Tag: charm

  • Man allegedly beats neighbour  to death with  charm

    Man allegedly beats neighbour to death with charm

    MEN of the Ogun State Police Command have arrested one Olatunde Akapo for allegedly killing one of his neighbours, Augustine Ode at Ibogun Alapako Oke community in Ifo Local Government.

    The suspect was said to have beaten the 42-year-old Ode with a deadly charm during a scuffle leading to his death.

    Akapo was arrested after a brother to the deceased reported the incident to Ibogun Division.

     A minor disagreement between the duo had degenerated to a fight during which the suspect allegedly rushed to his room, and came out with a charm with which he used to beat the deceased, following which Ode fell down and subsequently died.

     The Divisional Police Officer (DPO) of Ibogun Division, Nicholas Tamuno- Inam led detectives to the scene at Alapako Oke and the suspect was promptly arrested.

    The body of the deceased has been deposited at Ifo General Hospital morgue for autopsy.

     The Commissioner of Police, Ahmed Iliyasu has directed that the case be transferred to Homicide section of the State Criminal Investigation and Intelligence Department for further investigation and prosecution of the suspect.

  • Man kills mother over ‘disappearance’ charm

    Man kills mother over ‘disappearance’ charm

    An 18-year-old man has allegedly killed his mother in Plateau State for refusing to give him a ‘disappearing’ charm he claimed was his inheritance from his late herbalist father.

    The suspect, according to   the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), committed the crime at his Kisaghyip village farm in Bassa Local Government Area of the state.

    After killing his mother, Agugu Adau, reportedly removed the sum of N20,000 from her blood-soaked clothes and used it to buy a mobile phone, a shirt and a pair of slippers.

    Mr Tyopev Terna, spokesman of the Plateau Police Command, confirmed that the suspect was being held, but declined further comments.

    “Investigation is ongoing. The details are not ready. Please understand with us and be patient,” he said by phone.

    But Agugu said he killed his mother because she refused to give him a charm that was his inheritance from his father.

    He said: “When I was 14 years old, my late father, who was a native doctor, showed me a charm that enabled him to disappear and reappear at will. He promised to handover the charm to me when I turn 18.

    “On his dying bed four years ago, he gave my mother the charm and asked her to give me when I turn 18. But I am now 18 and she has refused to give it to me.

    “On this fateful day at the farm, I asked her about it, but she threatened to throw the charm into the river, if I disturbed her too much.

    “Her response infuriated me and I suddenly felt that she was of no value as a mother. I immediately slaughtered her with the knife I was using to harvest potatoes.

    “After slaughtering her, I dumped her body in the bush.”

    Mr David Adau, elder brother of the suspect dismissed the suspect’s claim that he killed the mother because of a charm.

    According to him, “Prior to the incident, the family had faced several problems with Agugu. He was fond of stealing and causing trouble.

    “I believe he killed our mother because of the N20,000 I gave her the day before the incident. I work at the mines in Barkin-Ladi, and usually give my earnings to our mother to keep for me.

    “I handed over the money to my mother in his presence; in fact, when I gave her the money, she expressed fear that Agugu could attack her to get the money. He has proved her right.”

    David said that on his return from work a day after the incident, he asked after the mother but Agugu said he did not know of her whereabouts.

    “He said he did not know where my mother was. Later in the day, I saw him with a new mobile phone, a new shirt and slippers, and I became curious.

    “I asked him (suspect) where he got them from, but he could not give me satisfactory answers.

    “Other family members joined me and we kept pestering him over our mother, but he insisted he knew nothing.

    “Three days later, I invited the Police to question my brother. That worked immediately as he confessed to killing her,” he said.

    David said that the suspect later led family members and the police to the farm where they saw the already decomposing corpse of the mother.

  • Man kills mother over “disappearance” charm

    An 18-year-old man, Agugu Adau, has allegedly killed his mother for refusing to give him a “disappearing” charm he claimed was his inheritance from his late herbalist father.

    A family source told the News Agency of Nigeria(NAN) that Agugu committed the crime at his Kisaghyip village farm in Bassa Local Government Area of Plateau.

    The source said that Agugu, after killing his mother, removed the sum of N20,000 from her blood-sucked clothes and used it to buy a mobile phone, a shirt and a pair of slippers.

    Mr Tyopev Terna, spokesman of the Plateau Police Command, confirmed that the suspect was being held, but declined further comments.

    “Investigation is ongoing. The details are not ready. Please understand with us and be patient,” he told NAN on phone.

    But Agugu, who spoke with our correspondent, said that he killed the woman because she refused to give him a charm that was his inheritance from his father.

    “When I was 14 years old, my late father, who was a native doctor, showed me a charm that enabled him to disappear and reappear at will. He promised to handover the charm to me when I turn 18.

    “On his dying bed four years ago, he gave my mother the charm and asked her to give me when I turn 18. But I am now 18 and she has refused to give it to me.

    “On this fateful day at the farm, I asked her about it, but she threatened to throw the charm into the river, if I disturbed her too much.

    “Her response infuriated me and I suddenly felt that she was of no value as a mother. I immediately slaughtered her with the knife I was using to harvest potatoes.

    “After slaughtering her, I dumped her body in the bush,” he said.

    Mr David Adau, senior brother to the suspect, has, however, dismissed the suspect’s claim that he killed the mother because of a charm.

    “Prior to the incident, the family had faced several problems with Agugu. He was fond of stealing and causing trouble.

    “I believe he killed our mother because of the N20,000 I gave her a day before the incident. I work at the mines in Barkin-Ladi, and usually give my earnings to our mother to keep for me.

    “I handed over the money to my mother in his presence; in fact, when I gave her the money, she expressed fear that Agugu could attack her to get the money. He has proved her right,” David said.

    David said that on his return from work a day after the incident, he asked after the mother but Agugu said he did not know of her whereabouts.

    “He said he did not know where my mother was. Later in the day, I saw him with a new mobile phone, a new shirt and slippers, and I became curious.

    “I asked him (suspect) where he got them from, but he could not give me satisfactory answers.

    “Other family members joined me and we kept pestering him over our mother, but he insisted he knew nothing.

    “Three days later, I invited the Police to question my brother. That worked immediately as he confessed to killing her,” he said.

    David said that the suspect later led family members and the police to the farm where they saw the already decomposing corpse of the woman. (NAN)

  • Pastor held for ‘burying charm’ in church

    •Cleric claims he was in church to remove juju 

    A cleric in Benin, Edo State, Apostle Ikenna Okafor, has been arrested for allegedly burying a charm in front of his church.

    The type of charm buried in the church could not be ascertained last night, but residents said it was a live animal.

    Ikenna, who heads Great Minds Prayer Ministry, was whisked away by the police to avoid being lynched by angry residents.

    The church, located on Esigie Street, was a beehive of activities as residents atruggled to catch a glimpse of what was allegedly buried in front of the church.

    The whistle blower, Chinedu Nnamdi, said his father woke him up at 2 a.m. on Saturday morning to see what the pastor was doing.

    Chinedu said he saw the pastor burying something in front of the church, adding that he switched on the light to be sure.

    The eyewitness said the cleric performed a little ritual and walked round the church severally before driving away.

    Efforts to speak with Ikenna were fruitfuless as he was in police custody at the Esigie Police Division.

    But police sources told our reporter that the cleric said he went to the church to remove a charm allegedly buried there by an unknown person.

    The pastor reportedly told the police that there was a dispute on the land, adding that his opponents buried the charm and called the police.

    Police spokesman Osifo Abiodun, a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), said the police were holding the cleric while the matter was being investigated to know who buried the charm in the church.

  • Man killed during charm test

    A 25-year-old man, identified as Osamame Isekhuere, popularly known as Black Arrow, has been shot dead in Benin City while testing charms, popularly known as “Africa Insurance”.

    The shooting, which occurred at the Oba Market, made many traders lock their stores, following riots occasioned by the killing.

    A source said Isekhuere asked one of his friends to shoot him to test a new charm he just acquired.

    The source said the friend incised the charms on their bodies and they decided to test it with live bullets.

    It was gathered that Isekhuere first shot at his friend but the bullet did not penetrate but when the friend shot him in the chest, the charm failed. The deceased was said to have died instantly.

    His friends burnt down a building where the said friend  rented an apartment.

    Police spokesman Uwoh Noble said he was yet to be briefed on the matter.

  • I was deceived by the charm a native doctor gave me — Teenage suspect in police net

    I was deceived by the charm a native doctor gave me — Teenage suspect in police net

    A TEENAGER and suspected leader of a 10-man robbery gang, Adeyanju Adebambo, and four other members of the said gang have been arrested by the police for allegedly robbing a female student of Senior High School, Okota in Isolo area of Lagos. Sixteen-year-old Adebambo, a native of Onitire community in Lagos, who claimed to be a tricycle operator, was arrested along with Kehinde Smith (18), Onyebuchi Okorie (18), Elijah Ojo (15) and Abiaka Samuel (18). Five other suspected members of the gang identified as Kehinde Senior, Solomon, Victor, Sako and Akeem, are, however, at large.

    But Adebambo has denied being an armed robber, saying that he is an SS 1 student of Itire High School combining his studies with commercial tricycle business to fund his education and help his parents in the education of his younger ones.

    He said: “I am not an armed robber. It was only one of us called Onyebuchi who robbed a female student of her Nokia phone. I was recruited by one Kehinde, a tailor and close friend, to go to Central High School, Okota to fight the boys who were claiming to be our superiors in the area and had wounded one of us.

    “We had been fighting like that and the police would not arrest any of us because we never robbed anyone. After beating up our victims, we would quietly return home hoping and believing that no policeman would dare come after us. Otherwise, our parents would storm the police station to demand an explanation for our arrests. They have the phone numbers of senior police officers in Lagos who they would call and none of us would be detained. But up till now, none of our parents has come to ask why we were arrested.”

    Adeyanju, who was caught with a charm, said the charm was given to him by a native doctor called Baba Rashida. But he believed that he was deceived by the said native doctor. “He said with the charm, I would never be arrested by the police, but here I am in police net. I will never trust a fake native doctor again,” he said.

    Narrating his journey into police cell, he said: “I was sleeping in our house in the morning and Kehinde came and woke me up. He said we should go to the school to fight one Spako. I asked why and he said Spako threw a stone at Sunkanmi the previous day as we were returning from school and wounded him. He had agreed to pay me the sum of N1, 500, which is the sum I deliver to the owner of the tricycle on a daily basis.

    “On getting there, I discovered that about 10 of us had been invited. And to my greatest surprise, it was not what we discussed about that they were doing. They started behaving like armed robbers, beating people and snatching phones and handbags.

    “The robbery actions started when one of us, named Onyebuchi, collected a Nokia phone from a female student of the school. The girl’s cry that she had been robbed of her phone and the robber trying to kill her with a knife attracted the attention of other students who pursued us and caught us at Cele Bus Stop on the Mile 2-Oshodi Expressway.

    “Some members of the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW), who were loading buses at the junction, helped the students to arrest us and handed us over to the police in Okota. So, I am not the gang leader. I was hired to follow them.”

    Asked why he thought their parents had not stormed the police station as expected, he said it was because the parents knew that robbery was involved. “Onyebuchi robbed the girl of her phone and beat her up,” he said.

    On the charm that was found on him, he said Baba Rashida, who gave him the charm free of charge, was his cousin based in Sango-Ota, Ogun State. He said the only condition he gave him was that he should not eat any food cooked with palm oil or salt any time he wanted to go for an ‘operation’. He said the charm was meant to make it impossible for him to sustain wounds from bullets, dagger, sword or any dangerous weapon. “And if the person wearing the charm hits an opponent with a blow, the opponent will crumble like a pack of cards.

    “I am not sure that the police would be able to catch him because of his charm. People know him as a great juju man. He is capable of disappearing when he senses danger. If he sees policemen, he will disappear. They call him the wind that cannot be trapped.”

    Asked how much he got from the robbery operation that took place at the high school in Okota, he said he was not involved in the robbery.

    He said: “It was Onyebuchi who robbed, I only got the N1,500 promised me, being the money I should deliver to the owner of the tricycle I work with. I did not know that my members were armed with dangerous weapons. Everything turned out like a film to me. I did not know that they would act like that.”

    Another suspected member of the gang, Kehinde Smith, said he trained as a tailor, adding that he uses one of his mother’s rooms as a workshop.

    He said: “I did not know that Onyebuchi would rob the school girl. I went there to fight and not to rob. I collected the knife I held from one small boy. When we got to the school, we waited till they closed. We were expecting the guy that wounded our friend, Sukanmi. His name is Spako. We wanted him to come out so that we would beat him up, but some of my members lost control, to the point that one of them named Onyebuchi started robbing people. He robbed a girl of her phone and her cry attracted other students who pursued us.

    “I am not a robber. I can never rob. I went there to fight and not to rob. I am from a decent family. This is my third time of engaging in such a fight. It was Onyebuchi who brought us into this trouble.”

    Onyebuchi, who claimed to be a native of Ebehigo community, Ngwaokwala, Imo State and a trained auto mechanic, however, said their mission to the school was not just to fight but also to rob.

    He said: “They are all liars. We went there to fight but could also collect phones and money. Any of us could collect phones. It is because it was only one phone we had collected before they started pursuing us that they are telling lies against me. If we had not been pursued, they would have collected more than 10 phones.

    “I did not go there with any knife. I collected the knife from the opposing side as we were fighting. Whenever we fight, we collect something from the enemies. When they are defeating us too, we would run and they would like to collect our phones, weapons and anything we came with.”

    The fourth suspect, Elijah Ojo, a native of Awe village, Oyo State, who claimed to be a generator repairer, confessed to the crime, saying: “We usually fight and collect handsets. I will not follow them again, especially now that I know that our action is criminal.”

    The fifth suspect, Abiaka Samuel, an indigene of Imo State, said he took exception to the phone that was collected. “We went there to fight and, all of a sudden, some of us started robbing. It was a big surprise to me. I would not have followed them if I knew that some of us are armed robbers,” he said.

    Narrating his ordeal in the hands of the suspects, one of the victims, Taiwo Quadri (17), an SSS3 student of Central High School, Okota, said: “One of my junior ones, Tosin Bajela (15) and others were going home after school at about 1.30 pm when we suddenly saw some boys who were looking aggressive. One of them called the girl and ordered her to hand over her phone to him but the girl refused. He pointed his knife at her and forcibly removed the phone from her and ran away.

    “One of our students saw him and ran after him. We pursued the thieves up to Cele Bus Stop where they attempted to run across the expressway, but some NURTW members saw them, apprehended them and took them to the policemen attached to an Armoured Personnel Carrier (APC) at the bus stop.

    “They later took them to Okota Police Station and handed them over to the Divisional Police Officer, a Chief Superintendent of Police (CSP) Ibrahim Adamu, who addressed us and detained the suspects for investigation while we were asked to come back the following day to collect our phones.”