The Supreme Court of Sierra Leone has decided that a trial for alleged murder at the High Court between the State and the former Skye Bank General Manager, Ikubolaje Nicol be done by a Judge and Jury.
The four Judges, Justices Vivian Solomon, Mohamed Deen-Tarawally, Alusine Sesay, and Jamestina King unanimously agreed that the accused has a right to the same treatment for fair trial as others who have faced murder charges since the abolition of the death penalty in 2021.
Presiding, Justice Solomon in her twenty-seven (27) page ruling said that the court has not been made aware of any greater risk to the public, any need for a trial by Judge alone, any issue which requires a more specialist inquiry than a layman could make, any risk or actual incident of jury tampering, and in short, there is no demonstrable risk to the administration of justice.
Justice Solomon also said that the court has received no evidence and heard no submissions as to what distinguishes the case of Ikibolaje Nicol and what makes it one in which a jury should not be used. In the absence of such evidence, she said that the decision appears to be arbitrary and is to deny him his rights under the constitution.
“It is my view that in the interest of justice, the second respondent herein will not receive a fair trial were I to accept that he can be tried by judge alone. To do otherwise will set a dangerous precedent. The interest of Justice is best served when all prosecutions are conducted and seen to be conducted objectively, fairly, impartially, and with integrity to help secure justice for victims, witnesses, accused persons, and the general public” said Justice Vivian Solomon.
A fair trial for murder before the passing of the abolition of the death penalty Act in 2021 she said would have meant a trial by judge and jury adding that such right has not been abrogated but only abolished the sentence and not the mode of trial for that special category of offenses. On point thirty (30) of the ruling, she said “The right to jury trial is a fundamental right at common law. Even where parliament sought to limit that right, it retained it for some offenses. Murder is one of them and inserted a safeguard of the general interest of justice.” “The constitution confers extensive powers on the Attorney General. The discretion and extensive powers must be exercised fairly, reasonably, and lawfully.” Justice Solomon cautioned that it is not the role of the prosecutor to seek conviction at all costs but has among other duties in a criminal trial to present the case to the court by assisting the court to arrive at the truth and achieve justice for the victim and the community.
On the 19th June 2023, High Court Judge Justice Adrian Fisher made a thirty-nine-page application to the Supreme Court seeking interpretation for a judge-alone application by the Attorney General in the case of conspiracy to murder, murder, and perverting the course of justice which had been objected to. The Supreme Court on Wednesday 11th October 2023 heard oral submissions from principal state Lawyer Ahmed James Bockarie and Lawyer Roland Wright defending the accused Ikubolaje Nicol.
Lawyer for the state had told the court that Paragraphs 61 and 62 of Justice Adrian Fisher’s ruling at the High Court had addressed the contention on fair trial. Trial by Judge alone he said is the sole discretion of the Attorney General or the Director of Public Prosecution “We’re applying the law and not departing” he submitted.
Asked by Justice Vivian Solomon to reference any other matter of murder pending trial at the High Court for which the Attorney General has made an application for judge alone he said none so far. The other matters relating to murder which are before Justice Adrian Fisher pending the determination of Ikubolaje he told the court are all by judge and jury but said that the applications for those had been made earlier.
Justice Alusine Sesay informed him that setting a bad precedent has its implications and that the matter before them at the Supreme Court is a big task.
Lawyer Roland Wright defending Ikubolaje Nicol argued that the state in their written submission did not address the questions and issues raised by the High Court which were before the Supreme Court and also failed to distinguish between the principles generally and how such issues affect the accused personally thereby believing that they (the state) are restating their initial position. He said that all cases after the abolition of the death penalty and even after his client Ikubolaje had been charged with murder and two other counts have been tried by the judge and jury. Therefore, he asked why the case of Ikubolaje should be tried by a judge alone. Even the Attorney General’s office he further submitted had not cited any case that has been tried without a Judge and Jury since the abolition of the death penalty.
The Attorney General Mr. Wright said is in contravention of section 23 of the Constitution which provides for fair hearing. “When you have established a precedent, for due process and fair trial, such precedent should continue” he affirmed. But at the time, the now former Chief Justice Babatunde Edwards who was Chairman of what was initially a five-member panel interjected and said that it was because murder and treason were capital offenses that no longer fall under such category that are punishable by death and rather had been replaced with life imprisonment. Roland Wright thereafter said “Treason and murder have always been treated as a special category of offences which the laws have recognized throughout” “Just treat us as you have treated everyone else” he added.
He continued that a subjective power must be observed objectively. “What we’re asking for is to be treated equally before the law. A subjective power was granted to the Attorney General, and in the exercise of that power, he has consistently allowed all murder trials to go by Judge and Jury from the Abolition of the death penalty, therefore, a precedent has been established” he re-echoed. As a point of caution, Mr. Wright said that what he pointed out as a subjective power should be guided by the Supreme Court. He envisaged a new dispensation might find it very convenient for political opponents to be tried by a Judge alone. His client, former Skye Bank General Manager Ikubolaje Nicol is accused of having conspired together with other persons unknown to murder Sinnah Kai Kargbo between 15th and 16th October 2022, at Leicester village in the Western Area.
On the 17th of October 2022, at the Criminal Investigation Department (CID), he is also alleged to have fabricated evidence with intent to pervert the course of justice.
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