Bernard Mbusu, Isaac Kinoti Kobia, Evans Muthengi Mutaki and Kelvin Mwangi Njoroge previously appeared in court over the murder of Dunfermline businessman Campbell Scott.
Four suspects in the brutal murder of a Scots businessman, whose decomposing body was found in a sack of pineapples in Kenya, are set to go on trial accused of the violent robbery of another man.
Campbell Scott, from Dunfermline in Fife, was discovered dead with his hands bound in the Makongo forest 60 miles from Nairobi, Kenya, after he went missing from his hotel last February.
The suspects, Bernard Mbusu, Isaac Kinoti Kobia, Evans Muthengi Mutaki and Kelvin Mwangi Njoroge were apprehended at Ideal Apartments, Ukunda in the west African country. They appeared in court earlier this month over the 58-year-old’s murder.
The men have now pled not guilty in a separate case where they are accused of attacking an American man on April 11 at an apartment block in Mombasa. They allegedly stole cash worth around £4,000 as well as a laptop, mobile phone and jewellery worth about £1,100, reports the BBC.
The four men could be released on bail of £5,700 and are due to return to court on May 27. The charges are not linked to the separate investigation into the murder of Campbell Scott.
Police have not commented on the status of the investigation into Scott’s death, and whether the four men remain suspects in the case.
Mr Scott was a senior director at the credit scoring firm FICO and had travelled to Nairobi for a conference prior to his disappearance. He went missing after failing to meet with colleagues to deliver a presentation at the JW Marriott Hotel in the city’s Westlands area.
Mr Scott was known to have visited the Havana nightclub the previous evening. He had been taken to a property in the Pipeline area. His body was later discovered in a pineapple sack with his hands bound.
Kenyan police asked Interpol to help track Mr Scott’s mobile phone and debit and credit card transactions. Previously, a spokesperson for the National Police Service of Kenya described the death as a “heinous, heinous crime” and said it is an “intricate and complex” investigation being led by the country’s homicide unit.
Following the grim discovery of Mr Scott’s body, his workplace Fico said the company was “devastated by this tragic news”. They added: “We mourn his passing and will miss his humour and kindness.”
Mr Scott’s partner, Simon Farrar, previously paid tribute to him. He said: “Campbell really was once in a lifetime and touched many people in many ways. People said everyone should have a Campbell in their life. His generosity was there for everyone. No matter what situation you were in, he was the first to offer help.
“If you needed money he would give you his last penny. He was the absolute love of my life and we made memories I’ll cherish forever. A friend once said ‘where there’s a Campbell, there’s a Simon’. Now there’s just me and the memories. He’s left a huge hole in everyone’s lives that can never be filled.”
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