A Lagos
State High Court sitting in Igbosere, on Monday, discharged and
acquitted the six suspects standing trial for the murder of a late Lagos
politician, Funsho Williams.
In setting the six men free, Justice
Ebenezer Adebajo ruled that the prosecution failed to establish any
nexus between Williams’ death and acts of any of the six.
“I agree with the defendants’ counsel
that the evidence given in respect of the offence of conspiracy to
commit murder is weak and unreliable because they are superficial, they
amount to speculation when given consideration. There is nothing cogent
and compelling to show that any combination of the defendants has acted
in furtherance of a crime,” the judge held.
He also ruled that there were
insufficient materials to infer that the six defendants conspired to
murder and actually murdered the late Williams.
Williams, a governorship aspirant on the
platform of the Peoples Democratic Party, was murdered in his house at
No. 34A, Corporation Drive, Dolphin Estate, Ikoyi, Lagos, on the night
of July 27, 2006.
For eight years the six men – Bulama
Kolo, Musa Maina, David Cassidy, Tunani Sonani, Mustapha Kayode and
Okponwasa Imariebie – had stood trial on two counts of conspiracy to
murder and murder of Williams.
In the course of the trial, the
prosecution, led by the Director of the Lagos State Directorate of
Public Prosecution, Mrs. Idowu Alakija, presented six witnesses before
the court.
Among them was the Lagos State Chief
Forensic Pathologist, Professor John Obafunwa, who conducted an autopsy
on Williams’ corpse and told the court on April 16, 2014 that Williams
died of asphyxia resulting from manual strangulation.
Another witness, Assistant Superintendent
of Police Abasi Nseh Udoe, had on May 14, 2014 told the court that
Williams’ mobile phone was recovered from the first defendant, Bulama
Kolo.
Udoe told the court that the fourth,
fifth and sixth defendants were security men responsible for the
protection of the life and properties of the deceased. And Alakija had
urged the court to convict the accused having failed in their
responsibilities.
Udoe further told the court that forensic
analysis revealed that a bloodstained shirt recovered from the murder
scene belonged to the sixth defendant, Okponwasa Imariebie.
Another witness, Chief Superintendent of
Police Shehu Sanni Wazo of the Nigerian Police Forensic Department, had
tendered before the court a knife, a rope, a mattress and a cushion as
items recovered from the murder scene.
The court had on May 16, 2014 admitted the items as exhibits.
However, upon the closure of the prosecution’s case on May 16, 2014, the defence had responded by filing a no-case application.
In the no-case application, the defence,
led by Mr. Agbara Okezie, had argued that the totality of evidences
given by the prosecution witnesses had established no nexus between the
accused and the death of the deceased.
Okezie had argued that the evidences were
only circumstantial, not compelling and not resistible enough to be
relied upon by the court.
He had then prayed the court to throw out
the case and discharge the defendants as they were not guilty of the
offences levelled against them.
On Monday, Justice Adebajo ruled on the nocase application filed by the defence.
The judge dismissed the case and
discharged the six defendants. Adebajo held that the witness, Udoe,
failed to prove that the Samsung phone recovered from the first
defendant actually belonged to the late Williams, saying the witness
failed to trace the call log and name the service provider.
He held that though Obafunwa testified
that Williams died as a result of strangulation, the pathologist did not
link any of the six accused to the action.
He said,” It is noteworthy to state that
the Chief Medical Pathologist of the state in his evidence stated
clearly that the deceased was killed by strangulation. The dagger and
the rope were distraction. The evidence of the pathologist, PW3, clearly
established the cause of death. The prosecution did not make any effort
to tie the cause of death to the action of any individual or set of
defendants.
“I am satisfied that the deceased has
been shown to have died, but it remains at large after the conclusion of
prosecution’s case as to the person or persons who caused his death.
The pathologist who said the deceased died by strangulation did not
allude to any of the defendants as having carried out the act; he was
never asked.”
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