Republic v David Manyara Njuki,John Njenga,Jeremiah Muturi,Jeremiah Wanjau Wanjiku,Dancan Chege Ndichu,John Irungu Kiai,Samwel Mwangi Maina,Peter Kiragu Githuka, Francis Maina Njoroge,Paul Githi Kimani,Mto Muchiri Mkoloi,Kariuki Mugo, David Karanja [2004] KEHC 520 (KLR)
Full Case Text
REPUBLIC OF KENYA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF KENYA
AT NAKURU
CRIMINAL CASE NO. 52 OF 2004
REPUBLIC…………………..……………………PROSECUTOR
VERSUS
DAVID MANYARA NJUKI………………………1ST ACCUSED
JOHN NJENGA……………………………..…….2ND ACCUSED
JEREMIAH MUTURI………….…………………3RD ACCUSED
JEREMIAH WANJAU WANJIKU……….………4TH ACCUSED
DANCAN CHEGE NDICHU………………..……5TH ACCUSED
JOHN IRUNGU KIAI……………………………..6TH ACCUSED
SAMWEL MWANGI MAINA……………………7TH ACCUSED
PETER KIRAGU GITHUKA……………………..8TH ACCUSED
FRANCIS MAINA NJOROGE……………………9TH ACCUSED
PAUL GITHI KIMANI………….……………….10TH ACCUSED
MTO MUCHIRI MKOLOI………………………11TH ACCUSED
KARIUKI MUGO…...…………………………...12TH ACCUSED
DAVID KARANJA WANYOIKE…….……..…..13TH ACCUSED
R U L I N G
The thirteen (13) accused persons jointly faced ten (10) counts ofmurder contrary to
Section 203 as read with Section 204 of the Penal Code. It was alleged that on the night
of 4th and 5th January, 2003 at Nakuru Township within Nakuru District of the Rift Valley
Province they jointly murdered the following persons:- Andefunda Saul Likuyi, Bernard
Wamaru Mukuthi, Harun Chege Mwaura, Jackson K. Bunei, Zakayo Chomba Gikunju,
John Kamutu Mutua, David Nyaolango Nyandere, Joel Muhia Kimotho, Peter Mwariri
Ndirangu and Joseph Wandera Asango. They all denied the charges and the prosecution
called thirty (30) prosecution witnesses to testify on various aspects in support of its case
and at the conclusion thereof, Mr. Karanja Mbugua, learned defence counsel for the first
accused and Mr. Gordon Ogola, learned defence counsel for the rest of the accused
persons submitted that the prosecution had not established a prima facie case as would
have warranted the accused persons to be put on their defence.
It is important to restate the prosecution case against each of the accused persons, albeit
briefly.
PW1, Karoli Asango Wandera testified that on 6th January, 2003, he was at their home
in Bundalangi sub-location, Busia District when he received the bad news to the effect
that his father, Joseph Wandera Asango (deceased) had been killed by some members of
an unlawful society known as “mungiki” at Nakuru. He travelled to Nakuru and went to
the municipal mortuary and removed the body to the Provincial Hospital mortuary where
a post mortem was later carried out and thereafter the body was released to him and his
relatives for burial.
PW2, Christine Mangeni Wandera was the mother to PW1 and her evidence was just
the same as that of PW1 as she received the news of the death of her late husband when
she was with PW1 at their aforesaid home and they travelled together to Nakuru.
PW3, Agnes Mumbi Mwariri was the wife to one of the people who were allegedly
murdered by the accused, the late Peter Mwariri Ndirangu. She told the court that on 6th
January, 2003 she was at home in Nyeri when she was telephoned by her late husband’s
sister and told that her husband had been killed at Kimathi Estate, Nakuru, where he was
staying. She then travelled to Nakuru, identified the body at the mortuary and a post
mortem was performed and the body was later released to her for burial.
PW4, Humprey Ben Andefunda testified that on 5th January, 2003 at about 11. 00 p.m.
he was in his house at Flamingo Estate, Nakuru when his neighbour told him his son,
Saul Likuyi Andefunda had been slashed to death by some people in his house at Kimathi
Estate within Nakuru Township. PW4 went to his late son’s house and confirmed the bad
news. Thereafter the matter was reported to the police and he recorded a statement. On
7/1/2003 a post mortem was performed and the body was thereafter released for burial.
PW5, Benard Wamalu Karuri testified that on 6/1/2003 he was told that his nephew,
Benard Wamalu had been killed and later on the same day he went to the Provincial
Hospital mortuary where he identified the deceased’s body for post mortem.
PW6, Police Constable Mwasheria Mbwana was at Bondeni Police Station, Nakuru at
the material time and on 5/1/2003 at about 8. 00 p.m., he was deployed on patrol duties
with one Police Constable Tanui to Lake View Estate near Kimathi and Flamingo Estate.
At around 9. 00 p.m., while they were in an area known as “Mahindi Choma” they heard
people wailing at Kimathi and Flamingo Estates as they called for help. They rushed
there and as they approached the area, they saw a crowd of about 50 people shouting and
attacking members of the public. The people were armed with pangas and rungus. The
police officers were armed with guns and as they approached the people, they started
shouting, advancing towards them. The police officers ordered them to stop but they
refused thus causing the police to shoot at them, felling down two instantly and the rest
ran away.
PW6 further testified that the said people had white ribbons on their heads and long
jackets. The Officer Commanding Bondeni Police Station came in a motor vehicle after
a short while and they pursued the people towards Flamingo area where they met two
suspects, one of them armed with a sword which was sharpened on both sides. PW6 said
that they arrested the two suspects and called the duty officer who went to the scene of
the arrest and they handed over the two suspects to him.
In cross examination, PW6 said that the two people whom they shot down were armed
with pangas and swords and were posing danger to them. He however said that the two
suspects they arrested that night were not among the accused. PW6 had personally
arrested a man by the name Anthony but he was not one of the accused persons. After
his arrest, PW6 never saw the white ribbon which the arrested person wore on his head as
well as the knife which he had. In re-examination by Mr. Gumo, the Assistant Deputy
Public Prosecutor, PW6 stated that the name of the other person whom they arrested was
Peter Kiragu but he was not sure whether he was among the accused.
PW7, Jonah Kiplangat Bunei said that on 6/1/2003 he was in Mombasa when he
received a report that his brother, Jackson Kimaiyo Bunei had died at Nakuru and he
travelled there and identified the body for purposes of a post mortem which was carried
out on 9/1/2003.
PW8, Police Constable Livingstone Lihandawas attached to the Provincial Criminal
Investigations Department and on 7/1/2003 at about 11. 45 a.m. at the Municipal
Mortuary he was shown nineteen (19) bodies which had different types of injuries and
cuts. He photographed the bodies and processed the film and he prepared a certificate to
the effect that the film was processed, developed and printed under his supervision. He
produced the certificate and the photographs as exhibits before the court, Prosecution
Exhibit No. 1. The photographs were truly horrifying, depicting human bodies badly
mutilated by what must have been sharp objects. PW8 however did not know the names
of the deceased persons whose bodies he photographed.
PW9, Police Constable Bunei was a brother to Jonah Kiplangat Bunei, one of the people
alleged to have been murdered by the accused persons. He identified his late brother’s
body for purposes of a post mortem on 9/1/2003 at War Memorial Hospital.
PW10, Hannah Wambui Limui testified that on 7/1/2003 she learnt that her son, James
Njoroge had been killed and a post mortem was later carried out and it showed that he
died as a result of a bullet injury which shot the back of his neck and exited from the
front. The deceased was not among the people alleged to have been killed by the
accused.
PW11, Joyce Mbitu Waweru told the court that she was staying with her husband,
David Olango Nyandere (deceased) at Flamingo Estate, Nakuru. The said deceased was
a teacher at Lake Nakuru High School. On 5/1/2003 at about 9. 00 p.m. while they were
in their house with her husband and one Bernard Wamaru, she heard the sound of
breaking glass from a distance of about 20 metres. Her husband went to one of the
windows to check what it was and PW11 put off the lights that were on. Then suddenly
their main house door was kicked from outside and four people got in and shouted “TOA
MUNGIKI, TOA MUNGIKI”. She replied that there were no mungiki members there
and at that time, six other people got in. She said that they had white ribbons tied to their
foreheads and some had caps. She further testified that her husband was asked if he was
a “Manamba” i.e. matatu conductor or a driver and he replied that he was a teacher. He
was then asked what tribe he was and he said he was a Luo and then the assailants said
they wanted people like him and then they started to slash him with a panga. They
dragged him out of the house and forced him to walk with them as they continued to
assault him. The attackers also assaulted PW11 before they slashed PW11’s husband to
death. PW11 then heard gun shots behind them and when she went back to their house,
she found that Bernard also had been slashed to death. She identified the third and the
fifth accused as being among the people who forced their way into her house on the
fateful night, saying that she talked to the two for almost twenty minutes beseeching them
not to kill her husband.
In cross examination, she said that when the people got into her house there were lights
and so she was able to see them. She said that she could recall their faces and insisted
that the 3rd and the 5th accused were among the people who stormed into her house. She
clarified that the house had two main rooms, an inner one and an outer one and the lights
she put off were those in the inner room while those in the outer room remained on so she
could see the people who broke into the house.
She further told the court that on the same week she identified the third accused in an
identification parade conducted at the C.I.D’s offices. When she was asked how the
identification parade was conducted, she said that five (5) people were seated down at the
said office and she did not know what the sitting position of the third accused was. She
also could not remember the police officer who conducted the parade. She further stated
that the room where the members of the parade were seated had windows and from
outside one could see inside. She was in the room when the suspects were brought.
During the parade she did not touch or point at the third accused and the accused could
not even know whether he had been identified. She did not identify the 5th accused then
but she identified him in the dock.
In her evidence during re-examination, she told the court that she had not been told by the
police whether she was going for an identification parade and insisted that she was able
to identify the 3rd accused at the parade because she had talked to him at length in her
house. She said that the third accused was seated as the second person from the left
during the identification parade.
PW12, Police Constable Dominic Ireriwho was at the material time attached to
Bondeni Police Station testified that on 4/1/2003 at about 11 a.m., he was at the station
when the O.C.S. ordered him, Police Constable Wanyonyi, Police Constable Kamau and
others to arm themselves with rifles and accompany the O.C.S. to Lake View Estate.
Upon arrival, they found that one person had been slashed to death by people suspected
to be mungiki members and the suspects had fled towards Mwariki Estate which borders
Lake View Estate. The police officers pursued them and upon reaching Mwariki Sewage
area, the suspects fled towards Kokoto area and the police caught up with them at the
farm of Rift Valley Institute. They found them seated along Nakuru Njoro road. Some
of them had pangas and they took off when they saw the police but the police chased
them and arrested four (4) of them and took them to Bondeni Police Station. PW12 said
he personally arrested one of the four people but he was categorical that the person he
arrested was not among the accused. He did not tell the court what happened to that one
suspect. However, and ironically so, he stated that the four suspects were charged in the
present case.
In cross examination, he said that the person he arrested had a panga and was known as
Nderitu Juma who is not among the suspects in court. He also said that they shot one
suspect as he was trying to run away and they took him to hospital. The name of that
suspect was not given and neither was the court informed of his fate. PW12 further
stated that the people they arrested had three (3) pangas and they were all booked in the
occurrence book at the police station and he was sure that the four people were among
those who attacked residents of Lake View Estate. The pangas which the arrested people
had were not produced before the court either, though the evidence of PW12 was that the
events he narrated were taking place on 4th January, 2003 during the day whereas the
accused persons were alleged to have committed the offences of murder on the night of
4th and 5th January, 2003.
PW13, Dr. Noah Oloo Kamidigo, the Rift Valley Provincial Pathologist testified that on
13/1/2003 he was requested by a C.I.D. officer to perform a post mortem on the body of
Jacton Owino Ogodo and his findings were that he had died due to bullet injuries which
he received on his upper part of the body.
On 8/1/2003 PW13 also performed another post mortem on the body of Patrick Maina
Kiarie. His opinion was that the cause of his death was brain damage due to a depressed
skull following blunt head injury.
Between 7/1/2003 and 13/1/2003 he also performed post mortems on the bodies of
Jackson Kimaiyo Bunei, John Kamutu Mutua, Joel Muhia Kimotho, David Olango
Nyandere, Andefunda Saul Likuyi and in respect of all of them, there was evidence that
they died due to multiple bodily injuries which were inflicted upon them by use of sharp
objects.
On 8/1/2003 PW13 performed a post mortem on the body of James Karanja Njoroge and
in the opinion of the witness, the deceased died due to various bullet inflicted injuries.
PW14, Inspector Leonard Luta testified that on 6/1/2003 at around 3 p.m. he was in the
C.I.D. offices in Nakuru when he was called by the Provincial Criminal Investigations
Officer (P.C.I.O.) to accompany him with other police officers to the Provincial Police
offices. He was instructed to wait at the waiting room where the first accused and other
men whom he did not know at the time but was to learn later that their names were Mr.
Njoroge and Mr. Zakayo were sitting. The P.C.I.O. instructed PW14 and the other police
officers to inform the first accused that he should accompany them to the Rift Valley
Provincial C.I.D. offices. PW14 gave the instructions as ordered and the first accused
and the other two people accompanied them. PW14 further testified that the police had
information from an informer that the first accused was funding mungiki members in
Nakuru. That information, he said, had been received between 1st and 3rd January, 2003
and they had been looking for him to verify the same. PW14 said that they had evidence
that the first accused was connected with the killings that had taken place and so he was
charged together with the other accused persons. PW14 was in the investigations team
that was headed by the then District Criminal Investigations Officer, Superintendent
Chelule.
In cross examination, PW14 said that the police were not told the names of the people
who were allegedly being financed by the first accused. They were also not told where
he was meeting with the people he was financing. He knew that the first accused was
staying at Bondeni area and PW14 had gone there twice to lay ambush against the first
accused but he did not manage to get him. He said that on 2/1/2003 he had gone there
with other police officers and left a message for the first accused to contact the police but
he had failed to do so. They were later told that he was at the Stanley Hotel, Nairobi and
they relayed that information to Nairobi Police headquarters but they did not find him at
the Hotel.
The informer then told the police that the first accused was seen within the precincts of
parliament. That information was allegedly given to superintendent Chelule and the
police went and found their informer near parliament but did not get the first accused.
Thereafter they got information that chaos had erupted in Nakuru and they were ordered
to go back and reinforce security.
PW14 told the court that he did not know how the first accused went to the Provincial
Police Officer’s office where they found him seated at the waiting room. The informer
had told the police that the first accused was buying pangas and giving them to mungiki
members to cause the mayhem but PW14 did not get any evidence to that effect. He
never interviewed any suspect who alleged to have been financed by the first accused
neither did he get the shop from which the first accused was allegedly buying the pangas.
The only real complaint that PW14 had against the first accused is that he went to his
house severally to trace him without any success and that he failed to report to the police
station after he left a message at his house that he should avail himself to the police.
Whether the first accused went to the Provincial Police Officer’s office from where he
was arrested in response to the message left by PW14 in his house or not, the court was
not told and as aforesaid, PW14 did not know how and why the first accused went to the
P.P.O’s office. PW14 further said that his specific role as against the first accused’s case
was to investigate his whereabouts but the bulk of the investigations were undertaken by
his superiors; presumably the District Criminal Investigations Officer, Superintendent
Chelule.
PW15, Police Constable Kirwa told the court that on 9/1/2003 he was instructed by the
D.C.I.O. Nakuru to accompany two ladies by the names Angeline Wambui and Hellen
Kagure to the Provincial General Hospital mortuary to witness a post mortem on the body
of Benard Wamalu which he did and the post mortem was carried out.
PW16, Police Constable Justus Kiptanui was attached to Bondeni Police Station and
on 5/1/2003 at about 8. 00 p.m. he was on patrol duties within Lake View Estate with
PW6. At about 9. 00 p.m. they heard people calling for assistance from Kimathi and
Flamingo Estates and they rushed there and as they approached, they saw a group of
about fifty (50) people armed with swords and rungus with white ribbons on their heads
and they were assaulting members of the public. They ordered the group to stop but
instead they approached them dangerously as they shouted. The police then shot two of
them dead and the rest disappeared towards Kivumbini area. They followed them up and
at Kivumbini they got scattered and the police arrested two of them. They searched them
and recovered a sword from one of them known as Anthony Mwangi. The other person
whom they arrested was accused number 8, Peter Kiragu who was identified in the
dock by the witness. He had no weapon but had a white ribbon on his head. The sword
that was taken from Anthony Mwangi was labelled and taken to Bondeni Police Station.
The two arrested persons were taken to Bondeni Police Station as well as the white head
bands which they wore. PW16 told the court that Anthony Mwangi was charged with the
offence of being armed in public but not with murder.
Cross examined by Mr. Ogola, he stated that when they went to Kimathi Estate there
were people running helter-skelter. They arrested accused number eights (8) with no
weapon at all but he had a white ribbon which was not produced in court although it had
been taken to Bondeni Police Station, he stated. Anthony Kiragu and accused No. 8 were
both booked at Bondeni Police Station for being members of an unlawful society and
Anthony Kiragu who had a very sharp sword was charged for that offence but accused
No.8 who had no weapon was charged with murder.
PW16 further told the court that on the material night, that is of 5th January, 2003 the
O.C.S. Bondeni Police Station came in a Land Cruiser and it broke down and at about
midnight he took it to a garage which belonged to the first accused. The house of the first
accused was next to the garage and he helped them to repair the vehicle. The garage was
next to Bondeni Police Station and about 200 metres from Flamingo. The witness said
that the first accused was aware of the mayhem that had taken place.
According to the evidence of PW14, Inspector Leonard Luta, the police were busy
looking for the first accused from 2nd January, 2003 upto 6th January, 2003 when they
extended their search to Nairobi yet on the night of 5th January, 2003, the person the
police were desperately looking for was there helping the police to repair their motor
vehicle at his garage so that they could pursue the assailant who had caused so much
bloodshed in the area. Why did not the O.C.S. Bondeni and his team composed of PW6
and PW16 among others arrest the first accused that night if at all he was a wanted man
in connection with the killings? Is it possible that the O.C.S. and his team did not know
that the P.C.I.O. and his team of investigators were looking for the first accused? Was
the conduct of the first accused on the night of 5/1/2003 consistent with that of a person
who was avoiding the police and refusing to hearken to their calls that he avails himself
to the police as per the evidence of PW14?
PW17, P.C. Rose Wanjiru Mwangi attended the post mortem of the body of the late
Peter Ndirangu on 9th January, 2003 which was performed by Dr. Koech.
PW18, Geoffrey Njoroge Kimotho identified the body of her son, George Muhia for
purposes of post mortem on 13/1/2003.
PW19, Hannah Waithira Kiarie testified that she was the mother of Patrick Maina who
was allegedly killed on 5th January, 2003. However, this deceased person was not among
the people who were alleged to have been murdered by the accused persons.
PW20, Corporal John Mbaruku was employed by the Kenya Wildlife Services at Lake
Nakuru National Park and his evidence was that on 3rd January, 2003 at about 10. 00 a.m.
he was at the main gate with one Samuel Mwaluma when they saw some two people
running towards the main gate. The people had crossed the electric fence surrounding the
park and were inside the park. The two men had pangas and PW20 and his colleague
stopped them and ordered them to drop the weapons which they did. They were arrested
and taken to Bondeni Police Station. These two men identified themselves as Joseph
Irungu and David Etole. The two said that they were running away but PW20 could not
identify them among the accused persons. The two were booked in the occurrence book
at the police station as having trespassed into the National Park. The witness was
categorical that the two people were in custody at Bondeni Police Station by 3/1/2003 at
about 10. 30 a.m. and so they could not have committed the alleged offence of murder on
the nights of 4th and 5th January, 2003.
However, Joseph Irungu and David Etole are not among the accused and it is not clear to
the court why the prosecution called PW20 to testify. Even if Joseph Irungu and David
Etole had been among the accused, no charges of murder having been committed on the
nights of 4th and 5th January, 2003 could be sustained against them if the two were in
police custody on 3rd January, 2003 at about 10. 30 a.m. and had not been released by the
time the killings were taking place.
PW21, Police Constable Joseph Chirchir was attached to Bondeni Police station and
on 4th January, 2003 at about 11. 00 a.m. he was in the office when PW20 handed over to
him two suspects, John Irungu and James Patrick kitole. He said he was also given two
pangas and he identified one of the pangas in court although he did not tell the court how
he identified it as it had no label at all. PW21 told the court that the charged the two with
the offences of being armed in public and entering into a National Park without consent.
The witness confirmed that the two were not among the accused.
Questioned by Mr. Karanja regarding the date when the two were handed over to him by
PW20, he insisted it was 4th January, 2003 during the day and not on any other date. The
two were later picked by the C.I.D. officers.
PW22, Anthony Muchiri Gitau did not give any evidence that was of any relevance to
the charges against the accused because he talked of having seen some 3 men dressed in
jackets and alighting from a matatu carrying pangas and sticks in their jackets. He
alleged that the three people beat him up with the sticks. That was on 3/1/2003.
PW23, Inspector Joseph Muguna testified that on 5/1/2003 at about 10 p.m. together
with police constable Leleruk and Police Constable Erastus were on patrol duties inside a
vehicle when they received communication that there were some people believed to be
mungiki members terrorising people at Flamingo and Bahati Estates and they were
directed to go and reinforce security. On reaching Section 58 they met 8 to 10 young
men who were dressed in heavy jackets and were running from Bondeni area towards
Section 58 and they were armed with pangas and rungus. They arrested two (2) of them,
Ngoroi Muchiri and Kimani and
recovered a panga and a simi from them. He identified a panga which he said was with
Nkoloi Muchiri (11th accused) and a
sword which he said was with the 10
th accused, although the names of the accused as given by the said witness is different
from the names given in the charge sheet. The two arrested persons were escorted to
Nakuru Police Station together with the panga and the sword.
In cross examination, he stated that he booked the two for the offence of being armed in
preparation to commit a
felony. He insisted that the panga and the sword which he produced in court were the
same ones which the two suspects had on the material night. The weapons had no blood
stains, he stated.
PW23 denied a suggestion by Mr. Ogola advocate that the people arrested were
watchmen in the area. Asked to identify the two people from the dock, he was unable to
do so. He also said that the suspects did not wear white ribbons on their heads.
PW24, John Ndung’u Kamani testified that he was attached to Bondeni Police Station
as Deputy Station Commander. On 4/1/2003 at about 8. 00 a.m. he was the duty officer at
the station and at about 10. 00 a.m. the O.C.S., Menengai Police Station, told him that he
met a group of mungiki people along KANU street removing passengers from matatus
and beating the touts. They went there and met a group of more than 20 people and they
managed to arrest 5 of them who had pangas and the pangas were taken to Bondeni
Police Station. However, the witness said that the 5 people they arrested were not among
the accused. At about 11. 00 a.m. the witness received a report that another group of
mungiki members had beaten somebody at Lake View Estate and several police officers
went there. They found that a person known as Joel had been cut with a panga and had
been taken to hospital. Members of the public showed the police a group of people and
the police followed them up. They were more than 30 in number and the police followed
them up to sewage works where the group confronted the police and the police fired in
the air to scare them. Some people ran towards the National Park and others towards
Njoro. PW24 and his team followed the group that ran towards Njoro. 11 of the people
were arrested and taken to Bondeni Police Station and the witness said that it was the
O.C.S. who dealt with the arrested persons although later they were picked from the
station by C.I.D. officers. In cross examination, he admitted that none of the 11 people
arrested that day were among the accused persons in court. The witness merely stated
that the arrested people remained in custody for about a week. I assume that they were
released thereafter. The court was not told what became of them. The court expected the
prosecution to call as a witness the person who was serving as the O.C.S. Bondeni Police
Station at the time since his station seems to have been the nerve centre of the police
operations but he was not called. PW6, PW12, PW21 and PW24 were all attached to
Bondeni Police Station and they all received various instructions from their O.C.S.
PW20 from the Kenya Wildlife Service also booked two suspects at the same station.
The first accused was staying near the station where he also had a garage. Most of the
recovered weapons were also stored at that station.
PW25, chief Inspector John Mbaluka was the O.C.S. Central Police Station, Nakuru
and he testified that on 6/1/2003 at around 1. 00 a.m. he was patrolling along Nairobi-
Nakuru Road with other police officers. As they approached Nakuru Blankets he saw a
group of 15 people wearing jackets and long coats and he ordered them to stop but they
started running away in different directions. The police officers fired in the air to stop
them but the suspects ran and hid themselves in some flowers and thickets there. They
searched and arrested 8 of them, some of whom were armed with rungus and pangas.
They took the suspects and the arms to the police station and handed over the case to the
Criminal Investigations Department. The witness purported to identify 4 pangas which
were allegedly recovered from the arrested people but the pangas had no labels or any
distinguishing feature except for one of them which had a label reading:“C.R. NO. 204,
Accused: Muchiri”. It showed that it had been recovered by Inspector Muguna at
Section 58. On being cross-examined by Mr. Ogola, the witness said that he could not
connect the people he arrested with the murders that the accused had been charged with.
He said that the arrested people were booked at the police station as being members of an
unlawful society. And upon re-examination by Mr. Gumo, he said that he was not the
investigating officer in this case and he was not able to tell whether the people he arrested
were among the accused persons. In any event, the people who were arrested by PW25
and his team were arrested on 6/1/2003 while the accused persons are alleged to have
committed the offences of murder on the night of 4th and 5th January, 2003.
PW26, Joseph Kanyi Kihika testified that on 5/1/2003 at about 9. 00 a.m. he was at his
home in Muranga when he was informed that his son, Benard Kihika Kanyi had been
assaulted at Nakuru by Mungiki members. He travelled to Nakuru on 6/1/2003 and
confirmed that his son had actually been killed and thereafter he identified the body for
post mortem.
PW27, Paul Ndirangu Mwariri stated that on 5/1/2003 at about 9. 00 p.m. he was in a
house at Kimathi Estate with his father, Peter Mwariri Ndirangu when he heard the house
windows being hit as well as the door. The door was suddenly broken open and some
people entered but he managed to escape. After ten to fifteen minutes he heard screams
and then gun shots. When he went back to the house, he found his father having been
slashed to death. He never saw the assailants, he stated.
PW28, chief Inspector Timothy Chepngabit was at the material time the head of
Scenes of Crime, Nakuru. He produced 25 photographs which he took at different scenes
of murder showing dead bodies of human beings and the surroundings where each body
was found. He also prepared a certificate to certify that the film was developed and
printed under his supervision and signed the same. The photographs and the certificate
were produced as Prosecution Exhibit 14(a) and (b) respectively.
PW29 Dr. Kogutu Vitalis, a Senior Medical Officer at the Provincial General Hospital,
Nakuru, examined all the accused persons except the 10th, 11th, 12th accused who were
examined by Dr. Sirengo.
All the accused except for number 12 were found to be of sound mental status and thus fit
to stand trial. With respect to accused No.12 Kariuki Mugo, Dr. Sirengo found that he
was unkept in appearance, his behaviour was inappropriate, his speech was incoherent
and sometimes inconsistent, he appeared disoriented in time, place and persons and had
impaired memory, both short and long term. The Doctor therefore recommended that the
accused be re-examined by a Psychiatrist Doctor. It would appear that the accused was
not re-examined as required and it is highly doubtful whether he was fit to stand trial.
The police should have had this accused person re-examined by a psychiatrist before he
was charged.
PW30, Dr. Paul Gachunga was a medical officer working at Nakuru at the material
time. He carried out post mortems on the bodies of Benard Waweru Mukuthi and Zakayo
Chomba Gikunju and he formed the opinion that the two died as a result of head injuries.
He produced the post mortem reports. PW30 also produced a post mortem report
prepared by Dr. Ochieng who carried out a post mortem on the body of Benard Kihika
Kanyi, who also died due to severe head injuries which he received.
The prosecution then applied to recall PW14, Inspector Leonard Luta to produce some
exhibits on behalf of superintendent Jonathan Abraham Chelule, who was the head of
the investigating team. Mr. Gumo, Assistant Deputy Public Prosecutor, said that Mr.
Chelule had been retired prematurely from the police force and he was a bitter man. But
when the court enquired whether he had been bonded to attend court and testify it was
realised that he had not been bonded at all. The application was not opposed by the
defence counsel and the court allowed it.
PW14 testified that on 6/1/2003 he was in the office investigating a case of murder when
Chief Inspector Mbaluka and Inspector Muguna delivered to him 3 pangas, one sword
and one dagger knife and told him that they were recovered from some suspects within
Flamingo and Section 58. He took possession of the exhibits and kept them. He then
produced them as exhibits before the court.
In cross examination, he stated that the said exhibits were handed over to Superintendent
Chelule in his presence and they were recorded in the Exhibit Memo. He further stated
that superintendent Chelule, who was heading the investigations and who kept the
investigations diary retired from the police force in May 2004 before he recorded any
statement. The exhibits he produced had no labels except the panga which was referred
to by PW25 which showed that it had been recovered from a Mr. Muchiri in a different
case all together. The exhibits memo was also not available, he said, and so it was not
easy to tell what exhibit had been recovered and from who. PW14 was not able to tell
where the exhibits he produced were recovered from.
The prosecution then closed its case and the defence counsel submitted that all the
accused had no case to answer. It is well known that the standard of proof in criminal
cases is beyond any reasonable doubt and where at the close of the prosecution case the
court entertains any doubts as regards the culpability of an accused person, he has to be
given the benefit of doubt. So, did the prosecution establish a prima facie case as would
warrant the accused persons to be put on their defence?
In MUNYOLE VS REPUBLIC [1985] K.L.R. 662 the Court of Appeal stated that in a
joint trial involving more than one accused person, as in the present case, the evidence
against each accused must be considered separately and the case against each accused
must be such as to prove the guilt of that particular accused beyond reasonable doubt.
The court must therefore be satisfied that there is sufficient evidence to warrant each of
the accused persons to be placed on their defence.
And what is a prima facie case ? Mr. Karanja cited the Court of Appeal decision in
RAMANLAL TRAMBAKLAL BHATT V R [1957] E.A. 332 where Sir Newnham
Worley P. delivered himself as follows:-
“It may not be easy to define what is meant by a ‘ prima f acie case ’, but
at least it must mean one on which a reasonable tribunal, properly
directing its mind to the law and the evidence would convict if no
explanation is offered by the defence.”
He had earlier in the same judgment stated that:-
“Remembering t hat the legal onus is always on the prosecution to
prove its case beyond reasonable doubt, we cannot agree that a prima
facie case is made out if at the close of the prosecution, the case is
merely one ‘which on full consideration might possibly be thought
sufficient to sustain a conviction’. This is perilously near suggesting
that the court would not be prepared to convict if no defence is made,
but rather hopes the defence will fill the gaps in the prosecution case.
Nor can we agree that the question wh ether there is a case to answer
depends only on whether there is some evidence, irrespective of its
credibility or weight, sufficient to put the accused on his defence.”
I may as well add that in my view, if at the close of the prosecution case the court is of
the view that on the basis of the facts of the case and the evidence adduced and
considering the relevant law applicable, the court is not in a position to convict an
accused person if he elected to offer no evidence, it would be a miscarriage of justice to
place him on his defence. In MURIMI VS THE REPUBLIC [1967] E.A. 542 an appeal
was allowed because the trial magistrate in refusing to acquit an accused at the close of
the prosecution case (as he should have done) occasioned a failure of justice on the facts
of the case.
I have carefully considered the prosecution evidence that was adduced as against the first
accused and in my view it is totally wanting and too weak to sustain such serious charges
as the ones which he faces. The only evidence that was adduced against him was that of
PW14. I have earlier in this ruling analysed that evidence and if I may revisit it, albeit
briefly, the police had been told by an informer that the first accused was financing
mungiki members in Nakuru and thereafter the police started looking for him. The
informer seems to have taken the police on a wild goose chase to various places in
Nairobi. He first told them that he was at the Stanley Hotel in Nairobi but that turned out
to be untrue. The informer then told the police that the first accused was within the
precincts of parliament and the police rushed there and apparently found the informer
near parliament buildings but they did not get the man they were after. The informer, if
at all he was truthful to the police, did not tell them when the first accused disappeared
from there. Since the informer was within parliament buildings where the first accused
allegedly was also, the informer should have noticed if the first accused left the said
premises. The first accused is a former member of parliament and was therefore well
known and it would have been easy for the informer to spot him and track his
movements. It was incumbent upon the police to verify the truth and accuracy of the
information which they allegedly received from their informer but they do not seem to
have carried out any independent investigations at all. The informer did not tell the
police where the first accused was allegedly meeting with the mungiki members or where
the first accused was buying the pangas from and the police do not seem to have made
any headway in their investigations towards that end. The pangas that were produced in
evidence did not appear to have been recently purchased, if at all it was true that the first
accused was buying the pangas for the assailants. The police seem to have believed the
information given to them by the informer as the gospel truth.
According to PW14, the first accused was found seated in the waiting room of the
Provincial Police Officer’s office on 6/1/2003 from where he was arrested. The court
was not told why and how he went there.
PW16 told the court that on the night of 5/1/2003 the first accused was helping the police
to repair their vehicle at his garage so that they could pursue the killers yet they did not
arrest him if at all he was a wanted man in connection with the killings.
While it is trite law that the police cannot be compelled to disclose the identity of their
informers leave alone call them to testify in court, it hehoves the police to subject such
information to thorough investigations to determine whether it is credible as to be
sufficient to form the basis of effecting an arrest and sustaining a charge, and particularly
so where that charge to be preferred against an accused is a non-bailable one.
I find that there is no evidence, direct or circumstantial to connect the first accused with
the offence as charged with and it would therefore be a violation of the law to put him on
his defence in the circumstances. I acquit him of all the counts under Section 210 of the
Criminal Procedure Code.
I now turn to consider the evidence relating to the other 12 accused persons. There were
some accused persons who were not mentioned at all by the prosecution witnesses and it
was not clear why they had been arrested in the first place. They are accused number 2,
John Njenga, accused number 4, Jeremiah Wanjau, accused number 7, Samuel Mwangi
Maina, accused number 9, Francis Maina Njoroge, accused number 12 and accused
number 13. PW24 testified that they arrested 11 people on 4/1/2003 at about 11. 00 a.m.
or there about but he said that the eleven were not among the accused. In any event, the
alleged offences took place on the nights of 4th and 5th January, 2003 and during the day.
At the close of the prosecution case, no witness mentioned the aforesaid accused persons
or linked them to the offences with which they were charged or even knew why and from
where they had been arrested.
The court cannot therefore place such accused persons on their defence. I hold that they
have no case to answer and consequently accused No.2, John Njenga, accused No.4,
Jeremiah Wanjau, accused number 7, Samuel Mwangi Maina, accused number 9 Francis
Maina Njoroge, accused number 12 Kariuki Mugo and accused number 13 David
Karanja Wanyoike are hereby acquitted of all the counts under Section 210 of the
Criminal Procedure code.
PW20 testified of having arrested two people for the offence of trespassing into the
Nakuru National Park. He said that they were arrested on 3rd January, 2003 at about
10. 00 a.m. He gave their names as Joseph Irungu and David Etole. The sixth accused is
known as John Irungu Kiaiand not Joseph Irungu. PW20 said he was not sure of the
English names of the two people he arrested. Even if it was assumed that he meant John
Irungu when he talked of Joseph Irungu, the witness was very clear that the two people,
whoever they were, could not have been involved in the killings which were taking place
on the night of 4th and 5th January, 2003 because by that time they were in police custody
for the said offence of trespassing into a National Park. More or less the same evidence
was given by PW21 although according to him, the names of the two people were John
Irungu and James Patrick Kitole but the two were handed over to him by PW20 at
Bondeni Police Station on 4th January, 2003 at about 11. 00 a.m. PW2 equally said that
the two were in police custody when the alleged offences were being committed. He
added that the two were charged with the offences of being armed in public and entering
into a National Park without consent. He also said that the two were not among the
accused in court.
What then was the basis of arraigning the sixth accused in court? I see no justification at
all and therefore I acquit John Irungu Kiai of all the counts against him in accordance
with Section 210 of the Criminal Procedure Code.
PW16 said that one of the people arrested on the night of 5/1/2003 was accused number
8, Peter Kiragu. He was not having any weapon at the time of his arrest and it was
alleged that he had a white ribbon on his head and was taken to Bondeni Police Station
and the white ribbon was also kept there. That white ribbon was not produced in court as
an exhibit. He was booked in the police station for being a member of the mungiki sect.
PW16 was with PW6 at the time when they arrested the eighth accused. PW6 could not
identify the 8th accused but PW16 identified the said accused in the dock. The accused
was arrested as he was running away. There was evidence that on that material night
people were running helter-skelter, innocent members of the public running away from
mungiki members and the assailants running away from the police and it was total chaos.
The arrest was effected at night. There was no indication whether at Kivumbini area
where accused number 8 and Anthony Mwangi were arrested there was sufficient light as
would have enabled the police to identify accused number 8 appropriately. The two
police officers saw the accused only that night and PW16 did not tell the court whether
accused No.8 had any distinguishing mark which could have made him to positively
identify the accused. Mistaken identity cannot be ruled out. It is also possible that
accused number 8 was an innocent member of the public who was just running away
after the pandemonium broke out. This possibility is given credence by the fact that he
had no weapon when he was arrested whereas the mungiki members were said to have
been armed with crude weapons like pangas. It is also ironical that PW6 and PW16
arrested accused No. 8 without any weapon and was charged with murder while Anthony
Kiragu who was also arrested as he ran away and was carrying a sharp sword at the time
was charged with the offence of being armed in public and is consequently not among
those who were charged for murder.
In my view, there was no sufficient evidence against the 8th accused, Peter Kiragu
Githuka, to connect him with the murder charges and consequently I acquit him under
Section 210 of the Criminal Procedure Code.
In this case, the prosecution relied almost entirely on circumstantial evidence to prove its
case. In the often cited case of KIPKERING ARAP KOSKE AND ANOTHER VS REX
(1949) E.A.C.A. 135 at Page 136, the Court of Appeal for Eastern Africa stated as
follows:-
“As said in Wills on ‘Circumstantial Evidence’ 6 th Edition P.341 in
order to justify the inference of guilt the inculpatory facts must be
incompatible with the innocence of the accused and incapable of
explanation u pon any other reasonable hypothesis than that of his
guilt. The burden of proving facts which justify the drawing of this
inference from the facts to the exclusion of any reasonable hypothesis
of innocence is on the prosecution and always remains with the
prosecution. It is a burden which never shifts to the party accused.”
I must therefore consider whether the evidence of PW23 as against the 10th and 11th
accused is incapable of any other explanation other than the inference that they are the
ones or were among the people that caused the death of the persons named in the charge
sheet. It is also important to recall the definition of Circumstantial Evidence as stated in
Blackstones Criminal Practice, 1995 Edition F1, 10 at Page 1777 :-
“Circumstantial Ev idence is evidence of facts from which the existence
or non -existence of facts in issue may be inferred. It works by
cumulatively in geometrical progression, eliminating all other
possibilities. It is however necessary before drawing the inference of
the accused’s guilt from circumstantial evidence to be sure that there
are no other co -existing circumstances which would weaken or destroy
the inference”.
According to the evidence of PW23, the 10th and 11th accused were arrested in possession
of a panga and a sword and were booked for the offence of being armed in preparation to
commit a felony. There was, however, nothing to prove that the two people were
involved in the killings of the deceased persons as per the charge sheet. The said
weapons had no blood stains and neither did the clothes of the two accused have such
stains. PW23 further stated that after he effected the said arrests he did not carry out any
further investigations into the matter.
As was stated by the Court of Appeal in MARY WANJIKU GICHIRA VS REPUBLIC
Criminal Appeal No. 17 of 1998 and restated by the same court in JOAN CHEBICHII
SAWE VS REPUBLIC Criminal Appeal No. 2 of 2002:“Suspicion, however strong
cannot provide a basis for inferring guilt which must be proved by evidence .”
It is evident that the police investigations were dismal and disjointed. The person who
headed the investigations and co-ordinated the police operations, superintendent Jonathan
Abraham Chelule was not called to testify and tie together the many loose ends of the
prosecution case. There was no good reason why he was not called. I cannot accept the
simplistic explanation that he was retired prematurely from the police force and was
therefore a bitter man and was unlikely to co-operate. That is a speculative argument
because the man was simply not bonded to attend court and testify. If that had been done
and he refused, the court has coercive powers to compel attendance of witnesses. It was
said that he is the one who kept the investigations diary and the exhibit memo. The
prosecution should have called him to testify. It must be remembered that it is not
enough for the police to round up as many suspects as possible when a serious crime
occurs and arraign them in court without having carried out sufficient investigations as
would reveal the involvement of each and every accused in the commission of the
offence as charged with. A court of law cannot convict accused persons en masse or on
mere suspicion without evidence pointing to the guilt of each and every accused person
before it no matter how serious the alleged offence is, otherwise it would be acting just
like some members of the public who administer the so called “mob justice” upon
suspects. A court of law must resist the temptation to convict on public sympathy or on
any other consideration but proper evidence, direct or circumstantial.
I find that the case as against the 10th and 11th accused is not established to such an extent
as would require that they be placed on their defence and I acquit them of all the counts
in terms of the provisions of Section 210 of the Criminal Procedure Code.
And lastly, I turn to the evidence of PW11 as against the third and fifth accused persons.
She identified these two accused as having been among the people who broke into her
house. She said that there was sufficient light to enable her identify the two yet there was
a group of about ten (10) men who broke into her house on the night of 5th January, 2003.
She also purported to have identified the third accused in an identification parade which
was held at the C.I.D’s offices. She said that the same was done when five (5) people
were seated down at the said office. The manner that was used to identify the 3rd accused
was contrary to the well known Judges rules as were spelt out by the Court of Appeal in
SIMON MUSOKE VS R (1958) E.A. 715. Among them is that the accused is placed
among at least eight (8) persons, as far as possible of similar age, height, general
appearance and class of life as himself. The identifying person must also touch the
person he identifies.
It was improper for the police to ask PW11 to pick out the suspect out of a group of only
five people who were seated down. That could not have been an identification parade by
any stretch of imagination. In any parade people must be standing or walking but never
seated down.
She never touched the third accused at all, she merely pointed him out to the police. The
accused person could not know that he had been identified at all. She could not tell
which police officer conducted that botched up exercise. The 3rd accused was not asked
to sign the identification parade forms, if any. She was unable to identify the 5th accused
then but purported to identify him at the dock. Dock identification is insufficient unless
the accused was previously known to a witness.
The prosecution did not adduce any other evidence against the 3rd and the 5th accused. It
relied entirely on the evidence of PW11 which was totally insufficient. I therefore acquit
the 3rd and 5th accused of all the counts against them under Section 210 of the Criminal
Procedure Code.
The end result is that all the accused persons are acquitted, there being no sufficient
evidence to warrant placing them on their defence and they should be set at liberty unless
otherwise lawfully held.
DATED, SIGNED & DELIVERED at Nakuru this 15th day of December, 2004.
DANIEL MUSINGA
JUDGE
15/12/2004