Mr. Admire Rubaya, the businessman Ronald Nyandoro‘s attorney, informed the State that he intended to seek for discharge after the State had finished its investigation.
This comes after Mr. Lance Malloch Brown, the last witness for the State, stated that he was unaware of any transactions between James Landon and Nyandoro. Mr. Brown said under cross-examination that he was unaware of any arrangement between Landon and Nyandoro and that he was unsure of the identity of the original registration book’s owner.
The magistrate is supposed to rule on the matter on June 5, which has been postponed. There are accusations against Nyandoro for car theft.
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Landon, the complainant, stormed out of the courtroom during Kirk Woest’s testimony at a prior hearing after Woest accused him of calling the police to his home.
The first State witness, Mr. Woest, stated during the same session that he thought Landon was using the Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission (ZACC) to get even with him for disclosing the specifics of the car purchase. Landon, according to Mr. Woest, was punishing him for telling him what had happened during the deal.
In addition, Mr. Woest disclosed that he had lost two cars that ZACC had seized on the grounds that their documentation was incomplete. He described a conversation in which he and Nyandoro decided that the car was up for sale. He clarified that he purchased the vehicle under that agreement


















































