti-corruption body says.
But the judge ruled that the sentences would run concurrently, meaning that Dauda will only spend two years in jail.
Corruption is endemic in Nigeria and so far the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has only managed to secure a handful of convictions.
President Muhammadu Buhari won election last year, promising to tackle the problem.
A number of prominent officials from the previous government has been arrested and put on trial, but some accuse the president of only targeting the opposition.
The EFCC s aid that Daudu, who was put on trial in 2010, was involved in laundering about $7 million (£5 million).
Delivering the judgement in Kogi State capital, Lokoja, Justice Inyang Ekwo, said that the persecution had “proved its case beyond every reasonable doubt”, the EFCC said in a statement.
It is not immediately clear whether Dauda will appeal against the ruling and whether any of the stolen money was recovered.