Otokoto Saga Again Supreme Court Saves Life of One of the Jailed Killers From Hangman’s Noose 22 years After

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A new twist has been recorded in the celebrated Otokoto case as Alban Ajaegbu, one of the persons accused of the ritual killing of 11-year-old Ikechukwu Okoronkwo in 1996 in Amakohia Owerri, Imo State has been freed by the Supreme Court. This is coming 22 years after the incident.

The young Okoronkwo, before his untimely death, was a groundnut seller.

Reports have it that the victim whose death led to upheavals in Owerri, the State capital was hacked down on September 19, 1996, when he was lured into Otokoto Hotel, Amakohia, Owerri and beheaded.

The unsuspecting Okoronkwo was said to have been drugged through a bottle of Coca-Cola soft drink given to him by the dare-devil assailants.

The hotel was owned by a popular business man Vincent Duru, known as Chief Otokoto.

Apart from beheading little Okoronkwo, the suspects, who were seven in number allegedly removed different vital organs from his body, including his genitals before burying the corpse in a shallow grave in the hotel premises.

However, luck ran out on the evil men, when their heinous act was discovered when 32-year-old Innocent Ekeanyanwu, left the hotel to deliver the head in a polythene bag to a client.

An Okada rider, who gave him a ride, discovered the fresh human head and alerted the police and Ekeanyanwu was arrested by the police on his way back.

Details of the judgment obtained online has it that in a lead judgment last Friday in respect of the trial, Justice Kudirat Kekere-Ekun held that the circumstantial evidence relied on to convict and sentence the appellant by the lower courts was not sufficient.

The judgment was read by Justice Ejembi Eko and the other four justices on the panel unanimously agreed with the judgment.

Justice Kekere Ekun stated that, “It must be restated here that the appellant was charged with murder and the prosecution has the burden of proving beyond reasonable doubt that it was the act of the appellant that caused the death of deceased.

“The appellant does not have the burden to prove his innocence. The lower court held that the defence of the appellant raised a lot of suspicion.

“The law is well settled that suspicion, no matter how grave, cannot take the place of proof,” the apex court held.

She said that the assumption of the lower courts that because the appellant worked in the Hotel for 17 years, he should have known who owned the farm that Okoronkwo was buried in was wrong.

“Suspicion cannot take the place of legal proof. That the appellant worked in the hotel for 17 years and didn’t know who owned the farm cannot make him guilty.

“The law is settled, that an accused person told lies does not make him guilty.”

Consequently, the court reasoned that the prosecution failed to prove its case beyond reasonable doubt.

Therefore, the Supreme Court set aside the judgment of the Court of Appeal in Owerri, delivered in 2012 which upheld the death sentence of the trial court and acquitted and discharged Ajaegbo.