Th
ree Keyan police police officers and an informant have been found guilty in the murder of three men, a human rights lawyer, Willie Kimani, a journalist, Joseph Muiruri, and a taxi driver, Josephat Mwenda, whose bodies were found dumped in a river in 2016.
The police officers, Fredrick Leliman, Stephen Cheburet and Sylvia Wanjiku as well as the informant, Peter Ngugi, were found guilty by Justice Jessie Lessit of a Nairobi High Court on Friday of intentionally killing Kimani, his client Mwenda and Muiruri on 23 June, 2016.
At the time, Kimani who worked for the International Justice Mission, a U.S.-based rights group, was representing Mwenda, who had accused Leliman of shooting him for no reason at a traffic stop in 2015.
The killing of Kimani who was a popular attorney and the equally popular journalist sparked days of violent demonstrations and a strike by Kenyan lawyers demanding an end to the extra-judicial killings by police in the country.
The protests later turned violent when taxi drivers who held separate protests on behalf of their colleague, set fire to the police station where the three victims were believed to have been held before they were killed.
When the bodies of the victims were recovered, Mwenda’s testicles had been crushed and his skull was fractured, and the other two bodies had injuries from a blunt object.
The high court judge was presented with gruesome detail on how Kimani was abducted while leaving a law courts in Nairobi and tortured and killed along with Mwenda and Muiruri.
The four convicts will be sentenced at a later date after the judge gave them a period of appeal.