A Chief Superintendent of Police, (CSP) Bamidele Olusegun, told a Coroner inquest into the controversial death of a 12-year-old student of the Dowen College student, Sylvester Oromoni Jnr that some staff of Dowen College were indicted in the first legal advice issued by the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP), Lagos State.
CSP Olusegun informed the court presided by Magistrate Mikhail Kadiri that he received a report from the DPP dated December 30, 2021, which was called interim legal advice recommended that the staff and they should be prosecuted for alleged negligence.
CSP Olusegun, who said he was serving with the homicide section of the Lagos State Criminal Investigation and Intelligence Department (SCIID), Panti section in 2021 disclosed this while being cross-examined by Mr. Femi Falana, SAN.
Reading part of the interim report dated December 30, 2021, the witness said: “There are sufficient facts to establish this offense against Mrs. Celina Uduak, Valentine Igboekweze, Hammed Ayomo Bariyu, Adesanya Olusegun, and Mr. Adeyemi and Dowen College.
The witness further affirmed that he conducted a thorough investigation on the matter.
He said he was aware that the police protested that they were not allowed to conclude investigation on the matter.
When presented with the protest letter written to the Chief Judge of Lagos State by the Police, on the development of the investigation, the witness identified the letter.
A portion of the letter that was read by the witness in the court states “It came as a rude shock that the investigation was not allowed to be carried out” He also said the suspects were not brought back to the station for the conclusion of the investigation.
He said: “During the investigation, one of the suspects informed me that the deceased was bullied. Another one also told me that he was taken to the third floor to be tortured.”
But, when asked if any witness told him that the deceased was injured on the 14th of November, he said he can’t recollect.
CSP Olusegun also affirmed that the deceased sister told her that he was also bullied sometimes in October and that the boy who allegedly bullied him was not punished for the act.
He also confirmed that a female parent of the school also reported a case of bully against her son by some students at Maroko police station.
Re-counting his involvement in the investigation, the police witness, “On 3rd of December, a petition forwarded to my office was assigned to me, and the school was already closed down then. On 6th December, we were at Maroko police station, where we met the Principal and the suspect. We took them down to Panti and obtained statements from the accused and the other management staff. We proceeded to a Yaba Magistrate’s Court to get a remand order and the housemaster was detained, while the children were remanded at Oregun correctional home.
He added that the deceased father’s statement was taken on the 9th of December while the Lagos State Attorney General and the Lagos State Commissioner for Education were put on the phone during the interview with the parties.
“I recollect that I went to Warri to bring the corpse to Lagos and I had an interaction with the doctor, the consultant pathologists.
‘’We arrived in Lagos on January 13 with the corpse of the deceased while the autopsy was performed the next day. Before then, letters were dispatched to the parties asking them to be in attendance or send representatives during the autopsy. I later proceeded to Abuja to speak with one of the witnesses. I also recollect that we visited the school on fact-findings and it was opened to us. I remember that the doctor at the school hospital, Dr. Moji confirmed that she attended to the deceased between December 21st and 22nd.
“She confirmed to me that she asked the nurse to massage the deceased legs and that paracetamol was also administered on him.”
Asked if the school has CCTV cameras, he said: ‘Absolutely no, there were no CCTV cameras in the school’.
The DPP, Mr. Babajide Martins, counsel representing Lagos, and Mr. Anthony Kpokpo, who was representing Dowen School however informed the court that the said legal advice sought tendered by the witness and which Mr. Falana SAN has cross-examined him with has not been front-loaded to them.
Kpokpo said: “It has become part of the deceased family to present documents that have not been front-loaded. We will not be able to continue with the cross-examination as a result of the surprises being pulled on us. “This is regrettable,” he said.