Tag: Eastleigh killings

  • Detectives Discover Terror Links In Eastleigh Murder Suspect, ATPU Joins Probe

    Detectives Discover Terror Links In Eastleigh Murder Suspect, ATPU Joins Probe

    The Anti Terror Police Unit has joined a probe into the activities of murder suspect Hashim Dagane Muhumed.

    The team wants to understand if Hashim could have been a terror recruit operating in Nairobi.

    This is after it emerged he had traveled to Turkey for unknown mission. While there, he impersonated a Nairobi businessman and used his image to extort money from unsuspecting online users, investigations show.

    Hashim is believed to have been taken to Turkey by terrorist group for yet to be known mission.

    Teams are investigating how Hashim, a suspect in the murders of four women including a 12-year-old girl in Eastleigh, Nairobi acquired a Kenyan identity card, despite apparent evidence he may not be Kenyan.

    Appearing before the National Assembly’s Administration and Internal Affairs Committee, Inspector-General of Police Douglas Kanja confirmed that Hashim arrived in Kenya from Ethiopia recently and somehow obtained Kenyan documentation.

    He said a key red flag is that while Hashim claims to be a Kenyan, he does not speak Kiswahili, English, or any local dialect.
    “We had to get an interpreter when interrogating him.

    We want to know how the man acquired the Kenyan identity card,” Kanja told the committee.

    Investigations also revealed that Hashim has four wives, one of whom he is suspected of murdering.

    On November 3, a public tip-off led to Hashim’s arrest.

    It has emerged he and his mother were also suspects in a murder incident of their landlord in Ethiopia.

    They later left for Kenya after serving a brief sentence.

    While in Kenya, Hashim used clan elders and some political leaders in Nairobi to fraudulently obtain an ID.

    All those involved in the chain of acquiring the document have been identified and efforts to get them for explanation are ongoing, detectives said.

    “We believe some politicians and clan elders helped him to corruptly get the ID.

    We are getting them all,” said an investigator aware of the investigations.

    The issue has unveiled a lid in the cartel involved in issuance of identity cards at a fee exposing the country to many security dangers.

    “This is just one case and we understand there is a former chief leading in this evil mission.”

    Investigations so far suggest Hashim had posed to be from Garissa County’s Ogaden clan.

    He claimed to be from Sankuri, and of Yahye family, and that he was born on January 1, 2000 in Lago, Balambala.

    His issued ID number is fake and belongs to someone else, officials say.

    It has emerged his real name is Mahat.

    Immigration officials have revealed he had traveled to Turkey.

    Hashim is under probe over the murder of four women in the city. His motive is yet to be known but police believe he was a terrorism recruiter.

    Detectives are investigating past over mysterious disappearance and murder incidents with Hashim as the possible suspect.

    Investigations show Hashim wanted to marry his latest victim Deka Abdinoor Gorone.

    The body of Deka was found boiled with an unknown chemical and dumped at the Langata cemetery in Nairobi on October 31.

    The family of the woman has revealed the suspect and his victim were in love and wanted to marry her.

    was in love with the murder victim Deka.

    Hashim is also a prime suspect in the brutal murder of family members – a mother, daughter and 12-year-old niece – whose bodies were found dumped separately in Nairobi and Machakos.

    The family of Deka revealed Hashim had twice approached her parents, asking for their hand in marriage but his proposals were rejected.

    Hashim was from Ethiopia while Deka comes from Wajir in Kenya.

    Deka was deeply in love with Hashim, and her friends say she was heartbroken by her parents’ refusal to approve the marriage proposal.

    Even after the disapproval, Deka continued to see Hashim, spending time with him even as her friends and family expressed concerns.

    She did not know he was a killer as he had done the same in Ethiopia on his wife.

    Deka was raised in Wajir and later moved to Nairobi where she worked at a restaurant in Starehe’s Ushirika area.

    She was last seen on October 21, the same day the bodies of three Eastleigh women were found separately.

    Deka’s family grew worried when she did not return home and was absent from work.

    When the news of the discovery of the three bodies broke out, the family thought she was among the victims.

    They visited mortuaries to confirm that in vain.

    They continued to search for her.

    The family suspected that she was with Hashim, as he was the person she spent time with.

    On October 24, Deka’s family reported her missing at California Police Station.

    This triggered Hashim, a trained police officer in Ethiopia to throw a spanner to the saga.

    The family’s anxiety was temporarily relieved when they received a voice note from Deka, saying she had left the country but did not know where she was.

    They did not know this was the work of Hashim. He had done this to confuse them and slow down the search for Deka.

    In the recording, according to police and the family, she claimed to be safe.

    Hashim also contacted one of his relatives in a separate recording claiming he had been arrested and needed money.

    When the relative asked about Deka’s whereabouts he claimed she had “migrated”, suggesting she had left the country.

    Deka told her mother in the recording she was out of the country and was traveling to an undisclosed location by bus.

    In the message, Deka expressed her sorrow for not being able to care for her ailing mother, apologising for not providing the financial support her mother needed.

    ” I am currently on a bus heading to a place I do not know,” she said in the recording.

    Days later, according to the family, the woman’s mobile phone activities were erratic as for instance would be offline, only coming online occasionally to send voice messages.

    Deka’s mobile phone and some body parts are still missing.
    Hashim’s mobile phone, Deka’s ID and several other items were recovered in ongoing investigations.

    A second suspect was arrested in Eldoret over the murder of Deka.

    Police said Jared Mong’are was arrested and several exhibits among them a blood stained panga believed to be the murder weapon recovered.

    He was presented in Makadara law courts on Friday and police allowed to detain him for 21 days.

    Acting on intelligence leads, the detectives established that Mong’are, who was smoked from his hide out in Eldoret town, is the person who, not only handled all payment transactions relating to the clients stay at Lavington Valley Heights Apartment, but is also the person who drove them to the venue in a Toyota Vitz that has since been recovered at Ngara Civil Servants estate and towed to DCI headquarters for forensic examination.

    Also established is that the room where Hashim checked in with Deka was being operated as a short stay by a Kilimani-based businesswoman, who subleased the room from the apartment owner paying a monthly rent of Sh55,000.

    However, the owner issued a notice of rent increment starting November 2024, forcing the lady to send movers to move out her stuff on November 1, 2024.

    This was a day after cctv cameras captured the prime suspect (Hashim) leaving the room on October 31.

    The police summoned the owner identified as Alice Mbinya, who was investigatively interviewed at homicide offices to shed more light on the case in question.

    Mbinya indicated that the stuff she had moved from Valley Heights Apartment were still intact as packaged by the movers, and that some had been dropped at her residential house in Kilimani and the rest at her other business in Gatundu.

    She then led the detectives to her home where the said stuff was unpacked, therein discovering a handbag which she indicated was not part of her belongings.

    The same is believed to belong to the murdered victim.

    The search was furthered to Gatundu where the second batch of the stuff from the primary scene had been stored.

    Therein, a blood-stained panga and another set of exhibits similar to those recovered at Langata Cemetery were recovered.

    And just like at the house where the murder was committed, notable were the efforts made by the suspect to clean any traces of blood, but not perfectly enough by someone in a hurry.

    Detectives have also established that the prime suspect was handling the victim’s mobile phone or sim card, which he used to call her family members several times.

    A forensic trail of his communication took the officers back to Lang’ata cemetery, where they combed the entire area, discovering a phone stashed in a bag that also contained clothes resembling those seen won by Deka Abdinoor Gorone, his possible victim.

    A shopping receipt from a leading supermarket helped uncover the identity of Deka

    She had checked to the room she was killed before she went to a supermarket in the area for some shopping and paid using her mobile phone.

    She picked up a receipt and put in her pocket before leaving as captured on CCTV cameras there.

    At the scene, the police recovered a receipt the woman had been issued with at the supermarket.

    Her body and some few items had been wrapped in a black paper bag and dumped there.

    The receipt later proved crucial as it contained crucial details that have helped police identify the woman.

    The receipt included the supermarket’s name, time of purchase, and payment method, indicating payment via M-Pesa, the mobile number used and other details.

    Police visited the supermarket in Nairobi’s central business district and were able to retrieve crucial data on the customer who transacted it.

    They then traced the mobile phone number used to pay at the supermarket, registered under the name Deka Abdinoor Gorone.

    Police say an analysis of the woman’s mobile phone records revealed frequent communication with another phone number registered linked to Hashim.

    The team then traced her last movements to an apartment in Lavington where she is said to have spent time with Hashim.

  • How A Supermarket Receipt Gave Detectives A Breakthrough In Linking Eastleigh Murder Suspect To Lang’ata Horrific Killing

    How A Supermarket Receipt Gave Detectives A Breakthrough In Linking Eastleigh Murder Suspect To Lang’ata Horrific Killing

    A supermarket receipt has helped  Nairobi police solve the puzzle of a severely mutilated body found near Lang’ata Cemetery.

    On October 31, authorities discovered the dismembered and boiled body of Deka Abdinoor Gorone, a resident of the California Estate in Nairobi, dumped at the Lang’ata Cemetery entrance.

    Investigators have now identified her alleged killer as Hashim Dagane Muhumed, a man linked to other recent murders in Nairobi.

    The investigation into Deka’s death began when her family reported her missing on October 24, a report filed at the California Police Station. Detectives tracked her last known movements following her disappearance thanks to CCTV footage, a series of digital trails, and, crucially, a receipt from a supermarket near her last known location.

    Deka’s last known sighting was in Nairobi’s Lavington area, where she had travelled to meet Hashim. The two checked into a short-stay room. Before joining him, CCTV footage captured Deka shopping at a nearby supermarket, where she paid via M-Pesa, Kenya’s mobile payment system. After collecting her receipt, she placed it in her pocket and exited the store, unaware of its significance.

    Police searching the scene recovered the receipt after discovering her body in a black plastic bag near the cemetery. They used it as a critical lead, identifying the supermarket and retrieving transaction details. Through digital forensics, they traced the mobile number used to pay for the shopping to Deka’s registered M-Pesa account, confirming her identity.

    When detectives reached out to her family, they were able to identify her as Deka, the woman seen on CCTV. The family, already distressed by her unexplained disappearance, was devastated by the grim discovery.

    The victim Deka Abdinoor Gorone and her alleged killer Hashim Dagane Muhumed.

    Upon identifying her, detectives intensified their investigation by scrutinising her phone records. They discovered a string of conversations using a phone number belonging to Hashim, the primary suspect. This connection led them to an apartment in Lavington, where Deka had allegedly spent her last hours in the company of Hashim.

    During a search of the apartment, authorities discovered some of Deka’s personal belongings, including her shoes and handbag. They also recovered a panga, a machete-like tool believed to have been used in the murder. CCTV footage from October 31 shows Hashim leaving the apartment with two bags, which police suspect contained Deka’s remains, later dumped at Lang’ata Cemetery.

    Use of chemicals

    Detectives believe the killer used a chemical to meticulously strip the bones of flesh. The motive behind the murder remains unclear, though Hashim’s connection to several murders suggests a disturbing pattern of violence.

    Hashim’s background only deepened the horror surrounding the case. Investigators discovered that he was previously a regional police officer in Ethiopia before moving to Kenya. In Nairobi, he worked as a driver at various schools in Eastleigh and managed to blend into the local community.

    This isn’t Hashim’s first brush with the law. He had already been linked to the murders of three members of a family in Eastleigh: Amina Abdirashid, her aunt Waris Dahabo Daud, and her niece Nusayba Abdi Mohammed. Despite this history, Hashim remained elusive, shifting between Eastleigh and Lavington while occasionally venturing as far as Somalia and Ethiopia to evade capture.

    The search for Hashim took a critical turn when an informant tipped off the police about his whereabouts. Surveillance footage from November 2 captured Hashim casually leaving a building in Eastleigh, which he frequented to scout for taxi customers. This sighting triggered an intensified manhunt, with investigators closely monitoring his movements through forensic trails and employing digital tracking to narrow down his location.

    After days of evading arrest, Hashim finally surrendered when police surrounded the building where he was hiding. Realising escape was impossible, he was taken into custody on Sunday. Police discovered multiple fake identification documents in his possession, including a counterfeit Kenyan ID, raising questions about how he had managed to operate under the radar for so long.

    With Hashim in custody, police are working to unravel the motive behind Deka’s killing. They are also investigating whether he had accomplices who helped him carry out the elaborate cover-up and dispose of the evidence. Among the unanswered questions is the whereabouts of Deka’s mobile phone, from which her family reported receiving a call on the day of her discovery.

    The landlord of the Lavington apartment, now missing, is also cited as a person of interest. After Hashim’s departure, the landlord reportedly repainted the rooms and cleared any evidence of the crime before disappearing, suggesting possible involvement or knowledge of the events that transpired.