When Justice Fails, Who Should Carry Responsibility?
Every time a violent crime shocks the country, attention immediately turns to the suspect. We ask who did it, why it happened, how it happened, and whether the person responsible will finally face justice. But sometimes the deeper question comes later, after public attention begins to settle: what happens when the justice system itself becomes part of the reason dangerous people remain free? This is the question many Kenyans keep asking whenever a suspect accused of serious violence is released, a case collapses, witnesses disappear, evidence becomes weak, or a file fails to hold long enough for conviction. It becomes even harder to ignore when that same person is later linked to another crime, another victim, another grieving family, another preventable tragedy. In many countries, responsibility is not always limited to the final act itself. A bartender can face consequences for knowingly over-serving alcohol to someone who later kills another person because the law recognizes t...