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Protest as appeal court upholds acquittal of six police officers accused of k!lling Nigerian man in Switzerland

topnaijanews.com 2024/10/6
Protest as appeal court upholds acquittal of six police officers accused of k!lling Nigerian man in Switzerland

An appeal court in Switzerland on Monday, July 8, 2024, confirmed the acquittal of six police officers charged with negligent homicide and abuse of office in the case of a Nigerian man, Mike Ben Peter Amadasun, who died during an arrest. 

The Vaud Cantonal Court rejected an appeal against the original not-guilty verdict last year.

According to the court, the emergency services reacted proportionately.

Monday’s ruling sparked immediate protests and chants of “Shame!” outside the courthouse. 

Around 80 people crowded outside the court in Renens outside Lausanne in western Switzerland, shouting: “Black lives matter!”, “Justice for Mike”, and “Police kill, the judiciary acquits!”

LIB reported that 39-year-old Mike had resisted a drug check in Lausanne and died whilst being arrested by the six accused police officers in 2018.  

In the encounter with the six police officers, he was pinned to the ground on his stomach. He died in hospital a few hours later after suffering a heart attack. 

During the first trial in June last year, a court in Lausanne ruled that the six officers involved could not be found guilty of negligent homicide.

The public prosecutor’s office also decided to drop the charges, referring in particular to forensic analyses that were unable to state with certainty that Ben Peter died due to the police intervention. 

After three days of hearings last week at the cantonal appeals court in Renens, three judges confirmed the lower court ruling, acquitting the officers of negligent homicide. 

They also acquitted them on additional charges of abusing their authority, brought by the lawyer of Ben Peter’s family, Simon Ntah. 

Ben Peter’s family sat across the courtroom from the six defendants and their lawyers to hear the verdict, which took over an hour and 20 minutes to deliver in a packed courtroom. 

During the first trial, the judges relied heavily on forensic expert testimony to reach their conclusion. They agreed with the conclusion reached by experts that it was impossible to say for certain that Ben Peter died due to the police intervention.

The judges also found that the officers had not wrongfully violated their duty of care. 

“Mike must get justice, no matter what. We still move forward,” his widow Bridget Efe told reporters outside the court. 

“They know that they did wrong. They know what they did. “Killing my husband, making my children fatherless, and they will go home to their various homes and live happily with their children? Never. “Justice will be served for my husband.” 

Christian Favre, the lawyer for the first police officer who intervened with Ben Peter, said the court had put challenging questions to the defendants. 

“The verdict which is rendered today — much more developed than the lower court verdict — is really a very strong confirmation of their acquittal,” he told reporters afterwards. 

He said the defence lawyers were “relieved, happy, but not surprised” by the ruling, which he claimed was “strong, it is well reasoned, it examines all the points. And it is not rendered lightly. 

As they left the court building, defence lawyers were loudly booed by demonstrators who chanted “racist justice” and “shame on you”

Protest as appeal court upholds acquittal of six police officers accused of k!lling Nigerian man in Switzerland
Protest as appeal court upholds acquittal of six police officers accused of k!lling Nigerian man in Switzerland
Protest as appeal court upholds acquittal of six police officers accused of k!lling Nigerian man in Switzerland
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