Cynthia Osokogu, the young student who was murdered in July
2012 by some of her Facebook social media friends, was asphyxiated,
that is: suffocated to death through blockage of air into her lungs....Cynthia
came to Lagos cos her friends made her believe they had a business deal for her.
They lodged her in a hotel in Festac and it was there they killed her by spiking
her drink and messing with her body. They later recorded a video of their act! Read the hotel receptionist's
account of the incident here and watch the murderers speak HERE.
In his testimony before the court
today, the Chief Pathologist of Lagos State, John Oladapo Obafunwa, said the
postmortem he carried out alongside five other colleagues on September 6 showed
that the deceased died of blockage of air into the upper part of the air
ways.
Efforts by Victor Opara, the counsel to
the first defendant, Okwumo Nwafor, to prevent Mr. Obafunwa’s testimony from
being taken failed as Justice Olabisi Akinlade insisted the trial was too
important to be delayed with flimsy excuses.
The Chief Pathologist, who is also Vice
Chancellor of Lagos State University, said he first saw the corpse on July 23 (a
day after the fateful day of Cynthia’s murder.
“The body was naked; the two hands
tied to the back with brown tape and supported with padlock; the two legs were
also taped together,” he said. “The mouth was stuffed with head net and
handkerchief, also tied with brown tape round the head to secure the materials
in the mouth.”
Mr. Obafunwa also said there were
pin-point holes in the white eye of the corpse as well as inside the upper part
of the air ways and surface of her lungs, a condition he termed as ‘petechial
hemorrhage’.
The pathologist's testimony further
revealed that the deceased had suffered pulmonary Oedema, an overweight of the
lungs from being soaked by blood.
“The left and right lungs weighed 400
and 500 grams respectively… due to blood accumulation”, he said, noting that the
normal weight would be 250 to 350 grams.
Apart from her death resulting from
asphyxia, the pathologist also said also observed that the deceased had multiple
bruises and abrasions suspected to be from biting.
His testimony further strengthens the
belief that a dose of ‘Rophynol’ sold to the suspects by a pharmacist, Osita
Orji, was not responsible for Cynthia’s death.
Mr. Akinlade adjourned to trial 24th
and 21st May, 2013.
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