logo
South African farm worker tok how dem force am to feed pigs wit dead women body

South African farm worker tok how dem force am to feed pigs wit dead women body

BBC News3 days ago
One white South African farm worker wey dey face accuse of killing two black women say im bin dey forced to feed pigs dia deadi body, according to lawyers.
Adrian de Wet na one of three men wey dey face murder charges afta Maria Makgato, 45, and Lucia Ndlovu, 34, die as dem allegedly bin dey look for food for one farm near Polokwane for South Africa northern Limpopo province last year.
Dem allegedly give pigs dia deadi body so dem fit hide di evidence.
Oga De Wet, 20, wey be state witness wen di trial start on Monday say di owner of di farm Zachariah Johannes Olivier shot and kill di two women.
Madam Makgato and Madam Ndlovu bin dey search for dairy product wey go soon expire wey dem dey leave for pigs wen dem kill dem.
Oga De Wet,one supervisor for di farm, testify say im bin under duress wen im bin dey forced to throw deadi bodies inside pig cage, according to both di prosecution and im lawyer.
If di court accept im testimony, dem go drop all charges against am.
Di case dey make pipo vex across South Africa, e don make di racial tensions for di kontri worse.
Dis tension especially for rural areas plenty, despite di end of di racist system of apartheid more than 30 years ago. Most private farmland dey owned by white minority, while most farm workers dey black and dey poorly paid, all dis issues dey fuel resentment among diblack population, while many white farmers complain of high crime rates.
William Musora, 50, anoda farm worker, na di third accused. Him and Oga Olivier, 60, still neva enta a plea and dem still dey prison afta dia bail applications fail.
Di three men also dey face charges of attempted murder for shooting Madam Ndlovu husband, who bin dey wit di women for di farm - as well as possession of an unlicensed firearm and defeating di ends of justice.
Oga Musora, one man from Zimbabwe dey face an additional charge under South Africa Immigration Act sake of im status as an illegal immigrant.
Di Limpopo High Court bin full wit supporters and relatives of di victims ahead of proceedings.
Members of opposition party Economic Freedom Fighters, wey bin don tok bifor make authorities close di famr, all of dem bin dey present inside di courtroom.
Dem don postpone di trial to next week.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

James Patterson to write book about Luigi Mangione
James Patterson to write book about Luigi Mangione

The Guardian

time2 hours ago

  • The Guardian

James Patterson to write book about Luigi Mangione

Bestselling crime writer James Patterson and investigative journalist Vicky Ward are writing a book on the killing of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, while actor Dave Franco said this week that he would be 'open' to playing accused murderer Luigi Mangione in a biopic if one were to be made. Mangione is currently awaiting trial for the murder of Thompson, who was shot and killed in Manhattan on 4 December last year. 'This is a story about the American Dream Gone Wrong,' said Patterson in a statement on the book, which does not yet have a title or release date. 'It's also a story of one young man's descent from Ivy League graduate to notorious accused killer to so-called political martyr.' Mangione, 27, has pleaded not guilty to federal charges of murder, using a weapon with a silencer, and two counts of stalking. The US attorney general, Pam Bondi, said earlier this year that she had directed federal prosecutors to seek the death penalty. 'Like millions around the world, Vicky and I were riveted by coverage of the five-day manhunt from Midtown Manhattan to Altoona, Pennsylvania,' Patterson said. Mangione was eventually arrested in a McDonald's. 'This story touches all of us,' said Ward. 'It goes to the heart of the social, cultural and political issues dividing the US right now. Nothing is more of a reviled black box than the health insurance industry, and it's time to open it up, through a crime that has caught the attention of the country.' The book will be published by Little, Brown in the US, which also published The Idaho Four, Patterson and Ward's recent book on the murder of four students. The news comes in the same week that Franco said he would be open to playing Mangione in a biopic when asked on the talkshow Watch What Happens Live With Andy Cohen on Tuesday. 'No one has approached me about it yet, I'll say that … More people in my life reached out about this exact thing than anything else that has ever happened. Let's just say I am open if it's the right people, and let's leave it at that.' Sign up to Bookmarks Discover new books and learn more about your favourite authors with our expert reviews, interviews and news stories. Literary delights delivered direct to you after newsletter promotion After the shooting, Mangione gained an avalanche of support on social media. The online fandom has sparked criticism for glorifying an alleged murderer. 'The suspect, who police now believe to be Mangione, was a fit young man and I think it'd be mistaken to overlook the degree that likely propelled the story,' Jared Holt, a senior research analyst at the Institute for Strategic Dialogue, told the Guardian in December. 'The other feature of Mangione is one that plays an outsized role in every single point of American life: his race,' wrote Ben Makuch in the Guardian at the time. 'If he were Black or Latino, this story would likely have played out very differently.'

Portland 'serial killer' charged with fourth murder... after woke ex-governor freed him from prison EARLY
Portland 'serial killer' charged with fourth murder... after woke ex-governor freed him from prison EARLY

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Portland 'serial killer' charged with fourth murder... after woke ex-governor freed him from prison EARLY

A suspected serial killer preying on women in Portland has now been charged with a fourth murder as it emerges he was freed from prison early by Oregon 's former Governor Kate Brown. Jesse Calhoun, 40, was indicted Tuesday on one count of second-degree murder and one count of second-degree abuse of a corpse in the murder of Kristin Smith, 22, Multnomah County District Attorney Nathan Vasquez said. Smith's partial remains were found in a field in southeast Portland in February 2023, around two months after she was reported missing in December 2022. For more than two years, Calhoun was named a person of interest in her murder but authorities did not have enough evidence to bring charges until now. Following his indictment, Smith's mother, Melissa Smith, told reporters at a press conference she was ecstatic that Calhoun had finally been charged with her daughter's murder. 'It has been a long and agonizing 898 days since the day I found out Kristin Smith was deceased,' she said. Calhoun was indicted on three counts of second-degree murder and three counts of second-degree abuse of a corpse in the deaths of three other victims in May 2024. Joanna Speaks, 32, Charity Lynn Perry, 24, and Bridget Leanne Webster, 31, were all found dead under suspicious circumstances across the Portland metro area in April 2023. Kristin Smith, 22, was found dead on February 19, 2023. On April 24, 2023 Kristin Smith, 22, (left) was found dead on February 19, 2023. On April 24, 2023, the remains of Charity Perry, 24 (right), were discovered Speaks's body was found first on April 8 in Ridgefield, Washington. Days later, on April 24, Perry's body was discovered in east Multnomah County before Webster's body was found on April 30 in Polk County. Police announced there was a person of interest on the radar back in July 2023 but another 10 months passed before Calhoun was hit with charges. He is also a person of interest in the murder of a fifth woman, 22-year-old Ashley Real, whose body was discovered in May 7, 2023, in Clackamas County. No charges have yet been brought against him in that case. Smith's mom said she was devastated last year when her daughter was not among the victims Calhoun was charged with. 'I cannot explain the agonizing pain I felt that day that Kristin was not one of those girls,' Melissa said. 'I stood strong with other families and was happy they got their answers, and I prayed every day this day would come for me, for us.' In June, she said it was 'gut-wrenching' to come face-to-face with her daughter's suspected killer in court. 'It's hard to look him in the face, and there's a lot I would like to say,' she said at the time. 'We already feel broken. We already feel empty.' Calhoun has an extensive criminal record - including burglary, drug possession and identify theft, according to public records. In 2019, Calhoun began serving a four-year sentence for burglary and theft. But, after serving as a prison firefighter during the 2020 wildfire season, he was granted clemency in 2021 by then-Governor Brown. He was released from the Columbia River Correctional Institution on July 22, 2021, almost one year before his projected release date. During his newfound freedom, he is accused of killing multiple women. By the time he was hit with the first indictment for murder in May 2024, Calhoun had already returned to prison for a separate unknown crime. A trial is set to begin in early 2027.

Alleged killer of Minnesota politician and her husband expected to plead not guilty in court
Alleged killer of Minnesota politician and her husband expected to plead not guilty in court

The Guardian

time3 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Alleged killer of Minnesota politician and her husband expected to plead not guilty in court

The man charged with killing the top Democrat in the Minnesota house and her husband, and wounding a state senator and his wife, is expected to plead not guilty when he's arraigned in federal court on Thursday, his attorney said. Vance Boelter, 58, of Green Isle, Minnesota, was indicted on 15 July on six counts of murder, stalking and firearms violations. The murder charges could carry the federal death penalty, though prosecutors say that decision is several months away. As they announced the indictment, prosecutors released a rambling handwritten letter they say Boelter wrote to the FBI director, Kash Patel, in which he confessed to the 14 June shootings of Melissa Hortman and her husband, Mark. However, the letter doesn't make clear why he targeted the Hortmans or state senator John Hoffman and his wife, Yvette, who survived. The hearing before US magistrate judge Dulce Foster will also serve as a case management conference. She plans to issue a revised schedule with deadlines afterward, potentially including a trial date. Prosecutors have moved to designate the proceedings as a 'complex case' so that standard speedy trial requirements won't apply, saying both sides will need plenty of time to review the voluminous evidence. Boelter's motivations remain murky. Friends have described him as an evangelical Christian with politically conservative views who had been struggling to find work. Authorities said Boelter made long lists of politicians in Minnesota and other states – all or mostly Democrats. In a series of cryptic notes to the New York Times through his jail's electronic messaging service, Boelter suggested his actions were partly rooted in the Christian commandment to love one's neighbor. 'Because I love my neighbors prior to June 14th I conducted a 2 year long undercover investigation,' he wrote. In messages published earlier by the New York Post, Boelter insisted the shootings had nothing to do with his opposition to abortion or his support for Donald Trump, but he declined to elaborate. 'There is little evidence showing why he turned to political violence and extremism,' the acting US attorney for Minnesota, Joe Thompson, told reporters last month. He also reiterated that prosecutors consider Hortman's killing a 'political assassination'. Prosecutors say Boelter was disguised as a police officer and driving a fake squad car early on 14 June when he went to the Hoffmans' home in the Minneapolis suburb of Champlin. He shot the senator nine times and his wife eight times, officials said. Boelter later went to the Hortmans' home in nearby Brooklyn Park and killed both of them, authorities said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store