Losing my job turned me into a car thief-man confesses
According to
the Inspector General of Police Special Intelligence Response Team, which was
saddled with tracking down the gang, the suspects dispossessed motorists of
their vehicles, which they sold off in Jos, Plateau State.
IRT’s
investigation revealed that the gang robbed their victims with a locally-made
gun.
A member of
the gang, said to be the contact man, Jethro Jammal, connected the gang to the
receiver of their stolen goods in Jos.
After an
investigation that culminated in a raid, all the members of the gang were
arrested by operatives of the IRT.
Thirty-six-year-old Awusa, is a native of Delta State and
graduate of Accountancy from the Federal Polytechnic, Bida, Niger State.
In his
statement, Awusa went into the details of his journey into crime.
According to
him, he graduated from polytechnic in 2007 and went to work for a popular
eatery in Kaduna State where he was paid N52,000 monthly as store keeper.
He said, “I
worked there for one year and left when I got another job at an advertising
company in Abuja as a marketer.
“I earned
N175,000 monthly and I worked with the company for two years and six months
before I was sacked in 2013.
“I could not
secure another good job and decided to go into crime four years after in
February 2017.
“I started
with one of my friends known as Gabriel, who also lost his job and our first
operation was on the Nnamdi Azikiwe Expressway, Kaduna State, where we
collected a Honda Pilot SUV from its owner after he ran into a ditch during a
downpour at the Federal Cooperative College end of the expressway.”
According to
Awusa, when he and his friend saw the owner of the vehicle making frantic
efforts to pull the vehicle out of the ditch, they approached and offered to
help him.
But once
they gained access into the vehicle, they zoomed off.
He said, “I
drove the vehicle to Jos and I called one of my friends who resided there,
Jammal and told him about a vehicle I had for sale.
“He took me
to one Bala, who claimed he had links to people who buy stolen vehicles. I was paid N300,000 for the vehicle. I gave Bala and Jethro N80,000 to share, then
gave Gabriel, who stole the vehicle with me N50,000. I kept the rest.”
Awusa said
in their second operation in March 2017, they robbed a woman in Kaduna State
along the Tafawa Balewa Way while she was withdrawing money from an ATM.
According to
him, they waited for her from a distance and pounced on her as she attempted to
enter her car.
They robbed
her of her money and zoomed off in her car.
Awusa said,
“The car was a Toyota Corolla and we didn’t sell it because Balla who bought
the Honda Pilot SUV cheated us too much.
“We kept the
Corolla and drove it around for a few hours because we knew that there would be
no police checking point on the road.
“We were
also looking for money to change the plate number and procure new vehicle
papers. We did not do any other job until August 2017, when Jethro called me
and said he was broke.
“He said he
needed money and that he had a locally-made gun and two boys – Gerald Naboth
and Simon Brown – who could join our operation.”
It was learnt
that on their third operation, the gang robbed a drunk man of his Peugeot 406.
Awusa said
they found the man drunk and vomiting. They then took his wallet which had
N6,000 in it and sped off in his car.
The car was
taken to Abuja where it was sold to a man who had reputation of buying stolen
cars.
“He said
that he did not buy stolen cars but that he would link me to someone who could
buy the stolen cars. I did not know that
the person he was linking me to was a policeman. I was arrested eventually and then led the
police in arresting five members of my gang.
“This
operation was supposed to be my last operation because I had decided to
relocate to Delta State, where I had secured a job as a teacher in a secondary
school. I have decided to be a changed person.”
Ibia on the
other hand, is a 27-year-old Benue State indigene, who claimed to have become a
criminal “by accident.”
He said in
his statement that he was working at a bakery and that he met Awusa at a
bakers’ conference in Kaduna.
He said, “We
became friends and discussed how much it would cost to start a bakery. Later,
there was a time we attended a party at the Cooperative College, Kaduna. We saw a man outside, who had a problem with
his car and was helpless, his vehicle was inside a gutter. We decided to steal the man’s vehicle.
“That was
why I said I came into crime unknowingly.
I did not follow them to the last operation, but the vehicle we got from
the second operation was with me. We had planned to use it for a taxi around
Kaduna and we were looking for money to change the papers. But I abandoned the vehicle at a checkpoint
at Marabarido area of Kaduna and ran away when I saw policemen.
“After I was
arrested, I took policemen, who arrested me to the place where I abandoned the
vehicle and we couldn’t find it. I
regret getting myself into crime. I have even got another job in a bakery in
Kachia Local Government. That was where I was arrested.”
Also
arrested in the raid was Naboth, 25, who graduated in 2009.
He said
Jethro got him involved in the crime after he complained to him that his wife
was pregnant and was about putting to bed.
He said he
needed money to take care of his unborn child.
One of the members of the gang, a food vendor,
Bala Mamah, a 37-year-old Plateau resident, said he got involved through
temptation.
Comments