Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest news as they happen

    What's Hot

    Lagos Assembly puts stop to Makoko demolition

    February 3, 2026

    American Gospel Singer Ron Kenoly Passes on at 81

    February 3, 2026

    U.S. fighter jet intercepts Iranian drone 

    February 3, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Megastar Magazine
    • Politics

      IPOB Bans Use of “Emma Powerful” Alias, Unveils New Communication Framework

      February 3, 2026

      Defence Minister Christopher Musa Signals Plan to Join APC, Opens Up on Foiled Coup Risks

      February 3, 2026

      Momodu Backs Aigboboh, Targets Agric Boom In Etsako Central

      February 3, 2026

      Minister Nyesom Wike Declares Political Interest in Oyo State Chapter Growth

      February 3, 2026

      Governor Agbu Kefas Defects to APC in Landmark Shift

      February 2, 2026
    • Entertainment
      1. People
      2. Events
      3. Fashion
      Featured
      Entertainment February 3, 2026

      Kendrick Lamar Surpasses Jay-Z for Most Career Grammy Wins Following GNX Sweep

      Recent

      Kendrick Lamar Surpasses Jay-Z for Most Career Grammy Wins Following GNX Sweep

      February 3, 2026

      Toyin Abraham reacts to Kunle Afolayan’s ₦10m box office release

      February 3, 2026

      Abike Dabiri-Erewa features in Netflix’s Aníkúlápó, debuting

      February 3, 2026
    • Business

      Standard Bank  Successfully Closes USD 250 Million Strategic Financing For Aradel Energy

      January 28, 2026

      FG launches $25m vessel financing scheme to raise indigenous shipping

      January 23, 2026

      Nigeria’s cashew sector rakes in over $400m through exports – FACAN

      January 23, 2026

      Oxygen X Achieves Dual ISO Certifications, Reinforcing Commitment To Security, Trust, And Business Resilience

      January 20, 2026

      Dangote Appreciates Cement Distributors At Awards Nite, Splashes N15bn In Gifts, Cash 

      January 16, 2026
    • Health

      Federal Government Activates Emergency Response to Mitigate Public Health Impacts of Climate Change

      February 3, 2026

      Nutrition Experts Detail Health Benefits and Limits of Daily Fruit Juice Consumption

      February 3, 2026

      Nigeria Quadruples Nursing Enrollment in Major Health Sector Reform

      February 2, 2026

      Southwest Nigeria Integrates Vaccination Campaigns with Culinary Education to Tackle Malnutrition

      February 2, 2026

      Lagos Hospital Performs West Africa’s First Robotic Gynecological Surgery

      January 26, 2026
    • Culture

      Billionaire’s Son Wahab Okoya Faces Public Backlash Over Claims of National Progress

      February 2, 2026

      IFC and Terra Kulture Finalize Partnership to Expand Nigeria’s Creative Economy

      February 2, 2026

      Venice Carnival Commences with Winter Olympic Tribute

      February 2, 2026

      Ooni of Ife Concludes 2026 World Obatala Festival with National Prayer

      January 26, 2026

      IShowSpeed’s Lagos Tour Showcases City’s Culture Amid Viral Street Drama

      January 24, 2026
    • Lifestyle

      NCC Reports Rise in Urban Internet Speeds to 20.5Mbps Amid Widening Rural Connectivity Gap

      January 30, 2026

      Lagos Creative Retail Weekend Positions African Brands for Global Market Access at 2026 Showcase

      January 28, 2026

      APPOEMN Set to Host “Owambe 5.0” in Lagos, Reviving Nigeria’s 1940s Classic Party Culture

      January 24, 2026

      IShowSpeed’s Lagos Tour Showcases City’s Culture Amid Viral Street Drama

      January 24, 2026

      Posthumous Tribute: Honouring The Enduring Legacy of Captain Hosa Okunbo @ 68 

      January 7, 2026
    • Sports

      Atletico Madrid Reach Agreement to Sign Ademola Lookman in ₦66 Billion Deal

      February 2, 2026

      South Africa bid for WAFCON hosts replacing Morocco

      February 2, 2026

      Juventus Wary of Victor Osimhen Threat Ahead of Champions League Clash with Galatasaray

      February 2, 2026

      Ethiopian Runners Secure Double Victory at 25th Anniversary Dubai Marathon

      February 1, 2026

      Fifth seed Rybakina defeats Sabalenka to win 2026 Australian Open final

      January 31, 2026
    • Contact
    YouTube Facebook Instagram WhatsApp
    Megastar Magazine
    Home » DADA V THE STATE: POLICE AND SECURITY OF LIFE (1)
    News

    DADA V THE STATE: POLICE AND SECURITY OF LIFE (1)

    Ifetayo AdeniyiBy Ifetayo AdeniyiDecember 18, 20259 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email Telegram
    Share
    Facebook Twitter WhatsApp Telegram Email

    DADA V THE STATE: POLICE AND SECURITY OF LIFE (1)

    ‘The security and welfare of the people shall be the primary purpose of the government.’ – Section 14 (2) (b)

    INTRODUCTION

    Section 4 of The Nigeria Police Establishment Act 2020 provides that ‘the police shall be employed for the prevention and detection of crime, the apprehension of offenders, the preservation of law and order, the protection of life and property and the due enforcement of all laws and regulations with which they are directly charged, and shall perform such military duties within or outside Nigeria as may be required of them by, or under the authority of this or any other Act.’

    In many jurisdictions of the world the police are in charge of security of lives and property and they deal with the civil populace in common matters of crime detection and investigation.

    The deployment of the armed forces would only occur in rare cases involving threat to national security, sovereignty or territorial integrity of the nation. The constant or permanent presence of soldiers on the streets of any country indicates a failure of its policing system. In simple terms, section 33 (1) guarantees to every person the inalienable right to life when it states that ‘every person has a right to life, and no one shall be deprived intentionally of his life, save in execution of the sentence of a court in respect of a criminal offence of which he has been found guilty in Nigeria.’

    An underfunded, inefficient, ill-equipped and corrupt police system constitutes a grave threat to the security and lives of the people that it was established to protect and secure.

    Indeed, such valueless organization erodes national development which cannot co-exist within a state held down by terrorists, bandits, kidnappers, armed-robbers and other criminals.

    In the peculiar circumstance of Nigeria however, the police deserve some commendation, if one takes into account the sacrifices of their men and officers, who buy their own kits, pay for virtually all their working tools and even take over the provision of infrastructure, such as buying generators to power their offices.

    Some of them who are fortunate to secure allocations in the barracks, which is defined to be ‘a housing characterized by extreme plainness or dreary uniformity’, or ‘a structure resembling a shed or barn that provides temporary housing’, have bitter tales to share. You can best imagine the state of the dwelling places of police officers that are expected to burst complicated crimes and crack very knotty cases.

    This may be why the police authorities will require a special task force to enforce the presidential directive on the withdrawal of policemen from private duties because some of them will surely prefer the life of private policing than the trauma of public service.

    FUNDING FOR THE POLICE

    In the case of Dada v State, we have the examples of brave police officers who defied the odds to track the accused person. They deployed the limited technology available for positive use in following all the leads that came their way, and they embraced community policing by working with the people to unravel the hidden mysteries of the dastardly criminals.

    In Dada v State, we have policemen who must have resisted the filthy lucre to compromise investigation. I have focused on the cases of Saheed v The People of Lagos and Dada v State to highlight the need to fund the police for greater effectiveness and to make the point that if properly funded and equipped, the Nigeria Police Force can perform their statutory roles creditably, like their counterparts in other jurisdictions. Permit me to share with you the facts of Dada v State.

    REGULATING PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION

    As shown in the case of Saheed v The People of Lagos that was reviewed in my previous articles on this point, Dada v State has brought to the fore an urgent and pressing need to regulate public transportation. Cases of ‘one chance’ by which criminally-minded persons deploy small buses and their private cars to perpetrate crime are very rampant. Commercial motorcycle riders popularly known as Okada have become a menace, especially as instruments of crime. These motorcycles are used in night and daylight robberies, kidnapping, banditry and even terrorism. But the people have little or no choice than to patronize them in the absence of an organized public transportation regime.

    The absence of an effective data regime for this vital sector of our national life also poses great danger to the security of lives and property of the citizens.

    But for the diligence of the police officers involved in the investigation of this case, the positive collaboration with the community and the efficient prosecution, the appellant would have gotten away with the crime.

    THE FACTS OF THE CASE

    The facts of this case as reported in (2025) 17 NWLR (Pt. 2014) 213 are that the appellant was accused of kidnapping an eight-year-old girl, Mercy Ogunseye.

    He was subsequently charged to court for the offence of kidnapping contrary to section 3 of the Anti-Kidnapping and Anti-Abduction Law of Ondo State, 2010.

    At the trial, PW3 (a commercial motor cycle rider) testified that he gave a commercial ride to the appellant and the victim on his motorcycle on the day of the incident at about 4.30pm. PW3 described how the victim was seated sandwiched between him and the appellant on the motorcycle during the ride. PW3 said he noted that the appellant’s right hand was deformed because he dipped his left hand into his right hand’s side pocket to retrieve his fare for the ride, and handed it over with his left hand. PW3 testified that the appellant was the only passenger he had that day with a deformed right hand. Similarly, PW5 testified that he saw the appellant with the victim on PW3’s motorcycle at 5.00pm.

    PW5 said he gave up his turn to ride with PW3 to enable PW3 to give the commercial ride to the appellant and the victim. He corroborated the evidence of PW3 that the victim sat sandwiched between PW3 and the victim on the motorcycle. He testified that before PW3 returned to give him a ride, he (PW5) had walked to his destination. PW5 said he is a relation of the father of the victim (PW2), that he knew PW1 (the mother of the victim), and also knew PW3 before the day of the incident.

    He said that when the victim was being searched for, he identified PW3 as the person who transported the appellant and the victim on the previous day and was also able to describe the appellant and his deformed right hand to PW1 and PW2.

    The respondent also tendered the appellant’s confessional statements, but the appellant objected to its admissibility on grounds that the Investigating Police Officer (PW4) induced him to make the statements by promising that he would help the appellant get off the hook if he confessed to the crime. After a trial-within-trial, the trial court ruled that the confessional statements were voluntarily made, and it admitted them in evidence.

    In its judgment, the trial court found the case against the appellant proved, convicted him of the offence of kidnapping contrary to and punishable under section 3 of the Anti-kidnapping and Abduction Law of Ondo State 2010, and sentenced him to death.

    The appellant appealed to the Court of Appeal, which affirmed the conviction of the appellant, but allowed the appeal in part on the sentence and, in its stead, imposed a sentence of life imprisonment. Still dissatisfied, the appellant appealed to the Supreme Court which dismissed the appeal.

    THE JUDGMENT

    The Three Ways of Proving Commission of Crime:

    The three ways by which the prosecution can prove its case are: (a) Evidence of eye witnesses; (b) The confessional statement of the accused person; (c) Circumstantial evidence. In the instant case, the evidence of PW3 fixed the appellant at the scene of the crime.

    The appellant did not challenge PW3’s description of his deformed right hand. There was no appeal against the identification of the appellant by the PW3 as a man with a deformed right hand.

    Similarly, the PW5 had seen the appellant with the victim on the motorcycle of PW3. PW5 knew PW1 and PW3 prior to the incident. And when the victim was being searched for, PW5 was able to identify PW3 as the commercial motorcycle rider who gave the appellant and the victim a ride the previous day. PW5 was also able to describe the appellant to PW1 and PW2 (the mother and the father of the victim).

    Further, PW5 stated the sitting arrangement of the victim and the appellant on the motorcycle as testified by PW3. In addition, PW5 testified that he knew the victim and would recognize her anywhere.

    The evidence of PW3 and PW5 identified the appellant and fixed him in a close contact with the victim on the motorcycle at the scene of the crime and it is binding on the appellant. And there is no evidence on record that the victim has been seen dead or alive later.

    The direct evidence of the PW3 and PW5 clearly showed the appellant’s direct involvement with the missing victim. Their evidence corroborated the contents of the appellant’s confessional statements exhibit “G” series to the effect that he kidnapped the victim whom he handed over to the 2nd accused person who was with some other persons unknown to him on a promise of being paid N150,000.

    The Probative Value of Eye Witness Account:

    An eyewitness account is the best evidence in criminal trials and carries much weight. The evidence of an eye witness in any criminal proceedings is considered the best evidence worthy of belief and deserving of probative value in favour of the party’s case.

    An eyewitness testimony is usually the finest evidence in a criminal trial. In the instant case, the evidence of the prosecution witnesses was not contradicted by the appellant or challenged; it was overwhelming, to say the least, contrary to the argument of the appellant that the conviction of the appellant ought not to stand outside the confessional statements of the appellant.

    By EBUN-OLU ADEGBORUWA, SAN

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticlePastor Chris Okafor Weds Amid Controversy With Nollywood Actress
    Next Article Itele joyful as ‘Koleoso’ tops Nigeria’s 2025 most searched series
    Ifetayo Adeniyi
    • Website

    Adeniyi Ifetayo Moses is an Entrepreneur, Award winning Celebrity journalist, Luxury and Lifestyle Reporter with Ben tv London and Publisher, Megastar Magazine. He has carved a niche for himself with over 15 years of experience in celebrity Journalism and Media PR.

    Related Posts

    News February 3, 2026

    Lagos Assembly puts stop to Makoko demolition

    News February 3, 2026

    American Gospel Singer Ron Kenoly Passes on at 81

    News February 3, 2026

    U.S. fighter jet intercepts Iranian drone 

    News February 3, 2026

    NIWA Prioritizes Staff Welfare and Stakeholder Engagement to Shed Legacy of Waterway Mishaps

    News February 3, 2026

    FG reserves N881m to strengthen non-oil exports

    News February 3, 2026

    Senator Oshiomhole Faces Public Backlash Over Private Jet Footage Following ‘Cheap Food’ Claims

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Don't Miss
    News February 3, 2026

    Lagos Assembly puts stop to Makoko demolition

    Lagos Assembly puts stop to Makoko demolition Elegbede Abiodun House declared all ministries…

    American Gospel Singer Ron Kenoly Passes on at 81

    February 3, 2026

    U.S. fighter jet intercepts Iranian drone 

    February 3, 2026

    UBA Group Declares Loknath Mishra as CEO UBA UK

    February 3, 2026

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest news as they happen

    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    Our Picks

    16th Edition Of Face Of Edo, 10th Edition of Face Of The World Nigeria Beauty Pageant Hold In Benin.

    November 11, 2021

    A Better Society Is Possible

    December 2, 2021

    Prophet Joshua Iginla Buries Mother In Grandstyle As Ooni Of Ife, Wife, Top Dignitaries Storm Ekiti

    October 31, 2021
    New Comments
    • Anozie okolo on Supreme Court Affirms President Tinubu’s Victory As Atiku, Peter Obi Lose
    • Mc richman on Nigeria and South African Music histories
    • Moses Ibrahim on Olu of Warri: Pictorial @ The Ogiame Atuwatse III Economic Summit.
    • Sen Rich Kay on MALARIA ERADICATION: Prince Ned Nwoko & NMEP Meet for joint action.
    Megastar Magazine
    YouTube Facebook WhatsApp Instagram
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use
    • Contact Us
    © 2026 Megastar Magazine. Designed by MANNDI

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.