A
Nigerian man living in the United States has been charged with murder after his
mother was found dead at her Regency Park apartment in Texas USA.
Dr Hauwa
Esther Kadima, 61, was found dead on July 28 after officers received a call
from her son Daniel Basor Kadima, 31, alerting them of a person believed to be
dead at her apartment
Daniel called 911 about 9 a.m. July 28 and told dispatchers he was calling to report a death, according to the warrant, which was released Monday. When asked when he had last seen the deceased, he responded “yesterday,” police said. Kadima identified himself but did not say the victim’s name or the nature of their relationship.
Daniel called 911 about 9 a.m. July 28 and told dispatchers he was calling to report a death, according to the warrant, which was released Monday. When asked when he had last seen the deceased, he responded “yesterday,” police said. Kadima identified himself but did not say the victim’s name or the nature of their relationship.
Officers
say they arrived and found Hauwa Kadima lying on the floor next to a broken
wooden chair. Initial autopsy findings showed she had fractures to her skull,
with laceration of the brain because of blunt impact to the head. Daniel had
beaten her to death with the chair.
Kadima is
being held in the Gregg County Jail. His total bond is set at $100,005,500. In
a sworn affidavit filed in the Gregg County District Clerk's Office, Daniel's
ex-wife recounted past assaults and abuse from him, including four years ago
when he allegedly head-butted her, breaking one of her teeth and busting her
lip. She said he also would take her keys and lock her outside their apartment,
but also restrain her when she wanted to leave their home.
He also had video
cameras installed in their marital home, video recording their daughter. "He
eventually had a mental breakdown and was arrested multiple times," the
ex-wfe said in the affidavit. "He was committed to a mental health
facility." Mrs. Hauwa's friends described her as a devout Christian, and
well-educated with degrees from Wheaton College. They say she had a vision for
her native Nigeria. "She had a passion for wanting to start a school back
in her hometown. She didn't go back to fulfill her dream," Rev. Mary
Collier says.