RIP bro
Bad Cop Kills A Local Businessman In Kenya
Duration: 3:12
Views:
11K
Submitted: 4 months ago
Submitted by:
Peter Wamiti Mwangi, a police officer, has been identified and charged with the murder of George Gathu Matheri, a 40-year-old businessman, shot dead in cold blood in Karatina, Nyeri County.
CCTV footage has shattered every lie told to protect this crime.
It shows George alive, calm, unarmed. Two uniformed police officers armed with AK-47s confront him at a petrol station. George turns and walks away. He is not fighting. He is not threatening anyone. He is not aggressive. He is just a man trying to leave.
They follow him.
They quicken their pace.
They surround him.
And then Peter Wamiti Mwangi raises his gun and shoots George in the neck at close range.
That is not policing. That is an execution.
After killing him, the system moved fast to insult our intelligence. Police claimed George tried to snatch a gun. The CCTV exposes that claim as a deliberate lie. Eyewitnesses were right. The camera was merciless. The bullet told the truth.
George was murdered because an officer with a gun, authority, and zero emotional control decided a Kenyan life was worth nothing.
This is the same script we’ve seen before. Boniface Kariuki shot dead while selling masjs at protesters during protests in the case of Albert Ojwang.
Now George Gathu Matheri shot in a similar manner.
Different names. Same bullets. Same uniforms. Same cover-ups.
Why are police officers, paid by taxpayers and armed with weapons bought using taxpayers’ money, turning those guns on the very people they are sworn to protect? How many more Peter Wamiti Mwangis are roaming our streets in uniform, protected by silence and power?
This did not happen in a vacuum.
When leaders like Murkomen openly tell police to “use guns confidently” and promise them lawyers, they are not fighting crime they are manufacturing killers. They are telling officers that consequences don’t matter, that the state will shield them, that Kenyan lives are cheap.
George was a businessman. A son. A human being. He should be alive today.
Instead, his blood is now evidence of a broken policing system, rotten leadership, and a culture of impunity that treats citizens as enemies.
Charging Peter Wamiti Mwangi is not justice.
Justice is accountability all the way up.
Justice is ending the policy of bullets before brains.
Justice is stopping executions masquerading as law enforcement.
Kenyans are watching.
The cameras are watching.
And the lies are no longer working.
George’s death will not be buried with him.
CCTV footage has shattered every lie told to protect this crime.
It shows George alive, calm, unarmed. Two uniformed police officers armed with AK-47s confront him at a petrol station. George turns and walks away. He is not fighting. He is not threatening anyone. He is not aggressive. He is just a man trying to leave.
They follow him.
They quicken their pace.
They surround him.
And then Peter Wamiti Mwangi raises his gun and shoots George in the neck at close range.
That is not policing. That is an execution.
After killing him, the system moved fast to insult our intelligence. Police claimed George tried to snatch a gun. The CCTV exposes that claim as a deliberate lie. Eyewitnesses were right. The camera was merciless. The bullet told the truth.
George was murdered because an officer with a gun, authority, and zero emotional control decided a Kenyan life was worth nothing.
This is the same script we’ve seen before. Boniface Kariuki shot dead while selling masjs at protesters during protests in the case of Albert Ojwang.
Now George Gathu Matheri shot in a similar manner.
Different names. Same bullets. Same uniforms. Same cover-ups.
Why are police officers, paid by taxpayers and armed with weapons bought using taxpayers’ money, turning those guns on the very people they are sworn to protect? How many more Peter Wamiti Mwangis are roaming our streets in uniform, protected by silence and power?
This did not happen in a vacuum.
When leaders like Murkomen openly tell police to “use guns confidently” and promise them lawyers, they are not fighting crime they are manufacturing killers. They are telling officers that consequences don’t matter, that the state will shield them, that Kenyan lives are cheap.
George was a businessman. A son. A human being. He should be alive today.
Instead, his blood is now evidence of a broken policing system, rotten leadership, and a culture of impunity that treats citizens as enemies.
Charging Peter Wamiti Mwangi is not justice.
Justice is accountability all the way up.
Justice is ending the policy of bullets before brains.
Justice is stopping executions masquerading as law enforcement.
Kenyans are watching.
The cameras are watching.
And the lies are no longer working.
George’s death will not be buried with him.
Categories:
Crime & Lawlessness