Boy who impregnated cousin when they were both 14 loses appeal

A 17-year-old boy who impregnated his cousin when they were both aged 14 has lost an appeal against his sentence.

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A 17-year-old boy who impregnated his cousin when they were both aged 14 has lost an appeal against his sentence.

The boy had petitioned the high court to find that he was discriminated against because he was prosecuted alone yet they were agemates at the time he committed the offence.

The teen from Murang’a County lodged an appeal with the local courts on February 1 arguing that the trial was defective and discriminatory because his cousin was not charged with the same offence.

The particulars of the charge were that the boy, on unknown dates in December 2017 in Murang’a County, defiled the girl who was then 14 years old.

He was convicted and committed to a borstal institution for nine months followed by two years in probation.

But in his appeal, he had argued that, as a boy child, he was discriminated against by failing to also charge the complainant who had equally defiled him.

The teenager also claimed that the trial was defective for failing to order an assessment of his age contrary to section 143 (1) of the Children Act.

The Section requires that where a suspect appears to be under 18, the court should seek to ascertain the suspect’s age. The teenager argued that this was not done.

He said all these made his trial a sham. However, Murang’a high court judge Justice Kanyi Kimondo disagreed with him.

“When the appellant took a plea, the court noted that the appellant was a minor. In answer, the appellant said that he was 15 years. The court asked the prosecutor to provide a copy of his birth certificate. The certificate was placed on the court record on 20th August 2019,” Justice Kimondo ruled.

“The trial court was alive that it was dealing with a minor throughout the trial and sentence. It had even ordered for appointment of a counsel before the appellant’s family secured the services of an advocate. The learned trial magistrate was equally cognizant that her sentence had to conform with section 191 of the Children Act,” he added.

Got him a lawyer

Justice Kimondo also pointed out that the court sought an advocate for the boy before his family got him a lawyer.

The judge also dismissed claims that the appellant did not comprehend the proceedings and pointed that his lawyer cross-examined all witnesses, at length.

The intercourse between the two minors occurred on a number of occasions in December 2017 at his parents’ home in Kangema and they were both aged about 14 at the time of the offence.

The girl in question had told police that he had forced her into sex but when she took to the stand, she said it was consensual and that she had made the earlier statement to appease her mother.

When she was examined by the clinical officer on July 8, 2018, she was found to be 29 weeks pregnant with a due date of September 29 of the same year.

She bore a sickly child who died a few months later.

Justice Kimondo, in a ruling delivered on April 8 this year, said this rhymed well with her evidence that she had intercourse with him in December 2017.

The judge ruled that any doubt of the defilement was completely erased by the DNA report dated March 4, 2019, produced by Constable Anne Njeri, a police officer who investigated the case.

“It concluded that there are 99.99 + % more chances that he MMM is the biological father to MK who is SWK’s child,” Kimondo said.

He set aside the sentence handed down by the lower court and substituted it with an order that the boy is placed in the Nairobi Probation Hostel for 12 months under the Probation of Offenders Act.