THE Federal Special Anti-Robbery Squad (FSARS) has
arrested a native doctor and eight others over the alleged murder of a
staff of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).
The News Agency of Nigeria quoted the Deputy Commissioner of Police
FSARS, Mr Chris Ezike, as confirming the arrest during a chat in Lagos
on Thursday.
Ezike, of the Adeniji-Adele Police Station, said that the suspects
committed the crime on September 23, 2012.
The dead NNPC staff was Mr Sylvester Emefiele, who worked with NNPC's Transformation Office in Abuja.
The commissioner revealed that the wife of the victim, Ngozi, had
petitioned the Inspector-General of Police in September, 2012 over the
disappearance of her husband after leaving Lagos for Abuja.
He added that the woman claimed that her husband left Lagos for Abuja on
the invitation of his boss to process his visa for a training programme
in Hungary.
'She claimed her husband sent her SMS on September 23, 2012 at about
8.37 p.m that he was at Gwagwalada and that was the last she heard from
him.
'She also stated that surprisingly, she noticed that withdrawals were
being made from her husband's accounts through ATM,'' he said.
Ezike said that the arrest was made possible through scientific tracking
of the mobile phone line of the victim, stressing that a school dropout
was first arrested in Ilesa, Osun State with the victim's blackberry
handset.
'The suspect confessed that he bought the phone from one of the
suspects, a cab driver in Modakeke in Osun State for N22,000,' he said.
He added that after the arrest of the cab driver in Abuja, they were able to arrest others in connection with the crime.
'Two of the suspects confessed that they picked up the victim in their
taxi cab with registration No. AG 956 KEF at Giri in Gwagwalada Area
Council to be dropped at Finance Quarters, Wuye, Abuja.
'The driver of the cab was the one that picked the victim and picked the
second suspect some metres away even as the victim protested, the
driver pleaded with the victim that the man was his brother.
'The second suspect claimed he brought out hammer as a decoy for pistol
as soon as he entered the front of the cab. They subdued the victim and
took him to a nearby bush.
'They claimed they searched and dispossessed him of his laptop, N3,000 cash, three ATM cards and other items.
'They claimed they forced the victim to disclose his ATM pin numbers.
One of the suspects went to the banks to withdraw N180, 000 immediately
and the second suspect watched over the victim.
'They claimed that after they discovered the victim had more money in
his accounts, they used charm prepared by the native doctor on him and
he became weak.
'They claimed they discovered that the man died the following day and
they abandoned the corpse in the bus and escaped.
'On June 10, 2013, the two suspects led the DCP and crime scene forensic
experts led by the police doctor, Emenike Chinenyenwa, to the scene
located at Idu along Airport Road, eight kilometres from Nnamdi Azikiwe
International Airport junction, Abuja.
'At the scene, we met a completely decomposed skeleton suspected to be the remains of the victim.
'The bones of the legs were still stuck in the jeans trousers while his ribs were scattered around.
'His wrist watch, one leg of his sandals and the twine rope used in tying him and other belongings were recovered there.
'The remains have been packaged by forensic experts for autopsy by the police pathologist.
'The victim's family members were invited to identify the items
recovered. The wife and younger brother were able to identify them.
'The two suspects also led detectives to arrest the native doctor that prepared the charm in Ipetumodu, Osun State.
'Our investigation has been able to establish offences of criminal
conspiracy, kidnapping, armed robbery and culpable homicide,'' Ezike
said.
The DCP said that after the DNA test on the bones and tooth of the
victim, the report by the Force Chief Consultant Pathologist, Dr Akhiwu
Wilson, showed that they were similar to that of the victim's son and
his brother.