Audio By Carbonatix
The Ghana Police Service says it is working around the clock to ensure that its investigators have the capacity to determine when a case is prosecutable before effecting arrests.
This follows the discharge of over 30 persons arrested in the wake of the murder of Captain Maxwell Mahama, a development the slain soldier’s family is unhappy with.
The police have over the years been criticised for apprehending suspects and later dropping cases against them for lack of evidence.
However, apart from concerns of fundamental human right breaches, others believe these wholesale arrests end up destroying people’s reputation.
A private legal practitioner, Martin Kpebu wants state attorneys to be used to assist the police in investigations.
“We can reform even within the current system so that the few state attorneys we have, there is a system where they are embedded in the investigative process,
“So that from day one, they are involved. They don’t have to wait for the police to finish, build a docket before the state attorney begins to weed out the chaff,” he said.
He believes that if the state attorney is involved from day one, the state will be saved the embarrassment that comes with arresting multitudes and then letting them go in the end.
Director General of the Police CID, DCOP Maame Tiwaa Addo Danquah in an interview with Joy News said the Service intends to address the concerns through training of its service men to avoid some of these setbacks.
“We cannot continue to receive the blame...that is why we are doing our best to ensure that investigators arrest when it is necessary and when they have actually established a prima facie case that this person has to be arrested.”
Latest Stories
-
Weija Lake pollution fears as floodwaters wash illegal landfill waste into water source
6 minutes -
NACOC partners GJA to combat substance abuse and illicit drug trafficking in Ghana
9 minutes -
Football’s greatest legends prepare for their final World Cup
10 minutes -
Sammi Awuku questions whether GTA board chair Gertrude Donkor meets Tourism Act private sector requirement
14 minutes -
Providence turns red, gold and green as Tribe Culturefest ignites Ghana’s World Cup fever
15 minutes -
Asantehene to attend tribe Culturefest’s fan festival at Toronto’s Sankofa Square
17 minutes -
Former Chief Justice Sophia Akuffo resigns from the Council of State
2 hours -
Health workers struggle to contain Ebola in Congo camps as distrust grows
2 hours -
Richie Mensah unveils ‘The Octave’ as latest addition to Lynx Electronics family
2 hours -
Motorists, pedestrians alarmed over faulty streetlights on Achimota Forest stretch
2 hours -
Bank of Ghana orders financial institutions to stop supporting foreign currency crypto wallets
2 hours -
Former Upper West Minister Backs Dr Issahaku Moomin for NPP Treasurer Position
4 hours -
Legal Education Reform: Assafuah questions possible return of entrance exams under new bar training system
5 hours -
2026 Apostolic Visitation commences at Cedar Mountain Chapel
5 hours -
Gov’t urged to strengthen capacity of MMDAs to improve building permit regulation
5 hours