The High Court in Accra has sentenced one Otis Kwadwo Antwi, a driver, to life imprisonment after he was found guilty of the murder of a 35-year-old spray painter, Emmanuel Okai, in Mpohor.
A seven-member jury panel on Friday, November 22, 2024, returned a unanimous guilty verdict against the accused after a full trial.
With the decision of the jury bound by the Court, the presiding Judge, Justice (Mrs.) El-Freda Dankyi, sentenced him to life imprisonment in accordance with the law.
The prosecution, led by Mrs. Sefakor Batse, a Principal State Attorney (PSA), had called seven witnesses whose testimonies eventually secured the conviction of the accused.
Both the prosecution and the defense lawyers had previously addressed the jury on their respective arguments.
It was the case of the State Prosecutor, Mrs. Sefakor Batse, the PSA, to the jury that the accused, considering the gory injuries he inflicted on the deceased, “clearly intended to cause the death of the deceased.”
She said the harm was not accidentally inflicted, but “clearly done intentionally to ensure that the victim would die.”
The PSA said the deceased was “slashed with a sharp object at his side, leading to his organs spilling out.”
Mrs. Batse said there were cuts all over the face and body, and “there was evidence that he had been dragged on the road over a distance.”
She said the “horrible” nature of the slash on the deceased’s body “was surely intended to cause death and nothing else.”
Defense’s Case
Counsel for the accused (now convict), Akwasi Opoku Agyemang, who was holding Joe Debrah Esq.’s brief, said what the prosecution had done was “to raise suspicions and speculations but not credible evidence which should lead the jury to return a verdict of Guilty on the accused.”
He said the key aspects of the prosecution’s case had been left hanging by a thread on suspicions and speculations when “they should be incontrovertible” and lead the jury to “conclusively determine” that the accused person was there with the deceased and killed him.
Counsel said that the standard of proof the prosecution is by “statute required to present to you (jury) in proving the guilt of the accused should, beyond reasonable doubt, lead to the guilt of the accused.”
“The so-called lies and inconsistencies they accuse the accused person of must not absolve them from their statutorily-mandated duty to provide evidence leading to only one irresistible conclusion,” Counsel told the jury.
Summing Up
Justice El-Freda Dankyi, on Friday, November 22, summed up the trial for the jury while reminding them of the position of the law, the elements that ought to be proven by the prosecution to secure a conviction, and all necessary evidence before the court on the matter.
The judge also took time to direct the jury on the implications of their verdict and the binding effect that it will have on the families of both the accused and the deceased, as well as the larger community.
The accused was charged with murder contrary to section 46 of Act 29, and his plea was taken on March 10, 2021. A jury was empaneled.
On April 14, 2021, both the prosecution and defense addressed the court and the jury before the prosecution called seven witnesses to establish their case.
Brief Facts
The brief facts of the case were that the accused (now convict), Otis Kwadwo Antwi, is a driver who resides at Mataheko near Michel Camp, Tema.
Meanwhile, the deceased, Emmanuel Okai, also known as Yaw Amoah alias ‘Yaw Home Use,’ was a 35-year-old auto spray painter who doubled as a car dealer.
The prosecution narrated that on June 6, 2015, the deceased called the complainant in the matter to release his (complainant’s) unregistered 2010 model Toyota Rav 4 vehicle, which he had put up for sale, to him (the deceased) as he had found buyers in Takoradi.