THE TRUTH ABOUT THE HARRISON CASE AND THE FAKE MONEY CLAIMS
🟦⚠️ VDM Exposes the Lies in Harrison Gwamnishu’s Lawyer’s “Explanation”
A detailed breakdown of why the story does not add up.
The first time VDM addressed the Harrison Gwamnishu issue, he made one thing very clear: he would not speak further until Harrison came out and said the full truth himself.
But yesterday, something unexpected happened — a long epistle suddenly surfaced online, allegedly written by Harrison’s lawyer, claiming that Harrison had “told him everything” and the lawyer was now offering the explanation on his behalf.
The problem? The entire explanation is built on lies.
According to the statement, Harrison’s “modus operandi” is to replace large parts of ransom money with “prototype look-alike cash” because the real Naira notes are “too light” to hold a tracking chip. So they allegedly remove millions, replace them with fake, thicker money, and insert the chip because the chip “sits better” on counterfeit notes.
But here is the simple truth: Fake money is lighter than real money — always has been. Counterfeit notes feel cheaper, lighter, and thinner. So claiming real money is “too light” already exposes the lie.
Now the bigger question:
Even if someone believed that story, where did they get the thousands of fake notes needed to replace ₦5.4 million?
In ₦500 notes, that is 10,800 pieces. In ₦1,000 notes, that is 5,400 pieces.
Where did this massive quantity of counterfeit currency come from?
Did they buy it? If yes, fake money is extremely hard to buy in Nigeria — arrests happen instantly. And if they didn’t buy it, did they print it?
If they printed it, we must ask:
Who designed it? Who printed it? Which machine? How many pieces?
Producing thousands of counterfeit notes is not a joke — it is a major federal crime.
And the law is clear:
• Making counterfeit currency — LIFE imprisonment
• Possession of counterfeit currency — LIFE imprisonment
• Buying or selling counterfeit currency — LIFE imprisonment
So if their explanation is true, then Harrison is already facing a crime worse than the one people are even talking about.
Now, let’s talk about the “chip.”
Their claim that the chip needed “more weight” is another lie. Tracking chips are tiny semiconductors — smaller than a SIM card. They can fit comfortably inside ₦50,000 worth of notes. Some fit inside ₦10,000.
There is no scenario where someone must remove ₦5.4 million just so a chip can “sit well.” It makes no scientific sense.
Unless the chip is a liquid. Or a powder. Which is obviously another lie.
Let’s be realistic.
If they claim they needed to attach a chip to all 5,400 or 10,800 notes, that process alone would take hours and fill an entire room with scattered cash. No intelligent person believes that.
None of their claims align with logic, science, or even basic common sense.
This is why VDM despises lies — especially lies crafted deliberately to deceive the public and manipulate narratives.
And until Harrison speaks the truth with his own mouth, every story from lawyers, friends, or associates remains nothing but badly constructed lies.
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