Tuesday 19 June 2012

How police nailed Makewa



How police nailed Makewa


Prosecutor Jonathan Kyumbu
By Martin Masai

POLICE earned incredible accolades in Tawa Court as the trial magistrate sentenced fabled suspend catholic priest John Makewa to seven years in Jail. Senior Resident Magistrate Waititu Gichimu said he was satisfied that police officers investigating the attempted murder charge did a superb job by piecing together evidence to prove that it is Fr Makewa who shot Fr Fidelis Nzuki on the night of March 21 2010 with the intention of killing him.

Gichimu summarized his task as trial magistrate as requiring him to determine two questions: Was it Fr Makewa who shot the complainant?; Was the accused intent on killing the complainant?
After analyzing evidence available, Mr Gichimu concluded in the affirmative and told Fr Nzuki that he was indeed lucky to be alive.
The Anchordetermined as ever to cover this matter extensively now brings you a summary of submissions made by Police Prosecutor Jonathan Kyumbu to secure a conviction  against the assailant priest.
Herewith, a verbatim account. "Your Honour, further to the prosecutions submission 23rd April, 2012 and filed in court on 25th April, 2012 the prosecution wishes to further submit as follows:The prosecution has proved the charge of attempted murder against the accused person beyond any reasonable doubt, and as by law required.  We do wish to reiterate the contents of our submissions filed earlier and now wish to proceed further as follows. I start by addressing the scene of the crime.
SCENE OF CRIME
Your honour we invite you to look keenly to the evidence of PW8, PW11  and  PW14, both in their chief examinations and during cross-examination.  These witnesses were all Police Officers and they have confirmed that the window panes were broken by something else other than bullets.  In cross examination PW8 insisted that if they were bullets, then they would not have come from outside.  Obviously, this suggest that they were from inside.  PW11 spoke of a sand stone which found in the room of the accused.  
There is your honour a high possibility that the accused used the sand stone to brake the window pane in an attempt to justify his theory that it was the thugs who shot at it.  We invite your honour to analyse this scenario critically and find that the accused is not a trustworthy man and dismiss his theory.  Pw11 further stated that it is the lowest middle window pane which had been broken.  The accused broke that which he could reach.  On further cross examination PW11 informed that the broken glasses fell outside the room/house suggesting that the bullets were short from inside.  (See line 9 of page 32 of the proceeding.
We further invite your honour to look at lines 10, 11 and 12 of page 32 of the preceding and make a finding the pellet found in the body in the aforesaid line were from the accused person’s shot gun.
The accused person confirmed in his defence in Chief that the complainant was behind him at the time.  One wonders how the thugs bullets as put by the accused by-passed him and caught the complainant on his hand and both thighs.  Your honour this is not practical for all purposes and reason.  Without going deeper on this point we invite you to find the accused`s   explanation incredible and dismiss it forthwith.
The complainant was shot on his hands and thighs.  From the setting of the accused person`s house, the complainant was standing along the veranda and was completely covered below the stomach.  It was therefore not possible for him to get shot at the thighs by a bullet fired from outside the house.   See the photos produced as exhibits no. 4pg 18. See testimony from PW 8 Page 25 in cross examination. He insists that given the setting of the accused’s house, there was no way the bullets could have been shot from outside to hit the complainant below the stomach.  The complainant therefore was shot by somebody from inside the house and this is none else other than the accused person
THE ROBBERS THEORY
From the entire evidence on record, there were no robbers at the scene as alleged by the accused person. None of the prosecution witnesses talked of thugs, but only commotion.  The commotion which the witnesses talked about was only that of the accused, the complainant, and PW6 who were already up and in action.  We submit that at no time did the accused person see any robbers.  He was just shooting at nothing and later shot the complainant.  In his statement in defence, he said he checked and did not see anybody.  Even with this, he shot twice….  What was he shooting at if he saw nothing?

It is worth noting that the alleged thugs posed no threat at all for they gave the accused humble time to keep loading, re-loading, pick phone calls, mobilize support from among others, the visiting complainant and Shooting at people he could not see, yet at the end the shot at none of them other than the complainant he alleges to have been protecting.

We further submit that the accused person did not at all call the police or anyone else for rescue when the Parish was allegedly under attack.  This is contrary to the ordinary reaction by people when attacked by thieves.
From the evidence on record the accused person did not portray himself an honest person and acted maliciously, in that-
       i.            He mentioned many thugs when police visited the scene immediately but in his sworn statement of defence he talked about three attackers.
     ii.            He reported to the police ( See PW 8,PAGE 24, PW 14 PAGE 36) that he used his Ceska Pistol but there were no cartridges from the same, this further discredits his character, if not evidence.  The evidence by the police shows that the pistol was intact, to suggest it was loaded fully and no bullet from it had been spent. 
This can be collaborated by testimony by the complainant that it is him who held the pistol he had been given by the accused, hence why no bullet was expended from it. - See evidence of PW1, Page 5 and PW11 PAGE 29 of the proceedings. The accused himself admitted having handed two bullets to the complainant.
  iii.             Further, the accused testified waking up the complainant and a visitor to help him fight off the thugs. Interestingly, he did not wake up or call to his help, his principal assistants( PW4 and PW5) who were well conversant with the house, its surrounding and were best placed to call for help to repulse the alleged attackers as opposed to the visitors. It shows that the accused selected his target and isolated him to execute his mission. That he gave him bullets as, the accused confirmed in his sworn evidence and handed him a gun( see PW1 evidence, Page 5 of the proceedings) placed the complainant in unmistakable position for his  attack.
  iv.            The accused person wilfully and intentionally interfered with the scene by collecting the spent cartridges from his short gun and  only handed them to the police on 6th April, 2012 sixteen  16 days after the incident – see evidence of PW11 PAGE 30 lines 14, 15, 16,17 and 18.  Your honour, from the explanation in no. iii above, shows that the accused had ill motives, given that he hid the cartridges and only handed them to the police after being coerced.  
This act can only mean that the accused was desirous to conceal some evidence and defeat the course of justice - see PW 8, PW11 and PW14.  It is also clear from the evidence by the investigating officer and the scene of crime officers that the accused initially did not disclose  that to them that he possessed a Ceska pistol but only disclosed and handed it over to the officers after the complainant reported to them  - officers -  when they visited him in hospital to take his statement.  This clearly portrays the accused a dishonest person and unbelievable in these circumstances.
 Your honour we wish to call your attention to the disparity of time the alleged thugs attacked the Parish as reported by the accused to the Investigating officer and  other police officers who visited the scene of the  crime and as reported by the accused person in his sworn evidence: see pw8 and pw11.
Finally your honour we wish to submit on the question of the intent by the accused to murder the complainant.  First of all the act of shooting the complainant by the accused was not an accident.  This is because, the complainant suffered multiple gunshot wounds [see P3] and the doctor’s report.
The complainant suffered gun shots on his left hand, and both thighs.  To shoot somebody at the hand and both thighs was not done just once.  The accused must have therefore shot from his short gun twice, thrice or even severally.  Is shooting somebody thrice really accidental­? 
We submit that this was a well mentally schemed operation by the accused to murder the complainant.  Nobody else had a fire arm at the time and there was no exchange of fire at all.  
The accused, your honour, admitted during cross-examination that he was the only person who had a gun that material night.
So who shot the complainant? Evidence by the Prosecution shows that the complainant was shot from fire from a gun consistent with the one the accused used that day. 
Point of penetration shows bullets could not have come from outside the room where the accused and the victim were. It follows therefore that the enemy lay/stood within the room. 
Only the accused was armed and fired repeatedly from inside that room that night. He shot the complainant.
PW 11, Page 29 insists several times in his evidence that there were no footprints where the accused indicated the alleged thugs had been spotted and were allegedly shooting from. 
No spent cartridges were recovered from the same area either. See also testimony by PW8, Page 24 and see collaboration that no spent cartridges were recovered from the wide area the accused showed the police. Clearly, Your Honour, this evidence, juxtaposed with the sworn  defence statement in that respect demonstrates that the accused is dishonest and manifestly unbelievable.

In his sworn statement of defence, the accused tried to demonstrate to court how good a friend he was to the complainant, but we wish to submit that this does not exonerate him from his ill  motives towards the complainant. Indeed, friends kill friends. No one can tell what is in the heart of another, even the devil but only God.
The case law of Alexander Kilei Kasuki
                                      -VS-
R CA no. 134 of 2006 – is wholly in support of the persecutions case.
Prosecution evidence shows that once the complainant was shot, he lay injured, bleeding and as he faced death, asked for Final Rites as prescribed in the Catholic Faith, since he believed he would die. 
Testimonies, including that of the accused shows for a good 20 minutes, the  complainant lay there helpless. 
A Priest at the mission house volunteered to administer the Rites (See evidence of PW5/ PAGE 16) as the accused paced up and down. The complainant needed urgent medical attention, but the accused drove off to call the police. 
Sisters and the priests present used Fr Mutuku’S (PW5) car to rush him to Makueni District Hospital where the accused says he was Chairman. 
Clearly, the accused wanted the complainant dead, using delaying tactics to finish off what his mission was. So where was this fabled friendship that was not fruitful at the hour of need? 
The accused instead went on to celebrate holy mass at Multipurpose Hall at Wote Town and never even accompanied the complainant to the hospital.
 It is my humble submission that the prosecution has proved its case against the accused person beyond any reasonable doubt.  We request your honour to proceed and find the accused guilty of attempted murder and convict him accordingly."
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