Fresh news as A witness has opened up on how an Abuja man beat his own wife to death after tracing her to her destination when she went out.
File photo
This is latest gist as Insp. Raymond Isama, a prosecution witness, has narrated how one
Clement Davis, allegedly beat his wife to death on August 8, 2016.
NAN reports that Isama of FCT Police Command, led in evidence by
the prosecuting counsel, Mr Afraabasi Ebong, was testing in a culpable
homicide charge preferred against Davis in an FCT High Court, Lugbe.
Isama said that the woman fell down and became unconscious after
the defendant slapped her, adding that she was rushed to the hospital
where she was confirmed dead.
The witness said that the case was transferred from the Apo Police
Division to the CID Department, Homicide Section, on Aug. 11, 2016.
Isama said that Davies, in his statement, said that when he came
back from office, the door to his house was locked, the wife was not
around and nobody was in the house.
He said when the wife later came back and opened the door, she immediately left and went back to where she was coming from.
Isama said that in the statement, Davis said he followed his wife, to trace where she was heading to.
The witness said that when the woman got to her destination, Davies
approached her and slapped her on the face, beat her and she fell down.
“She fell down and became unconscious, she was taken to the hospital by the defendant but later confirmed dead by a doctor,’’ the witness said.
Ebong sought to tender the statement made by Davies, but was opposed by the counsel to the defendant, Mr Bank Akomolafe.
Akomolafe said that the statement in question was an extra-judicial
statement written by the police, adding that it did not constitute any
evidence.
He said that the Supreme Court had ruled that extrajudicial
statement by the police could not be admitted as an exhibit, adding that
Section 232 of the Evidence Act frowns against that.
Akomolafe said that the statement that the victim was slapped,
beaten and then collapsed, were what the police, as represented by
Isama, was told and not that he was physically present at that point in
time.
Ebong, in his response, said that the statement should be admitted as exhibit since it complied with the Evidence Act.
The judge, Justice Angela Otaluka, in her short ruling, admitted
the statement as exhibit and adjourned the case until July 12 for
further hearing.
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