Audio By Carbonatix
The Supreme Court has, by a 6–1 majority decision, dismissed an application by the Attorney-General seeking a review of its earlier ruling on criminal disclosures in the case involving former National Signals Bureau Director-General, Kwabena Adu-Boahene, and his wife.
Justice Yonny Kulendi delivered the lone dissenting opinion.
The couple is currently standing trial on charges of stealing, money laundering, and using public office for private gain. They had earlier applied to the Supreme Court to restrain the High Court judge handling the matter, but that application was dismissed. In the same decision, the Supreme Court also revised the Practice Direction on Further Disclosures, holding that prosecutors are only required to disclose materials in their possession that are connected to the case, rather than all materials described as “relevant”.
It was this aspect of the ruling that prompted the Attorney-General to invoke the Court’s review jurisdiction.
The Attorney-General argued that by effectively removing the word “relevance” from the disclosure framework without substituting it with an equivalent standard, the Supreme Court had, in practical terms, rewritten the law on criminal disclosure. He contended that the decision risked narrowing disclosure obligations to mere possession of documents, without sufficient regard to whether the materials sought had a meaningful bearing on the issues before the court.
Represented by Deputy Attorney-General Dr Justice Srem-Sai, the Attorney-General urged the Court to either restore the word “relevance” in its ordinary sense or replace it with language such as “connected with the matter before the court”, in order to preserve a clear nexus between requested materials and the subject of the trial. He maintained that without such clarification, the disclosure regime could be applied too restrictively, to the detriment of fair trial standards.
However, the Supreme Court, by a 6–1 majority, rejected the application and declined to review its earlier decision.
The Court has indicated that its full, reasoned judgment will be delivered on 4th February.
The panel that determined the matter was composed of Justice Lovelace Johnson, who presided, Justice Amadu Tanko, Justice Yonny Kulendi, Justice Senyo Dzamefe, Justice Richard Adjei-Frimpong, Justice Sir Dennis Agyei, and Justice Kwaku Tawiah Ackaah-Boafo.
Latest Stories
-
Reset Ghana’s economy through agriculture — Agribusiness Chamber on Independence Day
4 minutes -
The journey of hope
1 hour -
5G launch in Ghana will be a national rollout for all networks – Sam George
1 hour -
Independence Day should mark shift from stability to transformation – United Party
1 hour -
How schools in Old Tafo, Kumasi showcased vibrant traditional regalia to preserve cultural heritage
1 hour -
69 Years on, Ghana has a long way to go — Asamoah Boateng
2 hours -
President Mahama commissions Olam Agri pasta facility, driving local production and job creation
2 hours -
Ghana to push UN motion declaring slavery a grave crime – Mahama
2 hours -
Minority calls for stronger maritime security, protection for Ghanaians abroad
2 hours -
Minority raises alarm over farmers’ crisis, galamsey in Independence Day statement
3 hours -
Government pledges to make housing affordable for all Ghanaians
3 hours -
Minority demands reinstatement of over 1,500 public workers dismissed after 2025 change of government
3 hours -
Ghana @ 69: Africa Prosperity Network hosts high-level webinar on continent’s integration ahead of 2028 deadline
3 hours -
Mahama urges youth to harness technology for national development
3 hours -
Mahama pledges to serve with integrity as Ghana marks 69 years of independence
3 hours
