Following the Supreme
Court approval of the death sentence handed the convicted
General-Overseer of the Christian Praying Assembly, Chukwuemeka Ezeugo,
a.k.a Rev. King to die by hanging, Ndigbo Cultural Society of Nigeria
(NCSN) has begged the Federal Government not to make haste in executing
the death sentence, PM news reports.
READ ALSO: Reverend King to know fate of death sentence today
In a unanimous judgment by a seven-man panel of Justices led by Justice
Walter Onnoghen, on February 26 upheld the death sentence that was
earlier handed to Ezeugo by the Lagos state High Court in 2007, presided
over by Justice Joseph Oyewole.
The apex court in a lead judgment delivered by Justice Sylvester Ngwuta,
dismissed the appeal filed by Rev. King for lacking in merit and held
that the facts of the case were “like what you see in a horror movie.”
Reacting to the development, the leader of the Igbo group, chief Udo
Udeogaranya in a statement issued on February 26, urged President
Muhammadu Buhari-led federal government to “commute the sentence and
grant him pardon as Nigeria stands to gain nothing by shedding blood.
“This plea is premised on the ground that many Nigerians still hold Rev.
Ezeugo as their spiritual leader even in various prisons and that the
initial trial in Lagos as purportedly put forward by his lawyer Mr.
Olalekan Ojo and published by national dailies was a miscarriage of
justice in which the lawyer made certain points that demanded a second
thought.
“Ojo argued that his client did not commit the crime and was not at the
scene of the incident. He insisted that the deceased, Ann Uzoh, had in
two statements she made after the incident and before her death, stated
that she got burnt in a generator accident and that the cleric was not
responsible for her injuries.
“Ojo said the Investigating Police Officer, IPO, had tendered statements
which stated that Ezeugo was not responsible for the burns that led to
Uzoh’s death. He alleged that the trial Judge refused to admit in
evidence, the statements he said exonerated Ezeugo of the crime.
“The lawyer further contended had those ‘vital exhibits’ been admitted
rather than expunged by the trial judge, they would have operated to
cast serious doubt on the case of the prosecution. He maintained that
Justice Oyewole’s refusal to admit the exhibits in evidence ‘occasioned a
great miscarriage of justice’ against his client,” the statement reads.
READ ALSO: Supreme Court To Rule On Rev King’s Death Sentence
The Lagos state government has lauded the Supreme Court for upholding
the judgment of the state’s High Court that sentenced Rev. King to death
by hanging.
Rev. King was sentenced to death by a Lagos High Court, Ikeja, on
January 11, 2007, for the murder of one of his church members, Ann Uzoh.
He appealed the judgment through his lawyer asking the apex court to
upturn the High Court’s judgement.
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