Audio By Carbonatix
The Attorney-General (A-G) has directed the police to conduct further investigations into the case involving the two lawyers, Joseph Kwame Owusu Asamani and Ekow Amua-Sekyi, who are standing trial at an Accra Circuit Court for forgery and fraud.
The investigator of the case, DSP Felix Mawusi, yesterday told the court presided over by D.E.K Daketsey that the docket on the case was forwarded to the A-G based on which it advised that further investigations be conducted into the case.
No reasons were assigned and the court consequently adjourned the case to August 27, and asked the prosecution to inform the accused persons who did not show up in court, of the date in order for them to appear.
Asamani and Amua-Sekyi are alleged to have forged the judgment of a High Court Judge, Mr Justice Ofori-Atta, compelling Howard Eric Ewen, Managing Director of Keegan Resources, to issue a cheque of 850,000 dollars to Asamani.
Amua-Sekyi signed as witness when the money was received by Asamani.
They are charged for conspiracy, forging judicial service writ of summons, deed of assignment documents and uttering forged documents.
The prosecution said that on March 14, 2007, Asamani, acting as lawyer for Axex Company Limited, obtained judgment in a suit against Kwame Opoku and two other defendants.
After the judgment, Asamani allegedly conspired with Amua-Sekyi, counsel for the complainant, Mr. Samuel Etroo, a businessman in Tarkwa, and forged a suit number BMIS 350/07.
They further gave a title of the writ as Axex Company Limited and fraudulently inserted SAMETRO Company Limited as the fourth defendant in the writ although the company was not a defendant in the suit.
Prosecution said that on March 18, 2007, the two persons forged a judgment titled Axex Company Limited versus four other defendants and inserted an order by Mr Justice Ofori Atta for the recovery of a mine known as Esaase Gold Mine. .
In addition, they prepared a Deed of Assignment unknown to the complainant, scanned his signature on it and registered it at the Lands Registry and presented same to Ewen, who also signed.
The two lawyers without the knowledge of Mr Etroo and Mr Opoku, initiated a civil suit number BL35/07 and initialed it as Kwame Opoku versus SAMETRO Company Limited.
The two appeared before another Judge, Mr Justice Lartey Young on March 20, 2007 where Amua-Sekyi made certain admissions upon which the trial judge ordered that Bonte Esaase Mine be assigned to Kwame Opoku.
With that judgment, the accused persons obtained the consent of the then Minister of Lands, Forestry and Mines to assign Esaase Mines to Mr. Ewen of Keegan Resources.
On June 18, 2007, Mr Ewen issued Stanbic Bank cheque for 850,000 dollars to Asamani to complete the fraudulent assignment of Bonte Gold Mine from Mr Etroo to Mr Ewen and on June 18, 2007, Asamani issued a hand written receipt and Amua-Sekyi signed as witness according to the prosecution.
Source: Times/Ghana
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
GRNMA Vice President condemns alleged extortion of nursing students
56 seconds -
Aboakyer Festival 2026: Opoku-Agyemang promises transformative infrastructure
28 minutes -
Bawumia hits at government over ‘dumsor’, says outages are hurting businesses
34 minutes -
620,000 candidates begin BECE as WAEC tightens anti-cheating measures
45 minutes -
Auditors advise BoG to fast-track reforms, improve clarity in reporting
48 minutes -
Stay calm and trust your hard work – Haruna Iddrisu to BECE candidates
52 minutes -
BoG rejects Minority claims on 2025 accounts, cites misinterpretation of audited statements
58 minutes -
TUC calls for regular dialogue on economic challenges, unemployment
1 hour -
Majority caucus says BoG’s rising losses are cost of stabilisation, not collapse
1 hour -
Analysis: How GOLDBOD’s “beautiful” 2025 financials created a GH¢9bn hole at the Bank of Ghana
1 hour -
The numbers speak for themselves – Majority caucus fires back at Minority over BoG loss
2 hours -
South Africa: The boys who gave the world a party, and went home early
2 hours -
BoG gold sale row deepens as Majority caucus rejects Minority’s ‘policy insolvency’ charge
2 hours -
US criticises Zambia for lack of engagement as $1 billion health deal stalls
2 hours -
Meta faces US lawmaker scrutiny over removal of lawyer ads for social media addiction cases
2 hours