Kenya: Police and Drug Rings

From: Judy Miriga

Folks,

This is Sooo painful my head goes round and round I am not able to put myself together reading this brutal drug baron acts……

Kenya Police with the Government need thorough clean up……any mother or father will be sick reading this heartless and unthinkable brutality metted on your baby, the loved ones……I cant imagine, it doesnt seem to me like a true story…..

All these are happening because of bad compromised leadership……Any responsible leader, a parent or a manager would not let such happen before their very eyes without putting a stop to it.

Judy Miriga
Diaspora Spokesperson
Executive Director
Confederation Council Foundation for Africa Inc.,
USA
http://socioeconomicforum50.blogspot.com

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Saturday, 02 July 2011 00:01 BY MIGUNA MIGUNA

I have a confession to make. When I read about the grisly murder of the University of Nairobi student Merci Keino, I cringed and cried so loud those near me might have thought I had gone crazy. I was. I am a proud father of four lovely young girls aged between fifteen and seven. I could only think of my girls when the news about Mercy’s death broke. So, readers should forgive me if I take her death personally. I do.

And for that reason, I am extremely upset with the ever fumbling and incompetent Kenya Police. I have read with more anger Police Commissioner Mathew Iteere’s plea that ‘Mwau aides should be charged.’ Gracious Lord; that’s the institution Kenyans expect to conduct investigations and apprehend Mercy’s killers?

By law, only the police have the mandate to conduct criminal investigations and apprehend criminals. But on that newspaper report Iteere is pleading with God-knows-who to arrest people that had staged a shooting and then lied to the police about it. Hallo? Why has it taken more than one week to lock up those scumbags?

Everyone who saw Harun Mwau’s vehicle after the alleged shooting knows that the damn thing was staged. It was staged so poorly that even the two actors couldn’t perform the skit. Everyone could see the driver’s smirk when questioned how the six bullets could have struck very close to the car handle, with some bullets exiting on the passenger side door without touching either the driver or the body guard. They had no answers on how the driver’s window could be completely shattered with glass falling onto the seat where he sat during the ‘shooting’, yet he emerged unscathed.

Moreover, Iteere himself had declared that the way the shooting was supposed have occurred defies all laws of velocity (or was it ‘the law of munition’?).

The police only need ‘probable and reasonable basis’ to believe that a crime has been committed for them to arrest and charge a suspect. In the Mwau incident, there were a zillion ‘reasonable and probable cause’ to believe that the two actors had manufactured the story and lied to the police. Those are two charges right there. A third charge is the illegal use of firearm. A fourth one is ‘conspiracy to defeat the course of justice.’ Others would naturally follow after their arrests.

This brings me to the unforgivable cold-blooded murder of Mercy Keino. Why do I insist it was a cold-blooded murder? The story, as narrated by the local media, is pretty straight forward. A beautiful young female university student is invited out by her cousin. They arrive in Westlands late evening and are ‘welcomed’ by two studs who, by all accounts are either pimps or drug enforcers. They meticulously interview the two young women, taking their personal details and identity documents. That’s clue number one.

At that point, a cautious, streets smarts girl would have started being suspicious. But Mercy is a rambunctious, naïve beauty who is eager to have a good time on a Friday evening. So, the two pimps or enforcers flag a taxi (a second clue) and take the girls to a ‘private’ party.

The party is warming up when they arrive. Curiously, the women outnumber men one to three. That’s clue number three. Clue number four is the age-bracket of the ‘girls’; all range between nineteen and twenty five.

But there is ‘business’ to discuss with the middle-aged to elderly ‘business suits’ already seated and others arriving (clue number five). Alcohol is flowing like the great Nile. Clue number six. The only wrinkle is that Mercy is a teetotaler, yet alcohol is integral to the execution of the ‘business’ at hand. Clue seven.

Although the women outnumber men, the place is clearly swarming with heavily built security; armed and unarmed. This is the eighth clue.

Discussions veer towards the delicate and murky details of ‘transatlantic shipments of precious cargo.’ Whispers and codes used. Mercy is completely lost and starts getting restless. She wants to leave, NOW! That is the ninth clue.

But there is a problem; the ‘boss’, who has just arrived, cannot allow Mercy to leave. He thinks Mercy is dangerous. She has seen and heard too much. She is a risk the ‘business’ cannot take. He commands her to resume her seat and politely reminds her that she has two choices: ‘you either cooperate or you will become past tense.’ Mercy – naïve and boisterous – dares the ‘boss’ and attempts to leave. A scuffle ensues and Mercy is forcibly confined. She pretends to relax and engages in small talk. A few minutes later, she suddenly runs towards the exit.

The muscle men quickly grab her and force her back inside. Mercy has become a captive. By this time, she has resolved not to cooperate. Flashing before her is her fiancé and the wedding they had planned for December this year. ‘I can’t do this!’ she kept screaming. She took furtive glances at her cousin who was herself too scared to come to Mercy’s aid. Mercy is all alone now. The ‘bss’ has had enough. He orders his men to ‘feed her.’ She is forced to drink a cocktail of alcohol and other substances. This is clue number ten.

The effect was instant. The ‘boss’ gives a secret signal to his men. The exit suddenly opens for Mercy and she lunges at it. On reaching outside, the men tell her that they will call a taxi and ‘escort’ her home. She refuses but at this point, she has no options.

A sleek Mercedes ‘taxi’ dutifully arrives within minutes and Mercy is forced inside. What follows after this is well known to the underworld: rape, torture, strangulation and death. A few minutes later, the body is dumped on the busy Waiyaki Way. Clue number eleven.

Shortly thereafter, the ‘taxi’ is slowly driven into a hidden warehouse and its number plate removed. It is thoroughly vacuumed inside out and repainted. The number plate is transferred to another sleek Mercedes. Clue twelve.

A cover-up story is quickly manufactured and disseminated to senior editors in various media houses. Senior police officers are quickly roped in. Mercy is depicted as having been drunk, rowdy and reckless. A motor vehicle accident story has been carefully circulated. The media frenzy sets in. ‘It was an accident!’ they scream. The pathologist can’t tell the cause of death. That’s predictable. The story is latched onto by the inept and corrupt police and press. The police officer that witnessed the autopsy has been transferred. Clue thirteen.

This was supposed to be an open and shut case. Yet the police haven’t arrested anybody for aggravated assault, forcible confinement, unlawful detention, battery and torture. These are crimes disclosed by various newspaper reports. Additionally, the police should charge somebody with murder. But the witnesses are scared shitless. They are only repeating the cover-up stories they were fed by the agents of the ‘boss’.

Why haven’t the police searched and examined all homes, offices, apartments, rooms, hotels, motels, vehicles, warehouses, depots – anything connected with everyone who was at the party? What about the Nyoyo Stadium where that Okello guy supposedly delivered a ‘bag’ after midnight on the day Mercy was murdered? Has it been combed? If not, why? With their criminal negligence of the Samuel Kamau Wanjiru murder case, the Police Commissioner is proving to Kenyans that he cannot deliver. Let truth be told: Mercy refused to be a drug mule and for that she had to die. It’s as simple as that. There you are: I’ve done it for my girls!

From: Cosmos Omondi
Subject: NOSE BLEEDING & Death, kenyan detective??

Date: Saturday, June 25, 2011, 5:37 PM

Oduor,

Presently, to be sincere, the war on drugs can only be successfully won in a few democracies like the US soil. But in places like Kenya the drug network is so complex that if we genuinely commence fighting it today it will take us a generation. 99% of the current crop of leaders will have go out of the scene.

Why do I say this? Remember when Sonko threatened to spill the beans in parliament, everyone in the house shivered – that could only happen where the high and mighty are touched.

Drug affair is so bloody so that for us to successfully manage it (near the stage where the US is) then we’ll have to agree as a country on many issues. If not then many of those trying to unearth anything related to it will continue dropping dead mysteriously!

Omosh.

On Sat, Jun 25, 2011 at 11:08 PM, maurice oduor wrote:

Cosmos,

Heheheheheeee !!!!

You don’t want us bringing up the Wanjiru case? I understand your vested interests here. Good luck pursuing Njeri. Have you even made an initial contact? That’s the most difficult part right now.
Talk to people like Mheshimiwa to help you out.

About that cop: he was ailing? Did they say what ailment? In North America his body would have been treated as a radioactive substance, for example. His family and people who had come in contact with him would have been quarantined. Remember Ebola?

Courage

From: Cosmos Omondi
Date: Sat, 25 Jun 2011 22:50:59 +0300

Nyandoto,

Report according to 7.00pm news are that the police officer was ailing.

Oduor,

When bringing in Wanjiru’s case as an example be careful coz am watching you.

On Sat, Jun 25, 2011 at 8:32 PM, maurice oduor wrote:

Daktari,

You are very right. There’s almost no care at all in the way crime is investigated in Kenya. Investigators don’t wear gloves or masks; the crime scene is not secured and evidence is contaminated left and right.

From what I’ve seen of Kenya’s investigative techniques, they’re still where Canada and the US were in the 40s and 50s. Take the Wanjiru case. There are rumours that he might have been killed in the house and then the body thrown out over the balcony. If that rumour is true and someone cleaned all the blood droplets in the house, Luminol, a chemical used by the FBI and Police in the US, would have detected this in seconds. Luminol will detect blood even if you clean it off with bleach/Jik.

Our investigative skills are pathetic and that’s why a lot of crimes and murders go unsolved.

Courage,
Oduor Maurice

From: paul nyandoto
Date: Sat, 25 Jun 2011 17:13:57 +0000

Humans,

This detective`s death in Kenya is a mystery. Have the press been told all the symptoms or the press has just released outline they collected from relatives, but not doctors. If this samaritan was healthy and never was sick then he must have been killed: So if he was killed then how?. Where did he eat that day, has he been sick. Kenyan policemen are also known to be doing work without gloves, neither do they put on mask etc.

Biological war fare substances like smallpox, plague, tularemia have been cultivated and even modified in laboratories to kill very fast if needed. The three I have mentioned can be aerosolized and through respiratory droplets can easily enter your breathing system and cause death. But according to the daily nation reporter today the symptoms given and the time it took to death I personally do rule out smallpox and tularemia, it is impossible for them cause such a quick reaction unless modified.

BUT; BUT: PLAGUE (septic plague) fits the symptoms almost 100%, unless all are not told on the report by the daily nation or some highly virulent virus (ebola). Other alternatives are radioactive substances. I think much will be released later incase they do a good investigation on his life, path and finally on his body. Some kenyans have also been extraordinary rich within a very short limited time that nobody can account for their wealth. They must have been involved in some extra activity business which have very high risk if not drugs. I hear some have been probed for drug trafficking but nothing found. Then we are left with: illegal biological cultivation, transporting illegal radioactive materials to Iran etc. There are evidences that some radioactive substances are being taken to Iran through Kenya etc.

Paul Nyandoto

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