Audio By Carbonatix
Prince Ganaku, lawyer for Mr Frank Oliver Kpodo, says his client feels vindicated following his clearance by the Auditor-General’s Office for the wrongly attributed GH¢427,995,661.40 in unearned salaries to a single public servant.
However, he insisted that the ordeal had caused significant reputational harm that could have been avoided with due diligence.
The Auditor-General’s Office has withdrawn a major error in its nationwide payroll audit report, admitting that it wrongly attributed GH¢427,995,661.40 in unearned salaries to a single public servant.
In a press release dated April 21, 2026, the Office clarified that the amount was not received by Mr Kpodo, but rather related to payroll irregularities involving 3,476 unaccounted staff under the Ministry of Education.
Speaking in an interview on Joy FM's Middaynews, Mr Kpodo's lawyer said the impact has been severe, citing widespread circulation of the claims on social media platforms like X (formerly Twitter).
He also noted that despite official clarification from the Audit Service and the Controller and Accountant-General’s Department, The Fourth Estate is yet to retract or update the original publication.
“This is not fair,” he stated.
“It has caused horrendous reputational damage. All you need to do is go on Twitter—now X—look up the post about him, and read the replies. Some have even taken screenshots and circulated them widely across the world.
"You might not even be online today to see that the Audit Service or other authorities have issued clarifications. Yet, up to now, the Fourth Estate has not corrected the post or issued a rejoinder to say, ‘No, this is inaccurate,’ even after both the Audit Service and the Comptroller and Accountant-General have cleared him. This is not fair.”
He described the development as “a good thing when the truth comes to light,” but criticised the circumstances leading to the publication of the initial claims.
According to him, Mr Kpodo had engaged journalists from The Fourth Estate before the publication and had indicated that the alleged payments were impossible under the existing controls at the Controller and Accountant-General’s Department. He also pointed out that his client had evidence, including payslips, to refute the claims.
However, the lawyer argued that the story was published prematurely on Monday morning, although supporting documents could not have been accessed on Sunday when the initial interaction took place.
He further criticised the journalists’ handling of the story, describing the reported figure—GH¢14 million per month—as “outlandish” and one that should have triggered deeper verification.
“It is incumbent upon journalists to seek clarification, especially on such extraordinary claims, before publication,” he stressed, adding that the failure to do so suggested disregard for potentially exculpatory evidence.
Latest Stories
-
RNAQ pledges GH₵ 100,000 to support Okyeame Kwame’s ‘Clap’ song promotion
2 minutes -
Reckoning with the Past, Investing in the Future: Ghana and the Reparations Debate
8 minutes -
Ghana at 69: Achievements, challenges, and the future of fisheries and the blue economy
10 minutes -
Anti-corruption crusader demands decentralisation of presidential powers
19 minutes -
Understanding SIGA’s policy of encouraging inter-trading among Specified Entities
23 minutes -
Too much power at the top — Anti-corruption crusader calls for decentralisation of presidential authority
33 minutes -
Ghana-eligible Naasei stands out in Granada’s loss to Albacete
34 minutes -
Prof. Charles Odamtten Easmon: Father of heart surgery in West Africa
41 minutes -
How financial institutions drive SME access to finance in Africa
41 minutes -
GH¢427m payroll scandal: It’s good when the truth comes to light — Kpodo’s lawyer
42 minutes -
Old Tafo MP to distribute 10,000 mathematical sets to BECE candidates
42 minutes -
Ghana free primary healthcare policy faces funding concerns, think tank says
45 minutes -
From ‘no bed’ to ultra-modern: Wenchi Methodist Hospital gets major orthopaedic boost
52 minutes -
OSP–AG Saga: Is this really about Ken Ofori-Atta — or something else entirely?
52 minutes -
BoG admits some creators can’t access X earnings, launches review into payment bottlenecks
54 minutes