Daily Nation Newspaper

Irregulari­ties cost Kambwili bail

- By CHARLES MUSONDA

IN a momentous irregulari­ty, Chishimba Kambwili has appealed against an offence for which he was acquitted.

And this is after Deputy

High Court Registrar David Simusamba, sitting as Principal Resident Magistrate discovered and exposed more irregulari­ties yesterday.

Magistrate Simusamba confessed that in his 13 years on the bench he had never come across a defendant who appealed against his acquittal.

The blunder, he said, was indicative of the grave irregulari­ties in the applicatio­n which was prepared long before judgment was delivered.

This, he said was irregular and therefore unacceptab­le and that he shall not entertain any applicatio­n for bail pending appeal by Kambwili until he fully complies with appeal procedure enshrined in the Criminal Procedure Code (CPC).

Making a ruling on irregulari­ties in Kambwili’s notice of appeal yesterday, Mr. Simusamba, who sits as Principal Resident Magistrate in the matter, said the convict will continue serving his sentence until further court order or completion of the sentence.

“The notice being irregular, I therefore hold that there was no notice of appeal at all. Consequent­ly the convict cannot invoke Section 332 of the CPC by applying for bail pending appeal without complying with Sections 321 and 323 of the CPC,” Mr. Simusamba said.

He said Kambwili’s notice of appeal was filed way before he could finish delivery of judgment and sentence, a position which is contrary to the demands of Section 321 of the CPC.

He said evidence of this fact can be seen in the grounds of appeal contained in the notice of appeal and the affidavit in support of summons for admission to bail pending appeal both filed on October 14, 2020.

Mr. Simusamba said in the grounds of appeal Kambwili said, “more grounds to follow upon perusal of judgment,” meaning that at the time he was making the grounds of appeal he had not perused the judgment or he was simply not paying attention when it was being read out to him.

He said it is a requiremen­t that the appellant signs the notice of appeal and one wonders at what point he signed the notice of appeal as it purports to have been signed by him when he clearly had no such opportunit­y as he was listening to his judgment from the dock.

He said what is even more shocking is the evidence in the affidavit in support of summons for admission to bail pending appeal in which Kambwili says he was convicted for forgery, uttering false documents, and giving false informatio­n to a public officer on October 12, 2020, the date which was initially set for judgment before it was postponed to October 14, 2020.

Mr. Simusamba said the most shocking is that Kambwili has appealed against his acquittal on the charge of giving false informatio­n to a public officer despite having denied the charge at the time he took plea and throughout his trial.

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