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I saw the Mercy Keino CCTV
vinii
#61 Posted : Wednesday, September 12, 2012 9:16:37 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 10/14/2009
Posts: 2,057
Mercy may hv died elsewhere and dumped on the road,,,,, the lady who saw a body being thrown out of a black Mercedes-Benz has been giving her side of the story...
If you are an eagle don't hang around with chickens; chickens don't fly....
rock
#62 Posted : Wednesday, September 12, 2012 9:35:51 PM
Rank: Veteran

Joined: 2/25/2009
Posts: 973
That is what i've been hinting at all along!! There are red flags all over,no need to draw you a map.
murchr
#63 Posted : Thursday, September 13, 2012 9:04:13 AM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 2/26/2012
Posts: 15,980
The gal mixed white and red wine plus beer. Kweli she was green.
"There are only two emotions in the market, hope & fear. The problem is you hope when you should fear & fear when you should hope: - Jesse Livermore
.
TAZ
#64 Posted : Thursday, September 13, 2012 9:40:04 AM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 11/14/2007
Posts: 4,152
Muriuki: I was heading to
Jacaranda Hotel through Waiyaki
Way when I saw what I believed
were legs of a person beneath a
saloon car.

Prosecutor: Was the vehicle
stationary or moving?

Muriuki: It was moving; I was
driving behind it
and trying to
overtake when I saw the body.

Prosecutor: What drew your
curiosity thereafter?

Muriuki: I saw a Mercedes Benz
from behind moving suspiciously
and driving on the right side with
full headlights on. I found this
odd and noted its registration
numbers.


I don't think she said anything about a body "being thrown out". Btw what was wrong about the Merc, full headlights? I think i've seen a lot worse from Kenyan drivers at that time of the night.

Don't get me wrong i'm not trying to defend Kafogo here, i'm fully aware what kind of person he is....just trying to understand why he would kill Mercy.
nesta
#65 Posted : Thursday, September 13, 2012 10:51:00 AM
Rank: Member

Joined: 12/17/2009
Posts: 121
Location: Nairobi
rock wrote:
TAZ wrote:
@ Alma....i totally agree with you, This girl and her friends were just out to have a good time but unfortunately for them it turned tragic. I think by now it has already been established that she was drunk. The thing about campus life (having gone through it) is that there's nothing which excites you more in a party than free drinks especially in the company of a high profile guests.

I find it naive to suggest that Mercy didn't know what she was getting herself into, this was not a pub but an apartment. Let's also not forget that the apartment belonged to one of his friends so technically he was the host. The girls had all the time to leave but they chose to stay and enjoy the free booze.

"Mercy's friend said she had not met Kabogo before and that it was after he joined them at their table that she was informed he was an MP."

“The girl was bleeding from her mouth; Kabogo told me that she had hit herself against the wall. He took me to the bathroom and there was cotton wool and toilet papers soaked in blood. I could not ascertain if the girl had hit herself or not,” Githinji-Caretaker.

Githinji informed the inquest that Kabogo then gave him instructions to clean the blood stains. Earlier, the caretaker said that Keino was drinking with one of Kabogo’s bodyguards who seemed not to enjoy her company. Later she became disorderly and threw a glass at the reception. “The bodyguard she was drinking with pretended that he was calling the police so that she could stop misbehaving,”

Its quite clear by now that she was not really minding her own business at the party. IMO, i think they reason why Kafogo allegedly slapped/kicked her was because of the misbehaving part and not necessarily "refusing his advances". I really sympathise with the parents.

Oh!..is that why? You should have said so earlier then.If thats the case then i guess its ok.(rolling eyes)


I'm thinking slapping the woman, if she behaved as stupidly as indicated, was justified. I don't find a problem slapping/beating up a drunk Man who is behaving stupidly and i don't think there's any problem with beating up a woman who's behaving like a stupid drunk man
On Christ Alone
accelriskconsult
#66 Posted : Thursday, September 13, 2012 11:16:52 AM
Rank: Member

Joined: 4/2/2011
Posts: 629
Location: Nai
masukuma wrote:
My heart goes out to the family but people need to understand that when you sow oats you reap oats...



That is why this country is going to the dogs.

Men tend to err every time they start discussing women morality issues. It matters to me not if Mercy was a street walking, weed smoking, wig wearing prostitute, the state owes her the right to life. When that right is taken away, it is the duty of the state to investigate what took away that life.

The proceedings in that party are important, it is not an ordinary party as soon as someone;

1. gets assaulted
2. Looses her life.

That is why that party is now the subject of a public inquiry funded by tax payers money.

Mercy Keino did not go to University to just get a degree like majority here seem to think. She went there to learn how to become a global citizen, expand her world view. That may include attending a few parties here and there, especially if the invitation to the party is extended by a good friend.

Miguna performed an excellent analysis of the Mercy Keino case to proof that the police were unwilling and uninterested in the case;

Allow me to revisit the tragic, barbaric murder of Mercy Keino. I do so out of moral and professional duty. We owe it to Mercy, to our children and to society in general to do everything within our powers to find and punish the perpetrators of this most heinous and cowardly crime.

When a cold-blooded criminal takes away the life of an innocent person like Mercy, our silence, fear and lackadaisical attitude encourages the wrongdoer to continue committing more crimes. In Kenya, it is becoming a culture. As a trained barrister and solicitor, one who takes a keen interest on both investigatory and prosecutorial techniques, I would be failing in my responsibility if I shied away from asking tough questions where these haven’t been posed or answered. I am not going to be intimidated, threatened, coerced or soothed into silence by the incompetent, corrupt and docile police.

Before relocating to Kenya in 2007, I had acted for numerous families traumatised by the loss of their loved ones at the hands of the police. I once acted for a family who lost a 24-year-old young man, gunned down at a major downtown Toronto hospital on December 31, 1999 as he sought medical attention for his seriously ill infant baby boy. He was black. The shooters were all white. There was a protracted inquest and false death litigation that I was involved in.

I also represented families whose loved ones had perished in tragic road accidents. Numerous times, I have acted for plaintiffs and defendants in malpractice suits ­ for and against lawyers and physicians. I have had my fair share of reviewing autopsy reports, medical charts and expert reports. I am no stranger to medical, actuarial, engineering, psychiatric and psychological expert reports.

In the past 15 years, I have cross-examined thousands of detectives, police officers, forensic scientists and physicians. I have also read thousands of police reports and notes. Those were a far cry from the patchy verbal narrations by the Kenya Police. So, I know a thing or two about the ‘best practices’ on how to handle crime scenes, how to preserve evidence, and how to detect inconsistencies, contradictions and lies in ‘case files’. When the media first reported on Mercy’s death, my brain went up in flames.

There were so many gaping gaps, questions, contradictions, inconsistencies and plain lies that were flying about. I thought I was watching a horror movie. Yet the police haven’t explained how they resolved them. For without a logical and satisfactory resolution, Mercy’s case must remain open. Criminal cases have no limitation periods!

I am well-trained and experienced in these matters. I have made a living analysing cases and asking relevant questions ­ in and outside the courtroom. And in all my years of legal practice, I have never come across the kind and level of investigative ineptitude and clumsiness that the Kenya Police exhibit daily, but more particularly on the Mercy Keino, Samuel Wanjiru, Njuguna Gitau, Oscar King’ara and Oulu cases. I am also aware of their criminal incompetence on the political assassination cases of Pio Gama Pinto, TJ Mboya, Dr Robert Ouko, Dr Odhiambo Mbai, Father Kaiser, Bishop Alexander Muge and others.

We are told that Mercy had gone to a private party at the Wasini Luxury Homes accompanied by her female cousin. They arrived at the Oil Libya gas station next to The Mall in Westlands. They were met by two men, presumably working for those responsible for ‘arranging’ the private party. Both men closely examined their identity cards and took personal details from them.

Having successfully passed the ‘vetting procedure’, one of the men took Mercy and her cousin in a ‘taxi’ to the apartment and, upon arrival there, they found ‘the second man’ had arrived ahead of them. Like most young women, Mercy carried a handbag and a mobile phone. Please note that detail.

It is almost a given that both Mercy and her cousin carried some money; at least enough for a ride back to the university after the party. The money would most likely have been kept in the handbag as most young women between the ages of 19 and 25 would most likely have dressed in clothes without pockets. It’s most likely that the handbag also contained other ‘normal’ and ‘precious’ items young women carry in their handbags on a night out. An intelligent guess informs me that Mercy considered her handbag very precious. Like most young women, she would have kept it either on the table or on the floor next to her. There’s nothing unusual about that. I’ve done my due diligence and carefully examined the area around Wasini.

The distance between the Oil Libya to Wasini is about 1.4km, give and take. An average person would walk that distance in less than 40 minutes. A taxi would take two minutes from Oil Libya, barring bad traffic.

A direct route from Wasini to Waiyaki Way on Church Road is about 200 metres. A normal person would walk that distance in less than 20 minutes.

However, depending on the level of intoxication, forceful physical restraint or injury, a person might take more than an hour to reach the highway from Wasini on Church Road. There are no streetlights. It’s pitch dark between midnight and 5am on this route.

Because Mercy and her friend had followed the Sarit Centre route earlier, one would have expected her to do the same going back. Human beings are creatures of habit. Moreover, they had been met at Oil Libya earlier on, suggesting that they might have been unfamiliar with the general area. It’s therefore inconceivable that Mercy - whom the Police Commissioner Mathew Iteere claimed was ‘drunk and reckless’ - would have travelled or ran along Church Road in total darkness to her death on the highway alone.

If Mercy was physically unrestrained and she had both her mobile phone and money, she would have either taken a taxi (as they had done earlier) or called a friend or relative to pick her up. The media initially quoted an un-named source at Wasini had called a ‘taxi’ for her. Who was this person?

Has s/he been interviewed by the police? There isn’t any indication if or when the ‘taxi’ arrived at Wasini. If it did, where did it take Mercy and who paid for the ride? Has the ’taxi’ company or driver given a detailed credible account of what happened between the time they were called and the time they arrived at Wasini? Answers to these questions would help unravel how Mercy’s badly mangled body ended up on the highway that morning.

Another undisclosed source claimed that Mercy left Wasini running with a few ‘bodyguards’ chasing after her towards the highway. Who were these men? Who did they work for? Have the police interviewed them? If so, have they clearly explained how Mercy died? More significantly, is that story consistent with Iteere’s scandalous claim that Mercy was ‘drunk and reckless?’ How does anyone who was not at the party speak about Mercy’s recklessness?

The source even claimed that he ‘witnessed’ Mercy being knocked down by a vehicle on Waiyaki Way after 2am. What was he doing in the darkness at that time? Did he contact the police promptly with that information? Has this witness described the men who were chasing Mercy? Have the police arrested those men? If indeed that story is credible, how could Mercy have been ‘run over’ by several vehicles? Couldn’t the ‘witness’ have alerted the motorists of the ‘accident?’ How come the witness never offered assistance and never came forward until the media broke the story?

The police have claimed that alcohol was found in Mercy’s blood. The question is: do the police know how the traces of alcohol got into her blood? Couldn’t the alcohol have been forcefully given to her or injected into her body? Couldn’t her drink have been spiked? Did the toxicology report reveal the presence of other substances? What were their levels? Were the levels of alcohol or other substances (if any) indicative of normal consumption or something sinister? This could easily be determined from examining the liver.

Apparently, Mercy’s handbag and mobile phone were ‘found’ in Wasini after she had been murdered. The police want us to believe that Mercy ‘left behind’ both her mobile phone and handbag. Why? How? No female university student, in fact, no female generally, would have left behind the phone she needed to call for help or assistance.

Usually, a woman won’t leave her handbag behind even when going to the bathroom; more so after the reported altercation with a ‘flamboyant’ Kenyan politician. The only logical explanation why Mercy’s handbag and mobile telephone weren’t found next to her body on the highway was because she didn’t leave the Wasini voluntarily. She was a captive. Her captors knew that with modern technology, one can be traced through a phone. So, they deliberately took it away. But have the police investigated all these angles? Your guess is as good as mine.

The police have latched on to the incredible story of an ‘Uthiru-bound motorist’ who ‘noticed a woman flagging down vehicles on the highway after 2am’. He allegedly noticed a badly injured woman lying on the same spot where the other woman had been. That’s a bald-faced lie. Why didn’t he stop and offer assistance to her? How would the motorist have seen Mercy’s injuries on the opposite side of the highway in total darkness?

If he had seen a woman waving down vehicles on his way to Uthiru, it means she had not run into the oncoming traffic as another undisclosed Wasini source had alleged; she would have either been injured or dead already. Why would she be waving down a motorist driving towards Uthiru, anyway? The University of Nairobi-bound vehicles would be driving on the opposite side of the road. Or could it be that she was desperate to catch the eye of a ‘good Samaritan’ because of imminent danger lurking in the dark?

In any event, how did the Uthiru-bound man see the opposite side of the highway after 2am in total darkness on his way back? At that spot, it’s impossible even during the day to notice anything much on the opposite side of the highway, never mind on a virtually unlit road at night. The Church Road side of Waiyaki Way is about 15 feet higher than the opposite side at the point where Mercy’s body was found, at least, and has a barrier, where the traffic comes up on the slip road section between the two carriageways to change direction. In any event, have the police conducted tests at the scene to confirm the Uthiru man’s bizarre story? If so, can they publish those results?

But then, there is a lady who said she saw a motorist dumping Mercy’s body on the highway then driving off. She followed him and wrote down the make, model and the registration number of the vehicle. She then drove to the nearest police station and reported the matter within a few minutes of witnessing the ‘crime’. In countries where police know their job, that’s more than enough to crack the case.

With that piece of evidence, why did the police allow Mercy to be buried within days of her death? Why didn’t the police treat the death as homicide immediately? How come the fake investigations were only ‘conducted’ after the media broke the story?

Perplexingly, the police have latched on to the Uthiru-bound man’s bizarre story and not the lady’s. Ironically, the Uthiru-bound man never reported his bizarre story to the police immediately after he ‘saw the badly injured lady’. He conveniently waited until the media broke the story ­ one week later. Why? Was he planted? Is he a real witness?

Between the two stories, which one sounds more credible and therefore believable? Why shouldn’t the police treat the Uthiru-bound man as a potential suspect?

There is another peculiar detail: When Mercy’s body was found on the road, there was not much blood at the scene. Why? If Mercy was a victim of a ‘hit-and-run’ and her body badly mangled as a result, as the corrupt and incompetent police want us to believe, why wasn’t the scene messy with blood? The police said Mercy’s skull had no brain; did they find parts of her brain on the road? If not, why? Isn’t it possible that the body was mutilated elsewhere before being dumped on the highway? Isn’t it also possible that the murderers are the same people who repeatedly ran over Mercy’s body after dumping it on the highway? Why didn’t the police visit the scene immediately after the report by the lady? On what basis have they latched on to the hit-and-run concoction?

Why haven’t the police thoroughly investigated everyone at the party, including the ‘boss’, cooks, waiters, watchmen and security people? How about the drug-dealing angle? What happened to the CCTV cameras? Have those been investigated? Why not? We want to know.

The Kenya Police have become unacceptably inept and corrupt. In the Samuel Wanjiru case, the police have refused to investigate a credible story linking the deceased’s wife to a senior police officer in Nyahururu. They have refused to disclose who were in the Toyota Prado that arrived at the Wanjiru compound with Teresia Njeri that fateful night. They haven’t released the autopsy report and explained what caused the fatal blow to the back of Wanjiru’s head if he had jumped from the balcony as the police have alleged.

These are questions I would have asked, had I been involved as a lawyer in this case and other cases. And the police must answer them to our satisfaction instead of expecting us to swallow their garbage. We aren’t total idiots!
selah
#67 Posted : Thursday, September 13, 2012 11:18:02 AM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 10/13/2009
Posts: 1,950
Location: in kenya
These statements below show there was something about this party that resulted in Mercy's death...Being Knocked by a car was just a cover-up.

Quote:
Mr Kabogo started slapping her while asking who had brought her to the party. Mercy got very scared and wanted to run away but some security officers and the MP’s bodyguards grabbed her and took her to the gate,” Ms Kamemba said.


Quote:
After midnight, Mr Kabogo went to one of the apartments with two women, leaving Ms Keino with his bodyguards, the caretaker said.

Mr Macharia told presiding magistrate Peter Ndwiga that it was then that Ms Keino became restless and broke some glasses, forcing him to take her to Mr Kabogo.

Prosecutor (Moses Omirera): What happened when she broke the glasses?

Macharia: We took her to the house where Mr Kabogo was and I left for my room.

Prosecutor: Did you hear any commotion?

Macharia: Yes. After about 15 minutes, I heard Mr Kabogo shouting and talking angrily. I rushed to the apartment.

Prosecutor: What did you find when you entered?

Macharia: I found Ms Keino lying down with Mr Kabogo slapping and kicking her. She was crying and the other ladies were screaming and pleading with Mr Kabogo to stop beating her. I also pleaded with him to let her go.

Prosecutor: Did you notice anything unusual?

Macharia: The sitting room was in disarray and blood-stained tissue paper was in the waste basket. Mr Kabogo told me the lady had hit herself on the wall and that was why her mouth was bleeding.

Prosecutor: What happened after Mr Kabogo stopped hitting her and where was she taken?

Macharia: He gave his bodyguards some money to hire a taxi to take her home and they grabbed her and took her down the stairs. It was the last time I saw her alive and I don’t know what happened thereafter.


Quote:
“I went to the reception and heard people talking angrily in the room where the MP was with his guests. I went up to see what was happening but before I reached the door, I met Mr Kabogo’s bodyguards dragging Ms Keino down the stairs,” Mr Juma said.

He said although he could recognise the two bodyguards who dragged Ms Keino out of the apartment, there was a third person he did not recognise.

Mr Juma said Mr Kabogo followed them after a short while and entered his car. He said he was accompanied by a second car, but he did not recognise the people in it as it was the first time he had seen them.

He said he could not tell what happened after the bodyguards brought Ms Keino to the gate and only heard the next day through the Press that the student had been hit by a car.
'......to the acknowledgment of the mystery of God, and of the Father, and of Christ; 3 In whom are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge.' Colossians 2:2-3
alma
#68 Posted : Thursday, September 13, 2012 11:38:44 AM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 7/20/2007
Posts: 4,432
everytime I hear someone starting a story with moral issues I get very scared.

Granted, she may infact have been hit by a car on Waiyaki way. That does not say which car, whose car and for what reason or even how.

Most of us are old enough to have seen girls who are partaking for the first time. We know we don't go to them and slap the hell out of them. In fact, guys like Impunity will be talking very nicely to her not slapping her.

So lets keep this sane. I'm just happy to see that for the first time in this country, families are pushing their issues na roho moja. God speed to them.

As far as I've read, there is enough here to sustain charges of assault, false imprisonment and messing up with a crime scene and interfering with an investigation.

The purpose of that party is important especially for the parents who can now institute civil suits on those who were there on neglect and things of such nature.

Good policemen around the world know that even if they can't sustain a criminal case, they should investigate and at least give the family a chance to institute civil cases. Take OJ Simpson as a benchmark where police investigations though faulted in a criminal court, were still used in a civil case that the family won.

Is this the Kenya we live in. Where just because you are high, everyone says you deserved it?Sad Sad

The above statement being with the premise that she was high by her own volition and was high on substances that we consider legal. That has yet to be proved or disapproved since the investigations stopped on seeing her high.Pray
Jose: If I make it through this thug life, I'll see you one day. The Lord is the only way to stop the hurt.
Magigi
#69 Posted : Thursday, September 13, 2012 11:46:14 AM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 3/31/2008
Posts: 7,081
Location: Kenya
alma wrote:
everytime I hear someone starting a story with moral issues I get very scared.

Granted, she may infact have been hit by a car on Waiyaki way. That does not say which car, whose car and for what reason or even how.

Most of us are old enough to have seen girls who are partaking for the first time. We know we don't go to them and slap the hell out of them. In fact, guys like Impunity will be talking very nicely to her not slapping her.

So lets keep this sane. I'm just happy to see that for the first time in this country, families are pushing their issues na roho moja. God speed to them.

As far as I've read, there is enough here to sustain charges of assault, false imprisonment and messing up with a crime scene and interfering with an investigation.

The purpose of that party is important especially for the parents who can now institute civil suits on those who were there on neglect and things of such nature.

Good policemen around the world know that even if they can't sustain a criminal case, they should investigate and at least give the family a chance to institute civil cases. Take OJ Simpson as a benchmark where police investigations though faulted in a criminal court, were still used in a civil case that the family won.

Is this the Kenya we live in. Where just because you are high, everyone says you deserved it?Sad Sad

The above statement being with the premise that she was high by her own volition and was high on substances that we consider legal. That has yet to be proved or disapproved since the investigations stopped on seeing her high.Pray

How true..In fact the more drunk she gets the merrier @impunity gets, hoping with hope that at some point she will black out and he will call the watchman to help him carry her to his car...and voila... Nyama choma na kachumbari for @Impunity!
...Some statements I have heard in this case are just against the laws of nature...completely absurd!
essyk
#70 Posted : Thursday, September 13, 2012 12:01:23 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 11/15/2011
Posts: 4,518
This incident is too painful to read.The details are nerve wrecking.
Will somebody go to jail for this barbaric act? cz if that doesn't happen..and it may not happen.






"The true measure of a man is how he treats someone who can do him absolutely no good.
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