Court bars State from preferring criminal charges against Murgor sisters

By , K24 Digital
On Tue, 22 Mar, 2022 16:45 | 2 mins read
Murgor sisters; Stephanie and Cheryl in the company of their uncle and lawyer Philip Murgor. PHOTO/Courtesy

The State has temporarily been barred from preferring criminal charges against Murgor sisters by the Kibera Law courts, pending the hearing of a case challenging their prosecution.

In a ruling delivered by the High Court, Judge Antony Mrima issued conservatory orders staying the prosecution of the two sisters at the magistrate court.

The sisters, Cheryll and Stephanie Murgor, were set to face charges for affray and assault on three people on Wednesday March 23, 2022.

"Pending hearing and determination, inter partes, of this application, an order is issued staying the criminal proceedings against the Petitioners herein in the Magistrate’s Court Criminal Case No. E388 of 2022, Republic –vs– Cheryll Chelimo Murgor, Munyra Hassan Mohammed, Samuel Dennis Ramdas and Patrick Kipngetich Koech," ordered Mrima.

The ruling comes after the two sisters, through their uncle cum lawyer Philip Murgor, moved to court seeking orders to bar the DPP from prosecuting them.

On March 11 ,2022 Kibera court issued summons against the Murgor sisters to take a plea in a dramatic confrontation incident with the Ndichu brothers namely Paul and Eddy, who are facing assault charges.

A charge presented in court, indicates that Cheryl and Stephanie Murgor are to be charged with affray contrary to Section 92 of the Penal Code for fighting each other at the reception of Emara Ole Sereni hotel which is a public place.

The incident took place on October 16, 2021.

According to court documents filed in court, the two sisters argued that the intention to prosecute them is a contravention of their fundamental rights to a fair trial, fair administrative action and amounts to an abuse of the legal process.

"The illegal and unconstitutional actions by the DPP Noordin Haji amounts to an act of corruption and abuse of office, as it is not supported by sufficient evidence or at all," reads the court papers.

Murgor says that on the night of October 16 and 17, 2021, the two sisters were brutally assaulted by the Ndichu brothers and Munyra Hassan Mohammed in one of the most notorious and clear-cut cases of Sexual and Gender-Based Violence (SGBV) in Kenya in the recent times, which was fully captured on CCTV.

Murgor urged the Judge to intervene in the matter arguing that the two sisters risked being charged in a criminal court.