THISDAY

Supreme Court Upholds Death Sentence on 3 Bakassi Boys…

- Alex Enumah in Abuja

The Supreme Court has upheld the judgment of the Court of Appeal, which handed down a death sentence on three members of the Bakassi Boys vigilante group in 2006.

The defendants / appellants; Emmanuel Eze, Adiele Ndubuisi and Stanley Azuogu were convicted on charges of murder of two persons by the High Court of Abia State on February 26, 2006 and were consequent­ly sentenced to death.

Not satisfied, the defendants separately approached the Court of Appeal to upturn the decision of the trial court.

However, the appellate court in its judgment delivered in May 2010, dismissed their appeals and affirmed the death penalty pronounced on them by the trial court.

The convicts had to appeal to the Supreme Court, praying that the murder charge on which they were convicted be substitute­d with manslaught­er.

They had premised their appeal on the grounds that they were incited to kill the deceased by the Abia State Government.

But delivering judgment on the appeal yesterday, a five-man panel of the apex court found the appellants culpable of the murder charge and consequent­ly affirmed the judgment of the lower court.

The panel led by Justice Dattijo Muhammad in a unanimous judgment, held that the three men truly committed murder and deserved the death penalty handed down on them.

Justice Amina Augie, who delivered the judgment of the apex court, said, “the Bakassi Boys are nothing but outlaws.”

Augie described them as “lawless persons operating outside the law, who desecrate the laws of the land in their unlawful and misguided quest to dispense justice by killing alleged criminals.”

The court in its decision held that the line of defence of the appellants, that they were provoked into killing the two persons, was baseless.

“The appellant admitted that the Bakassi vigilante group, to which he belonged was an unlawful associatio­n that dealt with alleged criminals with extreme measures which flagrantly breached the provision of the law on fair hearing", the court held.

Justice Augie added: “Having desecrated the laws of the land with such relish and reckless abandon, and being convicted for murder, the appellant is urging this court to allow the appeal, set aside the judgment of the Court of Appeal delivered on May 5, 2010 and substitute his conviction on manslaught­er, since he was incited by a third party.

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