
Audio By Carbonatix
Crime Analyst and Certified Professional Investigator Ransford Nana Addo Jnr has damned Ghana’s criminal justice system as a failed one that has hardly yielded desired results.
Speaking on Joy FM’s SMS a day after two youngsters were convicted for murder at Kasoa in the Central Region, Ransford Nana Addo says the convicts are paying the price only because they were caught in the act. Had they escaped from their sordid deed, society would be hailing them for whatever benefits their ritual murder would have afforded them.
Nicholas Kini, who was 18 years old at the time he and his then 15-year old friend murdered Ishmael Abdallah, then 10, for rituals to acquire wealth, has been handed a life sentence.
His accomplice who is still a juvenile, will be sentenced by a juvenile court.
Analysing the circumstances of the murder and its outcome, Ransford Nana Addo said he does not think that the Ghanaian society has paid these harrowing crimes the seriousness they deserve.
“Fortunately, it is only these small, small ones that have come to the fore and you hear, but the elephant in the room is that we are all aware that communities are springing up in this country where we have a lot of young people who belong to various groups who have built mansions and have fleets of vehicles and nobody is questioning where they got this money from.
“Our criminal justice system has failed us, because in some jurisdictions what they have used to treat this, is a very, very good law we call ‘unexplained source of wealth’. In our own case, we are still depending on the Criminal Offences Act of 1960, Act 29, where we have positioned ourselves that we need to prove beyond all reasonable doubt that the crime has been committed.
“But how will you explain, assuming these boys killed the deceased, fixed him somewhere nobody got to know, the following year he was driving a Range Rover at the age of 19 or 18, he’s built a new shop for his mother, he’s bought a house in a prime area. As a people, are we saying that all the crimes that will be committed, all we want to see is to see people caught in the act before we trigger our intelligence agencies? It doesn’t make sense. It doesn’t make sense at all for anybody to say that our laws on explained wealth, we should keep it the way it is…?”
Latest Stories
-
Integrity, perseverance critical to Africa’s leadership future – KAIPTC Commandant tells graduates
9 minutes -
Herald editor Larry Dogbey granted bail after contempt conviction
11 minutes -
Government to table Bill to replace 63-year-old rent control law by year-end
12 minutes -
Anabel Rose turns confidence into a dancefloor anthem on ‘Blasé’
25 minutes -
Asuansi Technical Institute inaugurates new board of governors to drive a new era of transformation
45 minutes -
NACOC to roll out new drug detection scanners at Accra International Airport
49 minutes -
Odaw River dredging to be completed in December 2027 – Housing Minister
49 minutes -
Ivory Coast coach slams ‘racist’ comments made by former Germany star Bastian Schweinsteiger
50 minutes -
Dome-Kwabenya MP distributes fertilisers to farmers to enhance food production
1 hour -
Beyond Sight: How visually impaired Ghanaians are experiencing the World Cup
1 hour -
World Cup: Ibrahim Mahama hails Black Stars, promises cash reward
2 hours -
Drivers, commuters demand urgent repairs to deplorable Adjei-Kojo-Kanewu road
2 hours -
Dome-Kwabenya MP warns against sale of distributed fertilisers as farmers receive support
2 hours -
GPSCP II, UCC and USIBRAS partner to strengthen skills in Ghana’s cashew industry
2 hours -
TECNO’s EllaClaw AI introduces smarter device management, personalised digital assistance
2 hours