A 28-year-old burglary suspect and secondary school dropout, Olamilekan Olaoluwa, has been
arrested by policemen from the Iponri division after breaking into a two-bedroomed flat on Brickfield
Road, Ebutte Meta, Lagos on Sunday around 2pm, while the occupant was away.
Punch reports that he removed a Plasma TV from the wall where it
was hung and packed the clothes, wristwatches and a handset of his
victim.
Not done, he proceeded to the kitchen and opened the fridge where he picked a can of malt to refresh himself.
He was still entertaining himself when the owner of the apartment came in and found the suspect with the loot.
She
was said to have raised the alarm, drawing the attention of residents
who beat up the suspect before handing him over to the police.
Olaoluwa, who claimed to have spent six years to train as a plumber, said he did not have a job or a place of abode.
He said he broke into his victim’s house because the gate was left open.
He
said, “I am a secondary school dropout. I do not have a permanent place
of abode, but I sometimes sleep in the Oko Baba Sawmill in Ebute-Meta.
“I
don’t always steal from people. On Sunday, November 22, around 2pm, I
was passing by when I saw that the gate was slightly opened and that
made it easy for me to enter.
“I broke the padlock and entered
the sitting room where I removed the Plasma TV. I then entered the
bedroom and took the woman’s husband underwears and wristwatches.
“I
also took the handset and the TV’s remote control. I opened the fridge
and took a can of malt and drank it. I was going downstairs when I saw
the woman. She asked who I was and what I was doing in her house.
“I asked her not to shout, but she shouted and people came inside the house.”
It was learnt that the suspect hid himself in a corner of a room in the house, but was found after an intense search.
Some hoodlums allegedly beat him up before he was handed over to the police.
The
police said the suspect was arrested with the Plasma TV valued at
N150,000; two wristwatches valued at N50,000; underwear estimated at
N10,000; a mobile phone valued at N5,000, adding that everything summed
up to N215,000.