The Comptroller of Kirikiri prison in Lagos, has told a Lagos High Court in Igbosere that a police officer attached to Ajeromi Police Station, Sgt. Joseph Ugbah, who is being accused of murder of one Okafor Charles at a viewing center, could not be traced at the prison.
The presiding judge, Justice Ebenezer Adebajo, on several adjournments had
issued a “Production Warrant” to Kirikiri and Ikoyi prisons.
In his reply dated
September 13, 2012, the Kirikiri Prison Comptroller told the court that
there was no trace of the defendant, while the Ikoyi Prison is yet to give any
information on the defendant.
Twenty nine-year-old Sgt. Ugbah (defendant) is facing one- count charge of
murder, an offence contrary to section 319 (1) of the Criminal Code Law Cap C.
17 Vol. 2 Laws of Lagos State 2003.
The charge LCD/31/12 reads: “Sgt. Joseph Ugba ‘M’ on April 1, 2010 at about
07.00pm at the DSTV Hall in the Ajeromi Area of Lagos in the Lagos Judicial
Division murdered one Okafor Charles.” It will be recalled that the prosecutor,
Mr. O. Soetan, had asked the court for a further date to enable him ascertain
the defendant’s whereabouts, and the case has seen 7 adjournments before it was
again adjourned to February 2, 2013.
Crime Alert gathered that the defendant joined the Nigeria Police in 1992,
served in Imo State before coming to Lagos State (Ajeromi Division), where he
was attached to the Anti Robbery Team. In a statement to the police, the
deceased’s father, Mr. William Okafor, a clergyman, said those who witnessed
the alleged murder of his son told him that Charles (deceased) and others were
in a film hall when the police from Ajeromi Division stormed the hall and ordered
all person’s to lie flat. “The police started searching their pockets and was removing the money
in their pockets. On getting to Charles, he challenged the police for searching
their pockets and removing their money. The challenge got one of the police
officers angry, and he used the butt of his riffle to hit Charles.
After that,
the police officers then asked everybody to leave the hall, while Charles still
remained lying on the ground.”
On how the deceased’s father was treated at the Ajeromi Police station,
55-year- old Williams said “I went to the DPO of Ajeromi Police Station and introduced myself as
the father of the deceased, and he said he did not send any of his men there to
make trouble. He (DPO) pleaded with the people outside the police station to be
calm, to enable the police take the corpse to the mortuary. My late son is
unmarried and works as a traveling agent, and I depend on him for survival,”he
stated.
Vanguard

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