Wednesday, August 21, 2024 - An accused serial killer dubbed “a vampire” and suspected of murdering 42 women has escaped from custody with 12 other detainees, Kenyan officials said Tuesday, September 20.
Mohamed Amin, the head of the nation’s
Directorate of Criminal Investigations, said Collins Jumaisi
Khalusha of Kenya and other suspects from Eritrea had been allowed to
escape from Nairobi’s Gigiri police station with the help of eight
officers, including the station commanders.
Officials claim the inmates cut through a
wire mesh in their cells and scaled a perimeter wall, with top brass only
learning of the escape when officers went to the cells to serve the detainees
breakfast.
After the escape, police found several cell
phones and a machete in Khalusha’s home when they did a search there.
“Our preliminary investigations indicate
that the escape was aided by insiders, considering that officers were deployed
accordingly to guard the station,” Amin said.
“This was a high-value suspect who was to
face serious charges,” Amin said of Khalusha, 33 — who police have described as
“a vampire, a psychopath.”
“We are investigating the incident and will
take action accordingly,” Amin said.
The breakout occurred after officials
ordered Khalusha to remain under police custody for another week as
detectives continued to investigate the 42 homicides linked to him.
Khalusha was arrested in July after
authorities were made aware of the discovery of 10 mutilated bodies inside a
quarry in Nairobi’s Kware neighborhood.
Officials claim Khalusha confessed to not
only killing the 10 women but 32 others within the span of two years, with the
first victim being his missing wife.
When he was initially taken into custody,
Amin described the suspect as a “psychopathic serial killer who has no respect
for human life.”
Khalusha’s lawyer, John Maina Ndegwa,
previously told reporters that his client was innocent and that his confession
was made after he was allegedly tortured by police.
Ndegwa said he last spoke to his client
Friday when the court ordered him to be held for seven more days, with the
lawyer baffled over the prison break.
“I’m also confused by the news,” he told
The Associated Press.
The eight officers accused of helping
Khalusha and the other inmates escape are now facing disciplinary measures,
according to acting Police Inspector General Gilbert Masengeli.
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