Assistant Superintendent of Police, Joseph Abednego Atsha, the investigator in the trial of Michael Nyinaku, CEO of defunct Beige Bank says nine out of the 10 companies that ₵21,123,270 was transferred to were owned by the accused person.
He said investigations revealed that the transfer was made to two other individuals.
The witness said the amounts transferred by the accused to the nine companies are as follows: Alberry-GH₵5,240,000, DYI Limited -GH₵6,000,000, Legacy Pensions Trust -GH₵427,000 and Adelia Limited -GH₵1,010,000.
The rest are Beige Academy -GH₵250,000, Beige Assur -GH₵627,000, Be venture Ltd -GH₵1,740,000, Beige Care -GH₵392,000 and Beige Capital Limited -GH₵2,200,000.
ASP Atsha, who is the fifth Prosecution Witness had earlier testified that his investigations revealed that a total of GH₵320milion was transferred from the account of various customers of Beige Bank into the account of BCAM and subsequently transferred into the suspicious First Africa Savings and Loans (FASL) account on the instructions of Nyinaku.
In a further cross-examination of the witness by Mr Thadeus Sory, Counsel for Nyinaku, ASP Atsha indicated that nine out of the 10 companies were owned by the accused person.
Mr. Nyinaku, who is facing charges of stealing GH¢340 million allegedly belonging to depositors and money laundering, has denied the charges.
The court earlier admitted him to bail in the sum of GH¢342 million with two sureties, who are public servants earning not less than GH¢2,000.00.
It further directed the accused to deposit his passport with the Court’s Registry.
Mr Thadeus Sory tendered various cheque disbursement forms, payment vouchers and cheques through the witness.
The cheque disbursement forms, payment vouchers and cheques revealed that the nine companies disbursed most of the funds they received from the FASL account to third parties and not Nyinaku.
The witness agreed that the processes leading to the issuance of the cheques were initiated and approved by different officials.
“The payment vouchers were also verified by another official and not the accused person,” he
added.
Mr Sory suggested to the witness that there was no shred of evidence before the Court which indicated that a pesewa of the funds which was the subject of the stealing charges in counts one to nine was paid directly to the accused person.
The witness agreed that the nine companies did not disburse the funds they received from the FASL account to the accused person.
However, he said the accused person was charged because he was the owner of nine companies.
The Case was adjourned for continuation.
Latest Stories
-
Where hope fails: Ghana’s decaying home for the destitute
9 mins -
NDC Mining Committee for 2024 campaign refutes allegations of recruiting thugs for elections
20 mins -
Traction Control: A lifesaver with an off switch? Here’s why it exists
23 mins -
I don’t need anyman to woo me with money – Miss Malaika 2024 winner refutes pimping claims
30 mins -
”Kurt Okraku sabotaged my national team career because I refused to sign with Dreams FC” – Najeeb Yakubu
31 mins -
Businesses urged to leverage Generative AI for enhanced customer engagement
35 mins -
MultiChoice Ghana partners with Ghana Hotels Association to elevate guest entertainment
43 mins -
Bawumia’s music streaming app or Mahama’s pay-per-view TV channel?
48 mins -
Karpowership Ghana empowers 40 Takoradi Technical University students with scholarship
50 mins -
We expect significant reduction in prices of petroleum products in coming weeks – CEO AOMC
1 hour -
Betway Africa offers once-in-a-lifetime ‘Play-on-the-Pitch’ experience at Emirates Stadium
1 hour -
I coined the term ‘hype man’ in Ghana – Merqury Quaye
1 hour -
Vasseur questions ‘strange momentum’ of Formula One race director change
2 hours -
“I am disappointed in Kojo Manuel” – Merqury Quaye on “no tie” comment
2 hours -
Nana Kwame Bediako; The beacon of unity
2 hours