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Emily May
Emily May
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Sunday 14 June 2026 05:06:41 GMT
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Who is this person who had asked for the head of just an old woman? Who did it? where did the head go As the village in Mukurweini lay in darkness, watching the days pass by fast — an indication that justice was quickly becoming an illusion — something happened kilometers away in Naromoru. It was a name: Martin Mwangi. Now, Mwangi was not a stranger to the criminal justice system, let alone the police station. Mwangi walked into a police station to confess to another murder. And in the process of confessing, he began claiming that he had killed Julia Gadhoni, the 83-year-old grandmother. Now let me take you back. You see, this Martin Mwangi was not a new man to the police. Martin Mwangi had once slipped through the fingers of justice. He had been acquitted by Justice Teresia Mweka after being charged with the murder of his cousin, James Mwangi Mwadoni. The court lacked evidence. Martin then walked out a free man — a quiet man, a man no one imagined carried storms inside him. And you see, investigations did not just lead police to the murder of his cousin. He initiated those investigations himself by first walking into a police station and confessing to the crime that happened in Kiambogo village in Ndaragwa. And by the way, I wonder how the court could see no evidence here, because it was on the 22nd day of August, 2017, that Mwangi walked into Nyeri Central Police Station and spoke to Chief Inspector Mkisha. That was at about 2 p.m. Chief Inspector Mkisha, unable to believe that a man had simply walked in and confessed to murder without any clear reason, phoned Chief Inspector Eros Mwengesa.
Who is this person who had asked for the head of just an old woman? Who did it? where did the head go As the village in Mukurweini lay in darkness, watching the days pass by fast — an indication that justice was quickly becoming an illusion — something happened kilometers away in Naromoru. It was a name: Martin Mwangi. Now, Mwangi was not a stranger to the criminal justice system, let alone the police station. Mwangi walked into a police station to confess to another murder. And in the process of confessing, he began claiming that he had killed Julia Gadhoni, the 83-year-old grandmother. Now let me take you back. You see, this Martin Mwangi was not a new man to the police. Martin Mwangi had once slipped through the fingers of justice. He had been acquitted by Justice Teresia Mweka after being charged with the murder of his cousin, James Mwangi Mwadoni. The court lacked evidence. Martin then walked out a free man — a quiet man, a man no one imagined carried storms inside him. And you see, investigations did not just lead police to the murder of his cousin. He initiated those investigations himself by first walking into a police station and confessing to the crime that happened in Kiambogo village in Ndaragwa. And by the way, I wonder how the court could see no evidence here, because it was on the 22nd day of August, 2017, that Mwangi walked into Nyeri Central Police Station and spoke to Chief Inspector Mkisha. That was at about 2 p.m. Chief Inspector Mkisha, unable to believe that a man had simply walked in and confessed to murder without any clear reason, phoned Chief Inspector Eros Mwengesa.

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