Titilayo Enemah, sister of Bolanle Raheem, testified in the
trial of Drambi Vandi on Thursday.
Raheem, a female lawyer, was allegedly shot dead by Vandi,
the suspended assistant superintendent of police (ASP), on December 25, 2022.
Enemah appeared before Ibironke Harrison, the presiding
judge of a Lagos high court, as the fourth witness in the murder trial.
‘MY SISTER SAID THE BULLET ENTERED HER CHEST’
During her testimony, Enemah told the court that the
defendant asked the car to stop and pointed the gun towards where her sister
was seated.
She said the deceased shouted her husband’s name after the
bullet hit her.
“I was looking at the police officer who said stop and I saw
him(the defendant) pointing the gun. We had passed the other officer who
initially asked us to stop,” she said.
“I saw him carrying the gun, and immediately we heard a
sound. I thought he used the gun to hit the side window. Immediately, my sister
shouted and said, ‘Gbenga, the bullet has entered my chest’. She said it again.
Her neck just dropped and she closed her eyes.
“I called her, ‘Mummy Semilore’. Immediately, I ran out of
the vehicle to the police officer and said ‘you just shot at my sister’. This
police officer pointed the gun at me, saying ‘I will shoot you’.
“He is the one who shot my sister and he still pointed the
gun at me when I held him.”
Enemah said some boys around the area asked her to hold on
to the police officer.
“After he threatened me, I was scared. Immediately, I saw
two boys coming to the scene,” she said.
“Ordinarily, that place is always busy but that day there
were no boys around. I saw two boys. They said, ‘hold him very well’.
“That gave me the courage. Immediately, I dragged him and
told him to sit near my sister in the front seat.
“He wanted to enter the patrol van, I dragged him and said
you won’t go because you just shot my sister.”
CROSS-EXAMINATION
During cross-examination, Odutola Adetokunbo, counsel to the
defendant, asked Enemah to confirm whether she wrote a statement at the police
station on the day of the incident.
“They were asking me to tell them what happened but I did not write the statement with my hand,” she responded.
“Do you sign the statement,” the counsel asked.
“Yes, I signed it,” she responded.
“Do you see any of the police officers pulling the trigger?”
the counsel asked.
“The only person I saw was him(the defendant). He was
carrying a gun. The bullet came out from the gun and hit my sister,” she said.
“Did you see the bullet?” the counsel asked.
“He(the defendant) was the one holding the gun and facing
her,” she said.
“Did the defendant shoot that gun?” the counsel queried.
“I know that he was the one holding the gun and facing us
with that same gun. Definitely, he was the one that shot the gun. He was the
one,” she responded.
“Why did you find it difficult to put that in your
statement?” the counsel asked.
“I wasn’t myself the day that incident happened,” she said.
“Is it because you were not yourself that you couldn’t
notice who shot the gun?” the counsel queried.
“At the police station, When the DPO asked him who shot, he
could not say anything. My children told me that he said at the police station—
what have I done?” she responded.
“All the witnesses that had appeared before did not say the
defendant shot,” the counsel retorted.
“I know what I saw that day. I couldn’t have seen other
police officers and I still went straight to drag him. He was the one who I saw
and I grabbed him.”
After the cross-examination, the judge adjourned the case to
February 1 and 2.
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