CCTV Footage Showing the Events Leading to the Death of Sarah Njogu /Citizen
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Detectives investigating the death of 25-year-old socialite Sarah Njogu now suggest the possibility of foul play.
On the night in question, Sarah attended a party at an apartment building in Kasarani. The evening began with Sarah and her companions purchasing drinks from a ground-floor shop before ascending to her friend's apartment. Unbeknownst to the revellers, this ordinary gathering would soon take a tragic turn. At the heart of the investigation lies a complicated love triangle involving Sarah, another woman, and a foreign man whom they both dated.
As the night progressed, tensions escalated culminating in a heated argument between Sarah and her female acquaintance on the balcony. Witnesses report that in the heat of the moment, Sarah plummeted from the second floor. The circumstances of her fall remain unclear, raising questions about whether it was a desperate act of suicide or the possibility of foul play.
Law enforcement officials are meticulously examining statements from the three suspects present that night - two women and a man.
CCTV footage retrieved from the scene captures Sarah's arrival at the shop, the party proceedings, and the balcony confrontation. This video evidence is now under intense scrutiny as investigators seek to unravel the truth behind her fall. The autopsy results have revealed blunt force trauma to Sarah's head and broken ribs, indicative of a violent impact. However, these findings have only deepened the mystery, as experts debate whether the injuries are consistent with a fall or suggest a more deliberate act. While the love triangle theory dominates public discourse, numerous questions remain unanswered.
On June 25th around 2 am, Sarah Njogu's mother received a distressing call. Her daughter had been rushed to St. Francis Hospital in Kasarani after a serious accident. Alarmed, Mary Wanjiru sprang from her bed, only to find the door locked with Sarah having gone with the keys nowhere to be seen. Undeterred, Wanjiru squeezed through a narrow window overlooking the balcony and headed to the hospital. When Wanjiru reached St. Francis, she was horrified to find her daughter lying on the bed with blood flowing from her ears. At the Emergency Room, Sarah was connected to life-saving machines but she was soon transferred to Kenyatta National Hospital.
Comments
Funny how they call Kenyan police....Law Enforcement
For those young women out there who think it is cool aka fashionable to fight over a man grow up.It is foolish and childish.That man you are fighting over will drop you as soon as the next one comes along.Now her family is left behind wondering what if anything they could have done to prevent this.Self esteem and self worth should be taught in school to vulnerable adolescents and teenagers so they grow up valuing themselves not looking to others to prop them up.You should never define yourself by your relationships which just like the ocean tide comes and goes.Marriage and family which in Africa gives women “fake upgraded status “ is just that a myth
Spot on! Knowing value and worth comes self respect, confidence and better judgement!
Surviving 5.8m of the 6.2m YES poop katiba voters should explain why they legalized murder.Listen many freed Railas/Kabogos/Johos boasting how they killed in the many daily YouTube videos to confirm.They are given affordable bond(as low as shs100k yet in US the lowest bond for attempting to kill a Kenyan is $5m)on being charged.Then they threaten or bribe witnesses to weaken the case.The Irungus spend an average of five years in jail in case the loose appeals.I hope cannibal Wanjirû will one day discuss how she remembers Kamangû’s penis inside her body and how she feels while smelling his blood.Gîtaû Kabogo should also do the same.