A Lagos High Court in Ikeja has
sentenced to death Akolade Arowolo for the murder of his banker wife,
Titilayo, who he repeatedly stabbed to death with a knife at their
residence in Isolo, Lagos, on June 24, 2011.
Justice Lateefat Okunnu, in her judgment
on Friday, held that even though there was no eyewitness to the
incident, the circumstantial evidence adduced by the prosecution proved
the murder charge against the convict beyond all reasonable doubts.
“I pronounce the defendant guilty as charged and accordingly sentenced to death,” the court held.
The 32-year-old man, decked in white
short sleeve shirt and black trousers, broke down in the dock and
shouted, “Jesus, I did not do this,” shortly after the judge made her
pronouncement.
“Jesus, what will happen to Olamide (the daughter the deceased had for her)?” he asked rhetorically.
The convict, who came into the courtroom
with a Bible and a diary, began speaking in tongues as he was being led
out of the court room. He held on to the Bible and the diary even after
the prison warders handcuffed him and led him out of the courtroom.
The prison warders, who were assisted by
the convict’s lawyer, Mr. Olanrewaju Ajanaku, had tough time dragging
him to the temporary detention cell within the court premises.
Intermittently, Akolade would bow down,
while the warders tried to pull him up, and rise up to say, “in the name
of Jesus, I’m going to come out. I will not be condemned because I did
not do this”.
He was led into the courtroom at about
9.36am. Before the judge arrived the courtroom at about 9.46am, he was
alternately going on his kneels to pray and reading his Bible.
Okunnu, in her two-and-a-half hour
judgment, relied on the testimony of the forensic pathologist, Prof.
John Obafunwa, who testified that there were at least 76 stab wounds
found on the deceased’s body.
“All these injuries could not have been
self inflicted. Even if you try to injure yourself to that extent, at a
point you would have dropped the knife,” the judge quoted Obafunwa as
saying.
According to her, a successful
prosecution of a murder case requires proof that the deceased actually
died; that the action of the defendant caused the death of the victim;
and that the action of the defendant was done with the knowledge that it
was capable of causing death or grievous injury on the victim.
“The evidence to the fact of the death of the deceased is clear and therefore stands proved,” the court held.
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