A Lagos High Court in Igbosere has sentenced an apprentice barber,
Samuel Edet, to 42 years in prison for robbery, according to The Nation.
Justice Sedoten Ogunsanya convicted Edet of robbing an aluminium
technician Adewale Elelo of his Nissan Pathfinder on February 21, 2012.
She sentenced him to 21 years imprisonment for conspiracy to commit robbery and another 21 years for robbery.
The sentences, which were without an option of a fine, will run concurrently, meaning Edet will spend only 21 years in jail.
Edet, from Akwa Ibom State, was arraigned on April 27, 2015, on a two-count charge of conspiracy to commit robbery and robbery.
Prosecuting counsel Haroun Adebayo said the offences contravened
sections 297 and 295(1) of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2011.
Edet pleaded not guilty.
During a nearly three-year trial, Elelo testified that the incident occurred on June 15, 2012 between 10 and 11pm.
Elelo said: “I was returning from a C & S Church after a
revival when, at St. Paul Street, along Agbado Road, leaving Toyin Bus
Stop, the second street by the left, I saw a black Jeep waiting ahead of
me. I drove towards it slowly and the car flashed its full headlights
at me. I became afraid.
“He (Edet) alighted from the Jeep and accosted me, asking me to
alight and demanded for my key. He asked me to get into the boot of my
vehicle, but I ran away and pressed the remote control of my vehicle
that was in my pocket.
“I got to a police check point at Toyin Bus Stop and alerted
the police that I had been robbed. The policemen and passers-by came to
my rescue and found the defendant in the car because the remote control
had made the car immovable.”
According to Elelo, Edet’s accomplices zoomed off as soon as the crowd arrived.
But Edet denied the allegations. He described himself as the victim of police illegal arrest.
Edet said: “I live at Ajegunle and work as an apprentice
barber. I was on my way to look for a shop or work when at Ojuelegba Bus
Stop I saw people running and shouting ‘Ole’ ‘Ole’ meaning thief, thief
and I was arrested and taken to the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS),
where the police wrote something on paper and asked me to sign.”
According to Edet, he was threatened that if he refused to sign he would be shot; hence, be signed.
But Justice Ogunsanya held that Elelo’s testimony, as well as that of the other eyewitnesses were credible.
She observed that there were several inconsistencies in Edet’s
testimony, including his statement that he was looking for a shop or
work at about 10:30pm on the night of the robbery.
The judge said: “The court believes the witnesses’ evidence
that it is the defendant that stole the car. The victim positively
identified the defendant as the person who robbed him.”
The court also noted that in Edet’s written statement to the
police, he confessed to the crime, and that the confessional statement
was not challenged by his counsel when it was tendered in court by the
prosecution.
Justice Ogunsanya said: “The court is satisfied that the defendant is as guilty as charged.”
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