Last month, Josephine Owino, a 26-year-old hair braider, vanished from the Mukuru Kwa Njenga shantytown in Nairobi, Kenya. She went out one morning to meet someone who had called her, never to return.
Desperate to find her sister, Peris Keya, Josephine’s younger sister, sought help from three police stations without any success. It was only after Peris had a vivid dream where Josephine led her to a hill and showed her a pool of water that the search took a chilling turn.
Following Peris’s dream, local men were hired to search an abandoned quarry filled with trash, where they discovered at least 10 sacks containing body parts. This led to a shocking revelation – a suspected serial killer, Collins Jumaisi Khalusha, was arrested by the Kenyan police. He confessed to the murders of 42 women, including his wife, over the past two years, dumping their bodies in the quarry.
The suspect’s lawyer claimed that the confession was coerced through torture, raising doubts among the public about the validity of the arrest. However, the police defended their investigation, stating that forensic analysis of a victim’s cellphone led them to Collins Jumaisi Khalusha.
The gruesome discoveries in the dump, located near a police station, have rattled Kenya, sparking fear and speculation about the identity of the perpetrator behind these heinous crimes.