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Bold Journalist Put DCI Amin on the Spot over Inconsistent Reports: "You Lied on Oath"

Published 5 hours ago2 minute read

Faith Chandianya, a journalist at TUKO.co.ke, brings over three years of experience covering politics and Current Affairs in Kenya

The Directorate of Criminal Investigations (DCI) boss, Amin Mohammed, was challenged by a journalist during his press briefing.

Photo collage of Journalist and DCI boss Amin Mohamed.
A journalist put DCI boss Amin Mohamed on the spot during his press briefing. Photo: K24/Simon Maina.
Source: Getty Images

Speaking on Monday, June 30, the bold journalist asked the DCI boss why Kenyans should believe his statement of not knowing the whereabouts of IT expert Ndiang'ui Kinyagia.

The journalist further stated that Amin had lied under oath before, making it even harder for Kenyans to trust him.

"You lied under oath. Why should Kenyans believe you anymore when it comes to matters of criminal investigations?" the reporter asked Amin.

This question arose from Amin's statement in his Senate testimony on the murder of blogger Albert Ojwang in police custody.

Amin had told the Senate that at 1:35 pm, the Central Police Station officers found Ojwang alive and injured in the cells. Amin also stated that Ojwang' was found harming himself by kicking the cell walls, a narration that the postmortem proved to be wrong.

The Mbagathi Hospital CCTV cameras also showed that Ojwang's body arrived at the medical facility at 1:35 pm, already dead.

"..the cell sentry PC Kimani have visited the cells and have found most of them well apart from the last cell where he found Albert Ojwang' who was alone in his cell making a lot of noise while kicking the cell walls," Amin stated at the Senate.

In his defence, Amin stated that his account of the events leading to Ojwang's death was a verbatim reading of entries from the police official records and not a personal interpretation of how things happened.

"Whatever I said in the Senate, some people who did not mean well for the DCI misinterpreted what I said. What I was reading was from the records in the digital copy, but it was not what the DCI was saying," Amin affirmed.

The DCI boss affirmed that what he submitted to the Senate was based directly on the digital Occurrence Book records that he had received.

"What I read wasn't an opinion from the DCI. It was what had been factually logged in," Amin defended himself.

Source: TUKO.co.ke

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