How Nation Journalist has found himself in Monica Kimani’s murder case

Monica Kimani, the slain business woman who resided in Kilimani has seen Kenyan Journalists get dragged in her murder case.

Monica was found by her brother in a bathtub in her Kilimani apartment dead with her throat slit.

Her murder saw the arrest of Joseph Irungu alias Joe Jowie, a fiance to Citizen TV’s journalist Jacque Maribe, after reports from neighbors showed that Jowie was the last man seen at Monica’s residence on the fateful night of her murder.

Jowie’s arrest dragged TV girl Maribe into the case after it was found that it was her car that was used by the prime suspect.

Maribe was sought by police detectives to record a statement over the murder case where she told the police that she is the one who drove Jowie to hospital after an attack that saw him shot.

However, reports later emerged that Jowie shot himself to cover up the murder case.

Later, a neighbor to Maribe, Brian Kassaine was arrested after investigations from police established that he was the one who handed over the gun to the killer.

His arrest has left a Nation Media Group employee wounded and hurt on the digital space.

While the real Kassaine is now in police custody, had no traces on the internet, his namesake is a writer at Nation Media with photos, profile and his digital footprints a search engine away.

The 24-year-old writer shares the exact name with a suspect in Monica Kimani’s murder, a man who is being investigated after detectives traced a gun used in a shooting incident on that night to his house.

Brian Kasaine, Nation Media writer who shares his name with murder suspect (PHOTO/Nation )

In an interview with Sunday Nation’s Elvis Ondieki, Brian Kasaine revealed that sharing the name with the suspect (Brian Kassaine) had subjected him to cyberbullying, incessant calls, sleepless nights and an anxiety that could not let him work.

Kasaine was forced to visit the Directorate of Criminal Investigations (DCI) headquarters on Wednesday to clear his name after local news sites carried his photos in place of the real suspect.

His photos were circulating on social media that he was the one being investigated by the police and that the gun used by Joe Irungu was found in his house, adjacent to where the fiances, Maribe and Jowie lived.

“I got the first call at around 8 p.m, from one of the members of the Writers’ Guild Kenya. She is in Mombasa. The moment I picked the call, she said, ‘Oh, I’m so happy you’ve picked, because it means you are not the one.’ I was surprised and I asked her what was going on,” recalls the Nation Writer.

Being fresh from campus, his lecturers saw his photos on a local publication and sought to find him. A lecturer called him asking about the arrest that had been reported in several stories with his photos.

Worse was boiling and awaiting his soft-spoken personality on Twitter. Given that he doubles up as a motivational speaker, Kenyans on Twitter could not have enough of him, thinking he was the real Kassaine.

LEFT: Mr Brian Kasaine, 24, a writer and motivational speaker during the interview at Nation Centre, Nairobi. RIGHT: Brian Kassaine, the suspect in Monica’s murder. PHOTO/COURTESY

In a number of the tweets he admits having read, they described him as a murderer by night and motivational speaker by day.

Kasaine is an employee of KenyaBuzz, a Nation Media Group product. He intends to get legal redress from a number of media houses that had wrongly placed him in their stories, thinking he was the suspect.

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