Audio By Carbonatix
Exactly six years ago on 6 July 2014, hiplife recording artist Theophilus Tagoe, popularly known as Castro, disappeared with Miss Janet Bandu at the Ada Estuary while on holiday with the Gyan brothers and friends.
Castro and Miss Janet Bandu were reported to have drowned following a jet ski accident at Ada Estuary.
While the jet ski involved in the accident was recovered on the same day of their disappearance, their bodies were not, despite a search by the police. The pair remain missing to date.

Recounting events surrounding Castro’s disappearance, Gyan said, that was the first time they went to Aqua Safari and that in the previous years, they went to Akosombo.
That particular year, the yacht at Akosombo had broken down, hence, they decided to go to Ada.
“A day before we went to Ada, he [Castro] came to my house and said he was on his way to Kumasi and would not join us. But whilst we were on our way to Ada, on the Accra-Tema motorway, we received a phone call that “Under” [Castro] wants us to wait for him."
"We parked at a fuel station where a crowd gathered to catch a glimpse of me. I later got the inclination it was destined to happen because he was initially not part of the trip. When we got to Ada, everything went fine. We were to spend three days, but ended up using the Jet Ski on the second day”
By the Laws of Ghana, Castro and Miss Janet Bandu can only be declared legally dead by a court after seven years.
According to The Evidence Act of 1975, Section 33, a person can only be declared legally dead after seven years by a court, where the person in question has not been seen or heard from in seven years despite diligent and persistent efforts to find him.

Castro De Destroyer, real name, Theophilus Tagoe, was born in 1982. His debut album, Sradenam, released in 2003, shot him to public prominence and he followed up with subsequent hit albums including 'Toffee', 'Comm Centre' and 'African Girls'.
He earned the accolade, “The Destroyer” which was attached to his Showbiz name because most of his songs became instant hits. He was also called 50 Cent by close pals due to his striking resemblance to American rapper and artiste, 50 Cent.
Castro endeared himself to many with the release of 'OdoPa' which featured Asamoah Gyan and Kofi Kinaata.
In the year 2006, he won the Hiplife Artiste of the Year as well as the Hiplife Album of the Year at the Ghana Music Awards with his song “Toffee”. At the 2011 Ghana Music Awards, he won the Best Hiplife Song of the Year which featured Asamoah Gyan with the song “African Girls”.
A number of colleague musicians are still hopeful Castro will return but when and how remains the mystery puzzle.
Latest Stories
-
Young African professionals urged to drive innovation to build a resilient future
22 minutes -
Education is a fundamental enabler for achieving all SDGs – Mahama
23 minutes -
Mary Addah says Office of Special Prosecutor was flawed from day one
32 minutes -
Cecilia Dapaah, Ofori-Atta cases ‘entrenched distrust’ in OSP – Mary Addah
58 minutes -
A dangerous experiment – Sam Okudzeto questions foundation of OSP
1 hour -
Corruption is still everywhere – Sam Okudzeto says OSP missed its mission
2 hours -
Scrap it – Sam Okudzeto says Special Prosecutor’s office has achieved nothing
2 hours -
Golden Globes 2026: The full list of nominees
3 hours -
DiCaprio’s One Battle After Another leads Golden Globe nominations
3 hours -
New mpox strain identified in England
3 hours -
Why has Paramount launched a hostile bid for Warner Bros Discovery?
3 hours -
White South Africans divided on US refugee offer
3 hours -
Australia’s social media ban for children has left big tech scrambling
3 hours -
Trump gives Nvidia green light to sell advanced AI chips to China
4 hours -
Dozens injured after magnitude 7.5 quake strikes northern Japan
4 hours
