Saturday, 19 May 2018
Supreme Court Frees Otokoto Murder Suspect After 22 Years In Detention.
The Supreme Court, on Friday, freed Mr. Alban
Ajaegbu, who was one of the accused persons in the celebrated ‘Otokoto’ ritual murder of 11 year old Ikechukuwu Okonkwo;He was freed after 22 years.
Little Okonkwo who was a groundnut seller, was on September 19, 1996, lured into a hotel called Otokoko in Owerri, Imo State and gruesomely beheaded. Investigations had revealed that the victim became unconscious at the hotel after he drank a bottle of Coca-Cola that was spiked with drug,
before he was killed. The crime was discovered when 32-year-old Innocent Ekeanyanwu left the hotel to deliver Okonkwo’s head in a polythene bag to a client.
An okada rider who was conveying Ekenyanwu to his destination discovered the fresh human head and alerted the police.
Among those arrested over the ritual murder included the owner of the hotel, one Vincent Duru, who was popularly referred to as Chief Otokoto during the protracted trial of seven suspects that were fingered in the crime.
Besides beheading the victim, the suspects were said to have removed vital organs from his body, including his genitals, before burying the mutilated corpse in a shallow grave. All the seven suspects fingered in the ritual killing were all found guilty and sentenced to death by hanging.
Ajaegbu who was discharged and acquitted of the crime by the Supreme Court on Friday, was said to have worked at the hotel as a gardener.
The apex court, in a unanimous judgement by a five-man panel of Justices, held that
circumstantial evidence the trial court relied upon to convict and sentence him to death by hanging, was not sufficient.
Specifically, Justice Kudirat Kekere-Ekun who prepared the lead judgment, held: “It must be
restated here that the appellant was charged with murder and the prosecution has the burden of proving beyond reasonable doubt that
it was the act of the appellant that caused the death of deceased. The appellant does not have the burden to prove his innocence. The lower
court held that the defence of the appellant raised a lot of suspicion. The law is well settled that suspicion, no matter how grave, cannot take the place of proof.”
She said that the assumption of the lower courts that because the appellant worked in the hotel for 17 years, he should have known who owed the farm that Okoronkwo was buried in, was fallacious.
From Vanguardngr
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