Tailor in court over alleged manslaughter

SourceGNA

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An Accra High Court has com­menced trial of Joseph Kwasi Ef­fah, a 63-year-old tailor and farmer, who allegedly shot a man whom he had mistaken for an animal.

The police later identified the deceased as Prince Kwabena Kumi, 36.

Charged with manslaughter, Effah, a Neighborhood Watch Committee member, pleaded not guilty before a seven-member jury.

The prosecution led by Mrs Sefakor Batse, Principal State At­torney, said eight witnesses would be called to make their case.

The prosecution and defense counsel took turns to address the jury and the court presided over by Justice Lydia Osei Marfo.

The prosecution said the accused, Joseph Kwesi Effah, is a tailor, farmer, and resident of Akim Asuboa near Akim Oda.

Prince Kwabena Kumi (now de­ceased) was a 36-year-old aeronautic Engineer, who worked with Africa World Airlines in Accra.

The prosecution said on March 31, 2018, the deceased left Accra to visit his mother Comfort Nkansah Kumi at Akim Asuboa in his Honda CRV vehicle with reg­istration Number GE 7809- 14.

The prosecutor said when he (the deceased) reached Akim Akroso, he took his vehicle to a washing bay and joined some of the washing bay attendants at a nearby drinking spot.

It said the deceased was later spotted at the Akim Akroso lorry station, very intoxicated, with his car parked in the middle of the road.

According to the prosecution, the Akroso Police intervened by impounding his vehicle and got him a passenger bus en route to Akim Oda.

It said an arrangement was made for one Benedicta Buruwaa, a trader to meet the deceased on his arrival to escort him to his mother’s house.

The prosecution said the ar­ranged meeting did not materialize because Buruwa arrived late and did not meet him at the agreed drop-off point.

According to the prosecutor, the deceased could not make his way home so his relatives lodged a complaint at the Akim Oda Police station.

The prosecution said on April 3, 2018, a search party found the body of Prince Kwabena Kumi (the deceased) in a state of decom­position in the bush along the Asuboa-Akro­so road.

It said in­vestigations later revealed that the accused person was a member of the Akim Asuboa Neighbourhood Watch Committee and on March 31, 2018, he was on duty at about 10:00 pm together with one Daniel Kwabena Akwaah, also a farmer and a member of the same Neigh­bourhood Watch Committee.

The prosecution said during their patrol, they both heard a snoring sound in the bush and suspected it to be a pig.

The court heard that the ac­cused, who was holding a locally manufactured gun, went closer to the sound and fired in that direction without checking exactly what or who he was firing at.

The prosecution said it was only when they got to the exact spot where he fired that he realized he had shot a human being.

They, however, left without offering any assistance or reporting the matter to the police.

The body of the person was identified later as that of Prince Kwabena Kumi.

The prosecution said the pathol­ogist, after postmortem examina­tion, gave the cause of death as haemorrhagic shock, severe jaw and chest injuries, and gunshot at intermediate range.

The prosecutor said inves­tigations led to the arrest of the accused and other suspects and the retrieval of three locally manufactured single barrel guns from members of the Neighbour­hood Watch Committee, including that of the accused person which were forwarded to the forensic laboratory for ballistic examina­tion. 

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