Audio By Carbonatix
The Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP) has published wanted notices for three individuals involved in ongoing investigations related to corruption and corruption-related offences.
First on the list is Anthony Gyasi, also known by his aliases Nana K. Gyasi, Nana Gyasi, and Nana.
Born on September 29, 1989, and currently 34 years old, Gyasi stands at a height of 1.73 meters. He has brown eyes, black hair, and a brown complexion.
Gyasi’s last known address is in Adjen Kotoku, Ga West Municipality, with possible locations in Greater Accra, the Eastern Region, and the Ashanti Region.

He is associated with individuals such as Sessah Kofi, Ibrahim Faustina, Cobbinah David, Abeku Fynn, and Emmanuel Newton.
Gyasi is wanted for his involvement in corruption, bribery, and abuse of public office for profit.
The second individual is Francis Asare, born on February 1, 1997, making him 27 years old. Asare has brown eyes, black hair, and a brown complexion.
His last known address is in New Fadama, Accra. He may also be found in the Greater Accra and Eastern Regions.
Asare is known to associate with Sadia Alhassan, Sessah Kofi Ibrahim, and Anthony Gyasi.

He is wanted for his involvement in corruption, bribery, abuse of public office for profit, and aiding and abetting other public officers in similar activities.
The third individual is Sadia Alhassan, a 41-year-old woman born on April 21, 1983. Alhassan stands at a height of 1.62 meters, with brown eyes, black hair, and a brown complexion.
Her last known address is Kwaprow, UCC Campus, with possible locations in the Central, Greater Accra, Eastern, and Oti Regions. She is associated with Taibatu Seidu, Karimu Seidu, Joel Ofori, Sessah Kofi Ibrahim, and Francis Asare.
Alhassan is wanted for her involvement in corruption, bribery, abuse of public office for private benefit, and aiding and abetting other public officers to abuse their office for profit.

Any information on their whereabouts should be reported to the OSP at 0554494499 or 0554484488.
The OSP stresses that all individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.
Latest Stories
-
Central Regional Health Directorate probes maternal death at Kasoa Mother and Child Hospital
13 minutes -
GNECC launches 2026 Global Action Week for Education, focuses on bridging digital divide
29 minutes -
Stanbic Bank equips Ashanti journalists with financial skills to boost resilience
30 minutes -
Tom Saintfeit steps down as Mali head coach after two years in charge
34 minutes -
China hands over $56.5 million ECOWAS HQ in Nigeria, expanding influence in West Africa
36 minutes -
Ghana’s UN resolution seeks restitution and healing, not development funding – Ablakwa
40 minutes -
EPA urges public to curb noise pollution on International Noise Awareness Day
1 hour -
Xenophobia: Centre for Global Affairs and Responsible Governance urges AU intervention in South Africa
1 hour -
Maxwell Lukutor secures major funding for three SHSs, 24-hour market in first term push for South Tongu Constituency
1 hour -
Ntim Fordjour demands probe into ‘indecent’ scenes at Accra Carnival
1 hour -
El Niño Alert: Why a possible 2027 heat record could signal droughts, floods and flood risks for Ghana
1 hour -
UMB strengthens its leadership with appointment of Emmanuel Sackey as Group Head of Treasury
2 hours -
Court throws out prosecution witness statements in Buffer Stock trial
2 hours -
Police seek public help to track three fugitives after Adabraka jailbreak
2 hours -
Electronic Communications Act not meant to regulate journalists’ conduct – Inusah Fuseini
2 hours