Audio By Carbonatix
An Accra High Court has slapped ¢2.95 million defamation judgement on journalist Kevin Ekow Baidoo Taylor for damaging the reputation of a legal practitioner, Ace Kojo Anan Ankomah.
The Court in its judgement Monday said Mr Taylor and Loud Silence Media are to pay General Damages of ¢2,000,000; Aggravated Damages of ¢500,000 and Exemplary Damages of ¢400,000.
There is also a perpetual injunction on defendants to restrain the publication of further material on the plaintiff and they are to publish an apology to within 14 days.
Further, the High Court placed a mandatory injunction compelling the defendants to remove offending material within 14 days and
pay ¢50,000 to the court.
In July last year, legal practitioner Ace Kojo Anan Ankomah sued Mr Kevin Taylor, for allegedly defaming him.
Also joined to the suit is the defendant’s firm, Loud Silence Media with Mr Ankomah demanding ¢10 million as damages for dragging his name in the mud.
Ace Kojo Anan Ankomah
A writ by the plaintiff’s counsel Thaddeus Sory said, “damages in the sum of ¢10,000,000 for the defamatory statements published by the defendants on defendants’ Facebook page ‘With All Due Respect – Loud Silence Media’ on 23/07/19 and YouTube on 24/07/19, the subject matter of this suit.”
According to Mr Sory, the false ad malicious publications by Mr Baidoo Taylor “has injured his hard-won reputation into hatred, ridicule, obloquy, discredit, contempt, vilification, reproach” which has caused Mr Anan Ankomah “great distress and emotional trauma.”
In its judgement Monday, the Court describing Mr Taylor’s comments as “cavalier” said that when the plaintiff called his bluff and dared him by suing him, Taylor did not “have the cojones to respond” in spite of him creating the impression of being able to appear anywhere to defend his “bombastic video.”
The Court held that it had jurisdiction in the matter because, although the defendants are outside Ghana, the defamatory matter was intended to be shared in Ghana, received considerable interest in Ghana, was downloaded in Ghana where the plaintiff has ties and that injury to the plaintiff in Ghana was foreseeable.
In awarding that extent of damages, the court took into consideration how widely the video’s “outrageous and malicious” contents were circulated.
The Court also considered the insults to the plaintiff by other persons following the publication of the matter (naming some of those persons), Mr Taylor’s “malevolence,” “spite,” and his “reprehensible conduct” and “egregious conduct” and held that that “offends the court’s sense of decency.”
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.
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
-
NSA to close registration portal for 2025/2026 National Service year
4 minutes -
BoG Governor targets single-digit interest rates to boost businesses
23 minutes -
BAWA-ROCK Ltd honoured for sustainable gold trading at Africa Development Conference
33 minutes -
Fire guts Unique Floral shop at Tse Addo
1 hour -
GPL 2025/26: Kotey strike hands Gold Stars crucial away win at Hohoe
1 hour -
Dormaahene urges Mahama to pursue accountability over National Cathedral project
1 hour -
GPL 2025/26: Mamah strike powers Samartex past Heart of Lions
1 hour -
Mahama directs release of GH¢1bn to contractors owed since 2017
1 hour -
GPL 2025/26: Aduana hold Hearts in Dormaa
1 hour -
Sekyi-Brown Reginald: Transforming infrastructure into preventive healthcare
1 hour -
Two arrested for unlawful possession of firearm, ammunition
2 hours -
GPL 2025/26: Karela United edge Vision FC in Tamale
2 hours -
Return home to support 24-hour economy agenda – Ambassador Smith urges students abroad
3 hours -
Minute’s silence held to remember Bondi Beach attack victims
3 hours -
Lands Minister commissions 3rd batch of 636 Blue Water Guards; pledges sustained fight against galamsey
3 hours
