Audio By Carbonatix
The third accused in the ongoing ambulance procurement trial, Richard Jakpa, has said the Attorney-General, Godfred Yeboah Dame, lacks integrity.
According to him, a close observation of the manner in which Mr Dame has conducted himself prior to and throughout the hearing of the case proves that he is solely concerned about achieving his objectives.
During proceedings today, Thursday, June 27, Godfred Yeboah Dame took over the cross-examination of the third accused from his deputy, Alfred Tuah-Yeboah.
This is the first time the Attorney General is directly cross-examining the witness after initial suggestions that he was avoiding a confrontation with him following the emergence of a leaked conversation with Jakpa in which he was accused of witness-tampering.
Speaking after the June 27 trial, Mr Jakpa explained that the A-G did not cross-examine him until issues regarding the leaked tape had been admitted by the court.
This, the third accused interpreted as fear of coming face-off with him and that the A-G's conduct proves that he lacks character and is only concerned about the outcome.
“You know the Attorney-General only started the cross examination after we have passed the stage where he engaged himself criminally. He waited after the Deputy Attorney General had passed that stage then he came to now deal with the contract issue," he said.
- Read also: As it happened: Prosecution continues cross-examination of Richard Jakpa in ambulance case
“I wasn’t disappointed because this is a man who lacks character, he lacks conscience. He has no respect for any decency. All that matters to him is the end. He doesn’t really care how he achieves it. Whose image he destroys along the way, he doesn’t really care,” he said.
Richard Jakpa and Minority Leader of Parliament, Dr Cassiel Ato Forson are standing trial in the ongoing ambulance procurement case.
The two men have been accused of willfully causing financial loss to the state and deliberately misapplying state funds.
The state says it lost some €2.37 million for nothing more than defective sprinter buses.
The case has been adjourned to next Tuesday, July 2nd, 2024.
Latest Stories
-
Man Utd angry as Morocco rejected Mazraoui request
15 minutes -
‘I started smoking at 13, battled addictions for 27 years’ – Tonto Dike
26 minutes -
Afrobeats still baby genre – Don Jazzy
38 minutes -
‘That conversation must stay in the party’ – Bryan Acheampong dodges $1,500 claim
53 minutes -
Greater Accra Regional Minister presents streetlights to MMDAs
1 hour -
How gold saved the cedi in 2025
2 hours -
A celebration of homegrown talent: Lagos meets Accra with cross-border fashion pop-up
2 hours -
Prudential Bank empowers merchant partners with POS training in Accra and Kumasi
2 hours -
There’s a challenge in our party, and we need a bold leader to win power for us – Bryan Acheampong
2 hours -
Asantehene is a national asset – Mahama commends Otumfuo’s role in Bawku peace process
3 hours -
PruRide Accra champions health, youth empowerment and sustainability through cycling
3 hours -
Ghana set for a dazzling Christmas 2025
3 hours -
Dr. Bawumia is the overwhelming favourite in NPP primaries with 69.7% lead – new survey
3 hours -
Jospong Group donates towards Zoomlion Central Mosque completion
3 hours -
NPP delegates rate Dr. Bawumia as the candidate with the strongest leadership qualities – survey
3 hours
