Sarah Wairimu who is the key suspect in her billionaire husband's murder case on Wednesday through a formal application asked the court to permit her access her house.
Through her lawyer Philip Murgor, Wairimu asked the court to grant her access to her house which is a scene of a crime to collect her personal belongings.
According to court papers, she listed clothes, shoes, books, artwork, photographs and two dogs - Rottweiler breed and a Doberman breed - as some of the things she wants to pick from her house.
She further listed a music system, golfing equipment, television sets, generator, beverages and perishable foodstuff in her kitchen.
Wairimu also asked the court to grant orders to have DCI release her car and provide a dust cover for her house's furniture saying that she has incurred huge expenses in buying new wears forcing her to depend on relatives and friends.
“The applicant has lost a significant source of income and is therefore only capable of meeting her immediate subsistence needs and is constrained to further meet the cost of the purchase of new items,” the court papers read.
Wairimu in a renewed battle with the DCI told the court that she has been denied inventory of all her belongings yet she remains innocent until proven guilty.
“DCI is in illegal possession of the applicant’s home and her property which amounts to a gross violation of the applicant’s right to property under the constitution,” she stated.