MOMBASA (Reuters) – Four Kenyan policemen will stand trial for murder after a judge ruled on Monday they have a case to answer in the death of British aristocrat Alex Monson, who died in their custody in 2012.
“The accused should tell the court what happened since the deceased was arrested in good health,” High Court Judge Erick Ogolla ruled.
The policemen – Naftali Chege, Charles Wangombe Munyiri, Baraka Bulima and John Pamba – were accused of killing 28-year-old Monson, son of Nicholas, the 12th Baron Monson, and heir to a family estate in Lincolnshire, in eastern England.
Monson was found dead in his cell after being arrested for smoking cannabis.
The police have said Monson died of an overdose, but his mother Hilary Monson told the court that her son had not been a drug addict at the time of his death.
Two reports by government pathologists, seen by Reuters at the time, said that Monson had died after suffering a traumatic blow to the head. An inquest found there had been attempts to cover up the incident, and threats against witnesses.
The ruling is the result of an inquest that began in 2019 in the coastal city of Mombasa in a case seen as a test of whether Kenya’s security services can be held accountable for the use of excessive force and extrajudicial killings.
The judge said he was satisfied with the case presented by the prosecution, which sought to have the four face murder charges over Monson’s death.
The judge said no evidence was presented in court to show Monson was assaulted elsewhere other than within the police station after he was detained.
Forty-five witnesses including police officers testified during the inquest.
(Reporting by Joseph Akwiri; Editing by Elias Biryabarema and Alison Williams)