Tag: hanging

  • Four to die by hanging in Kwara

    A Kwara State High Court sitting in Ilorin has sentenced a notorious criminal, Olatunji Ibrahim Ariyo and four others to death.

    They are Ganiyu Sulyman Yaro, Timothy Oyebanji, Lukman Olateju Sanda and Akeem Olayinka (deceased).

    The convicts are to die by hanging, the court said.

    The court held that on April 25, 2015, the convict committed the offences at Agbarere, Ilorin.

    “Each of the convict is sentenced to imprisonment for a term of two years and the sum of N25,000 is imposed as fine on each of them on count 5 for causing mischief by fire.

    “Each of the convict is sentenced to death to be executed pursuant to Robbery and Firearms Act on count 1, 2, 3 and 4 for the offences of criminal conspiracy to commit armed robbery and armed robbery.”

     

  • Court sentences man to death by hanging for killing mum

    A High Court sitting in Jos, Plateau State, has sentenced a 20-year-old man, Agugu Adau, to death by hanging for killing his mother.

    The judge, Justice Nafisa Musa, handed down the sentence after he found the defendant guilty of murdering his mother.

    “Based on the evidence before this court, the prosecution has proved beyond reasonable doubt that you, Adau, mercilessly took the life of your own mother.

    “The judgement of this court upon you is that you will be hanged by the neck until you die. May God have mercy on your soul,” Musa said.

    The convict committed the crime on December 30, 2016 when he killed his mother for refusing to give him an “invisibility” charm he claimed was his inheritance from his late herbalist father.

    Agugu committed the crime on his Kisaghyip village farm in Bassa Local Government Area of Plateau State.

    Agugu, after killing his mother, removed N20,000 from her blood-soaked clothes and used it to buy a phone, a shirt and a pair of slippers.

    He said 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 turned 18.

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

    “On this fateful day on 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 to me as a mother. I immediately killed her with the knife I was using to harvest potatoes.

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

    Mr David Adau, elder 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.

    He said 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 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 the suspect later led family members and the police to the farm where they saw the already decomposing body of the woman.

    Counsel to the convict, Mr David Adudu, of the Legal Aid Council, said the punishment on the convict was mandatory, adding that they would get a copy of the judgment, study same and raise possible grounds for an appeal.

  • Man to die by hanging for killing Okada rider

    An Osun State High Court in Osogbo has sentenced a middle-aged man, Sunday Palma, to death by hanging for killing Isiaka Rafiu, a commercial motorcyclist (Okada rider).

    He was arraigned on December 8, 2014, on one-count charge of murder, contrary to Section 316 and punishable under Section 319 of the Criminal Code Cap. 3 Laws of Osun State 2002.

    The prosecution team from the Ministry of Justice led by the Solicitor-General, Mr. Dapo Adeniji, called three witnesses and tendered statements, which were later admitted in evidence as exhibits.

    He told the court that on August 20, 2006, the victim left home for work and the incident happened.

    Adeniji said the Okada rider was gruesomely murdered by Palma.

    Read also: Don’t renew BEDC’s licence, Oba Ewuare II tells Buhari

    He said his body was found a few days later at a footpath and it was obvious that he fought someone before he was overpowered and killed.

    In his confessional statement, Palma admitted committing the offence.

    He said: “I saw the boy riding an Okada. I stopped him and told him to carry me to the farm along Gbogban Road in Ikire. On getting to the farm, I asked him to stop, and I removed a knife in my poly bag and killed him. I cut his neck after realising he was dead. I left him and went away with his motorcycle.”

    Delivering judgement, Justice Adepele Ojo sentenced Palma to death by hanging.

  • Three to die by hanging for robbery in Ekiti

    •One gets life jail

    An Ekiti State High Court, sitting in Ado-Ekiti, the state capital, has sentenced three men to death for alleged armed robbery.

    Another person was sentenced to life imprisonment for same offence.

    The court, presided over by Justice Lekan Ogunmoye, ruled that the first, third and fourth accused persons – Oluwatuyi Kayode, Abayomi Femi and Jegede Gbenga – be hanged by the neck until they die.

    The second accused, Kayode Ajimoko, was sentenced to life imprisonment.

    The quartet faced four count charges of conspiracy and armed robbery, contrary to Section 6(b) of the Robbery and Firearms (Special Provisions) Act Cap R 11, Laws of Federation of Nigeria 2004.

    Their offence also contravened Section 1(2) of the Robbery and Firearms (Special Provisions) Act Cap R11 Laws of the Federation of Nigeria 2004.

    They were first arraigned on February 7, last year, when the charge was read to them.

    Their pleas were taken and they pleaded not guilty.

    The convicts, on January 20, 2015, at Olokemeji, Odo Ado, Ado-Ekiti, serially robbed Kolawole Ogunlade, Babalola Modupe and Ojo Adedeji of their valuables, including a laptop, BlackBerry mobile phone, jewellery and handsets, among others.

    They were said to be armed with various weapons, such as cutlass, stones and broken bottles.

    Ogunlade reportedly engaged one of the robbers, who mistakenly stabbed his colleague on the head.

    The wounded robber was rushed to a hospital where he was arrested and handed over to the police.

    This led to the arrest of other three members of the gang.

    Exhibits tendered included the statements of the accused, cutlasses and four mobile phones recovered from them.

     

     

  • Farmer to die by hanging

    Justice A.O. Akpovi of a Delta State High Court at Ozoro has sentenced a 38-year-old farmer, Francis Williams, to death by hanging.

    He was found guilty of robbing his victim of a Nokia phone, valued at N5,000 and N170.

    Akpovi sentenced the farmer to death, having found him guilty of a charge of robbery, punishable under Section (1) (2) (a) of the Robbery and Firearms (Special Provision) Act Cap RII Volume 14 Laws of the Federation, 2004.

    The court also found the accused guilty of injuring with intent, which got him life sentence, and illegal possession of firearms with a sentence of 10 years’ imprisonment.

    The prosecution told the court that on June 4, 2014, on a palm kernel farm at Ewu in Ughelli South Local Government, the accused robbed Noah Ovie and his assistant of a Nokia phone, valued at N5,000 and N170, while armed with a cut to size locally-made gun.

    It said the suspect was overpowered after the victim summoned courage.

    The prosecution said in his desperation to escape after being apprehended, the suspect bit the finger of the victim, but his escape bid was foiled by passers-by, who        held him and handed him over to the police.

    The accused confessed to the police that he committed the offence, but retracted same during trial.

    He called no witness. The prosecution called four witnesses.

  • Airman sentenced to death by hanging

    The Nigerian Air Force (NAF) has sentenced Airman Kalu Bernard to death by hanging, for killing his lover, Solape Oladipupo, on March 12.

    The trial, which started about 9 am on Tuesday, dragged till 4 pm. The panellists reconvened at 7.30 pm.

    Reading out the 70-page court findings, which lasted for about two hours, the Judge Advocate, Flight-Lt. M.A. Umoh, listed the eight-count charge against 21-year-old Kalu as murder, house-breaking, impersonation, attempted murder, among others.

    The defence counsel, Abimiku Ewuga, urged the court to temper justice with mercy, saying the accused was his family’s breadwinner.

    President of the court Gp. Capt. Elisha Bindul, who found the accused guilty of six of the eight counts, sentenced him to death by hanging, subject to the confirmation of the conveying authority.

    But Ewuga said he will appeal the judgment.

    Kalu, on March 12, killed Oladipupo at her Corporal and Below Quarters, Compound 9, Air Force Base, Makurdi, on the suspicion that she was in a relationship with another man.

    He broke into Oladipupo’s home before shooting her at close range.

  • 2 cattle rustlers to die by hanging in Kogi

    A Kogi High Court sitting in Okene on Thursday sentenced two trans-border cattle rustlers – Muhammed Lawal Jauro and Yusuf Sanni – to death by hanging. The duo got the sentence after Justice Josiah Majebi found them guilty of cattle rustling and culpable homicide. The accused were arraigned on a three-count charge of criminal conspiracy, armed robbery and culpable homicide, contrary to various sections of the Penal Code. The prosecution had told the court that sometimes in January 2016, one Dauda Abdullahi made a report of a gruesome murder and theft of cows, belonging to one Haruna, in one of the farm centres in Okene.

    He said that upon investigation, the accused persons were arrested at Ajase-Ipo in Kwara State, while their leader, Awaijo Wetti, escaped and was still at large. The prosecution further submitted that the suspects, who had earlier pleaded not guilty to the charges, later pleaded guilty. The prosecution quoted Jauro as saying in his statement that in December, 2015, one of his friends, Yusuf, a resident of Kabba junction, Zariagi, called him on phone and informed him that there were cows belonging to one Haruna, at a bush in Okene.

    “He further suggested that we should go and steal the cows. After that, our leader, by name Agwaijo Wetti, a resident of Tyre village along Okene-Auchi road, asked us to meet at the bush of Okene, which we did. “Myself, Yusuf, Ado and our leader, Agwaijo Wetti, gathered and, with our cutlasses, went to meet the owner of the cows and all of us machete him with cutlasses until he died. “Three of us then took control of the cows and took them to Ajase-Ipo in Kwara State,” Jauro was further quoted as saying. In his judgment, Justice Majebi declared that the confessions of the accused persons were weighty and admissible in determining the case against them.

  • Four to die by hanging for robbery

    Four to die by hanging for robbery

    An Osun State High Court in Osogbo has sentenced four persons to death by hanging for armed robbery.

    State Prosecutor Mrs. Idiat Abdulrahman Temitope said the convicts – Joseph Moses (24), Samuel Job (19), Gideon Ode (25) and Daniel Abraham (24) – committed the offence on October 14, 2013 at 8 p.m on Kajola Road in Osogbo.

    Temitope, the State Counsel in the Ministry of Justice, said the convicts conspired and robbed Abubakar Rauf of a motorcycle with registration number (Lagos) BDG 896 QB.

    The lawyer said the accused were armed with a car jack, knife and assorted charms as well as other locally-made weapons.

    She said: “The convicts conspired to attack the complainant with a knife and other weapons and collected his motorcycle. They injured the complainant and stole his Bajaj motorcycle before they were apprehended in their house.”

    Temitope said armed robbery was regular in the area, adding that many deaths and cases of missing persons were prevalent in the area.

    The prosecutor said the offences contravened Section 6 (b) and punishable under Section 1(1)(2)(a) and Section 1(1)(2)(a) as well as under Section 1 (1)(2)(a) of the Robbery and Fire Arm (Special Provision) Cap R11, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004.

    Lawyer to the accused Mr Promise Jones pleaded with the judge to temper justice with mercy.

    Justice Olubunmi Ayoola said the prosecutor proved the case beyond reasonable doubt.

    The judge said the accused were guilty of the four-count charge of conspiracy, theft and armed robbery preferred against them.

    She sentenced them to death by hanging.

  • Three to die by hanging for robbery

    An Ilorin High Court on Thursday sentenced three persons to death by hanging for armed robbery and attempt to murder  Prof. Abdullahi Onimisi of  University of Ilorin.

    The judge, Hon.Justice H. Saleeman, found the three accused persons, Opeyemi Esan (former driver to the university lecturer), Benjamin Musa and Oluwasegun  Ajiboye, guilty of armed robbery and convicted them under Section 1 (2) of the Robbery and Firearms Act, CAP  11, Law of  the Federation, 2004.

    The state’s Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, Kamaldeen Ajibade, who led the prosecution, had told the court that the former driver to the lecturer was sacked due to his unruly behaviour.

    Ajibade further said that because the ex-driver was aggrieved over his sack, he organised the robbery to retaliate.

    He also told the court that the ex-driver had in his confessional statement to the police, admitted that he recruited the two others from Lagos to help him deal with his former boss.

    “On Sept 10, 2016 at the Senior Staff Quarters, University of Ilorin, the accused persons, while armed with offensive weapons, including guns and machete, robbed one Prof. Abdullahi Onimisi and his family of their properties, including car, handsets, jewelries and other valuables”, the prosecution said.

    NAN reports that the prosecution called 10 witnesses and tendered 59 exhibits in the course of the trial to support its submissions.

    Delivering his judgement, Justice Saleeman held that the case of robbery and attempt to commit culpable homicide against the three accused persons had been proved beyond reasonable doubt.

    “The society needs to do away with the likes of the accused persons in order to have a sane society,” he said.

    Consequently, Justice Saleeman convicted them as charged and condemned them to death by hanging.

     

  • Cynthia Osokogu’s killers to die by hanging

    Cynthia Osokogu’s killers to die by hanging

    •Facebook stalker, nephew found guilty of ex-general’s daughter’s murder

    Two of the four men tried for the 2012 murder of a general’s daughter, Cynthia Osokogu, are to pay the supreme price for the offence.

    Okwumo Echezona Nwabufo and his nephew  Olisaeloka Ezike are to die by hanging, Justice Olabisi Akinlade of the Lagos High Court said yesterday.

    Justice Akinlade found them guilty of drugging, chaining and strangling Osokogu, who was a Nasarawa State University post-graduate student, to death at Cosmilla Hotel, Festac Town, Lagos, on July 22, 2012.

    Orji Osita, 37, and Ezike Nonso, 29, were discharged and acquitted of the charge of recklessness, negligence and possession of stolen goods.

    Osita, a pharmacist, had been accused of supplying Nwabufo with Rophynol, a sedative which was allegedly used on the deceased, without a prescription.

    While Nonso was accused of buying her stolen Blackberry phones from Ezike.

    Nwabufo, 37, Ezike, 27, Osita and Nonso were arraigned on February 8, 2013, on a six-count charge of conspiracy, murder, stealing, recklessness, negligence and possession of stolen goods.

    They pleaded not guilty.

    Delivering her judgment which began at 10:53am and ended at about 3:20pm, Justice Akinlade held that the state had proved the counts of conspiracy, murder and stealing beyond reasonable doubt.

    She held that with its 10 witnesses and 17 exhibits, the prosecution’s case against Nwabufo and Ezike was uncontroverted and that the circumstantial evidence brought by the state was “cogent, complete, unequivocal and compelling.”

    But the judge resolved in Osita and Nonso’s favour, doubts in the prosecution’s evidence against them.

    Relying on the witnesses’ testimonies, Nwabufor’s and Ezike’s confessional statements and the circumstantial evidence, Justice Akinlade said: “The court has no doubt that the first and second defendants killed the deceased and if there are contradictions in their case, they are minor contradictions.”

    Before passing judgment, the judge asked the defendants if they had anything to say.

    Their counsel, Victor Okpara and Emeka Eze pleaded for mercy. Okpara added that Nwabufo was a first time offender who has “tremendous energy to do something worthwhile with his life. I urge this court to grant him a reformative sentence.”

    In her response, Justice Akinlade said: “I have listened to the plea of counsel (allocutus). Section 221 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State says clearly that a person who commits murder shall be sentenced to death.

    “In judgment, justice is required not only for the victim, but also for the society. In their attempt to steal Cynthia’s property, the first and second defendants stole her life. They were not even remorseful. But for the efforts of the police and the Ministry of Justice we wouldn’t have been able to do anything. This court cannot change the law.”

    She sentenced Nwabufo and Ezike to 14 years imprisonment for stealing on the first count and three years imprisonment on the two counts of conspiracy to steal and commit murder.

    On the second count of murder, Justice Akinlade said: “I pronounce the sentence of this court upon you, Okwumo Echezona Nwabufo and  Olisaeloka Ezike, that both of you be hanged by the neck until you are dead and may God have mercy on your souls.”

    In reaching its decision, the court considered, among others, whether the prosecution proved that there was a murder, the cause of death and whether it was the defendant’s actions that led to Osokogu’s death.

    The prosecution, the judge said, not only proved beyond reasonable doubts that the deceased died, it also showed that she did not die a natural death and that her death was the direct result of the first two defendants’ action.

    She said the witnesses’ testimonies were corroborated by the exhibits, which included the first convict’s laptop containing nude pictures of the deceased and those of other victims.

    Nwabufo, who disowned his confessional statement in court, stated that the deceased was his fiancée, adding that he did not know how she died.

    He said: “The late Cynthia was my girlfriend; we were close as the way lovers are before they get married.

    “I promised her that I would marry her and she accepted but told me it is still early that I should wait till Christmas when I would visit her parents in Delta State.”

    But the court held, among others, that his failure to provide basic information about the deceased, such as her hometown, her university and course of study, the date he proposed to her and the fact that he had never met or spoken to her family, suggested that his answers were contrived.

    Reading from Nwabufo’s and Ezike’s disowned confessional statements, which were admitted after a trial-within-trial, the judge said it was immaterial whether they intended to kill the deceased or not, because they could be taken to intend the natural consequences of their action.

    On Ezike’s statement, the court said: “There is ample evidence that he participated in the crime. He assisted in tying down the deceased. He bought the chain with which the deceased was chained. He acted in concert with the defendant. In such a case, it does not matter who did what.”