Rex Masai death inquest: Court orders police arms register be released
File image of the late Rex Masai.
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A Nairobi court
has ruled that Arms Movement Registers must be produced as evidence in the
inquest into the death of Rex Masai, dismissing objections raised by the
officer in charge of the Central Police Station armoury.
In a ruling delivered on Thursday afternoon, the court
rejected the position taken by armoury officer Fredrick Okapesi, who had
declined to surrender the registers unless he was first allowed to review them
to confirm that the Independent Policing Oversight Authority (IPOA) had not
altered the records. His stance was supported by National Police Service
Commission (NPSC) lawyer Elias Ouma.
The Director of Public
Prosecutions, through prosecutor Jalson Makori, urged the court to compel the
production of the registers, arguing that they were central to establishing the
circumstances surrounding Masai’s death.
In allowing the request, the
court emphasised that inquests are inquisitorial proceedings whose primary
purpose is to ascertain the truth rather than determine criminal liability. It
relied on Sections 385 to 387 of the Criminal Procedure Code, particularly
Section 386(1), which empowers the court to summon witnesses and receive any
evidence it considers necessary to uncover the truth in cases of reportable
deaths.
The court further held that
its authority to admit the registers was reinforced by Section 173 of the
Evidence Act, which allows the court to summon and receive any document
required for the just determination of a matter, notwithstanding objections.
While Sections 79 to 82 of the Evidence Act govern the proof
of public documents, the court clarified that these provisions regulate
evidentiary convenience and do not limit judicial discretion in inquests.
Certification under Sections 80 to 82, the court noted, is permissive rather
than mandatory.
The court found that the Arms
Movement Registers constituted primary and material evidence, as they detail
the issuance, movement, and accountability of firearms relevant to the death
under inquiry. It also noted that the registers were lawfully in IPOA’s custody
pursuant to a prior court order, a fact that was not contested.
Accordingly, the court ruled
that the registers be produced as exhibits, underscoring that public interest,
transparency, and the duty to establish the truth outweighed the procedural
objections raised by the armoury officer.


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