
Ogun Police Command on Thursday, July 6, arraigned five suspected
killers of ex-Naval officer, Chief Moses Akanni Famuyiwa, before a
Magistrate’s Court in Ifo, Ogun State.
The suspects namely Dare Abiodun (19), Femi Ayinla (17), Aliami
Akinlotan (18), Jamiu Akewe (19), and Gbenga Ojo (20); were arraigned on
a three-count charge of felony, armed robbery, and murder.
Famuyiwa, who was until his death, the chief Executive Officer of MAF 44
Gardens and Event Centre, was killed by the suspects and others at
large on June 14, 2017. Read previous report here
They conspired to rob the 73-year-old deceased of the sum of N500,000.00
in his apartment in Arigbajo and he was in the process stabbed to
death.
When the case came up yesterday before the presiding Magistrate, Miss S.
Titi Bello, after the charge was read, the IPO, Inspector Nike Oyinlola
told the court that the main mastermind of the act, Dare Abiodun, had
exonerated the four other suspects, claiming that his cohorts were at
large.
During a cross-examination, Dare Abiodun said Femi Ayinla, Aliami
Akinlotan and Jamiu Akewe were his friends but were not part of the
robbery operation. He added that when the police thoroughly tortured him
with gunshot wound on his ankle and that was when he took the police to
his friends’ houses, where they were apprehended.
He noted that he had not met Gbenga Ojo before but was forced to point
at him so that the police would set him free. Bello, however, lashed out
at the police for still keeping Gbenga Ojo, who the suspect said he did
not know me.
“If your investigation did not send him to prison, don’t send him there.
There is still remedy at this stage. It is wrong to send an innocent
person to prison. How would you exonerate a suspect and still arraign
him in court? If he is taken to prison, nobody would remember him, you
don’t have any case against this man.”
In their defence, the prosecutor, Sergeant Olumide Awoleke, who also
buttressed Dare Abiodun’s confession said if the police had released
those exonerated, the family would not have believed that they were not
bribed.
He craved the indulgence of the court to use its discretion to release
the innocent, which the presiding magistrate also threw to the
deceased’s family, by giving them a few minutes break to decide.On
resuming from the break, she adjourned the case to November 3, 2017.
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