The Office of the Vice President is said to have written to the Commissioner of the Customs Division to release bags of rice imported by a businessman who was battling another businessman over ownership of the same goods.
This led the disgruntled businessman to file a complaint at the Office of Special Prosecutor resulting in charges being filed against an Administrator at the Office of the Vice President, James Keck Osei, and 3 others.
The three others are Issah Seidu, who works with the National Insurance Commission, and Customs Officers John Abban and Peter Archibold.
They have been slapped with the charge of failing to comply with a lawful demand of an authorised officer.
The Special Prosecutor received a complaint from a businessman who had imported rice into the country. The concern is that another person, the first accused Issah Seidu had tried to also clear the same goods.
The Special Prosecutor while investigating the matter gave these individuals a form to fill out indicating their income and properties they own. They failed to do so resulting in charges being filed against them.
The businessman claims the GRA investigated the matter and asked that the goods be released to him.
“One deputy commissioner was asked to look into the issue and report back and her findings were that the documents presented by A1 (Issah Seidu) were fake and the petitioner was the owner of the goods and should be allowed to clear them. Instructions were given for the release of the goods to the petitioner. On hearing this A1 rushed to the court to file a civil suit against the petitioner and GRA," Prosecutor at the Officer of Special Prosecutor Emmanuel Basintele told the court.
"He thereafter sought to injunct them to prevent the GRA from releasing the goods to the petitioner."
He continued that the petitioner then came across documents from the Office of the Vice President.
“It was at this point that the petitioner said he has come across documents from the office of the vice President addressed to the commissioner of customs to release the goods imported by the petitioner to A1 because the office of the vice president wanted to use the rice for Ramadan.
"The petitioner has no relationship with the OSP. He is just a Ghanaian who wants to prevent corrupt officials from unlawfully taking his goods from him.”
The Court granted the Administrator at the Office of the Vice President Self recognizance bail while Issah Seidu and Peter Archibold were granted bail in the sum of 10,000 cedis with one surety each. The other accused person John Abban failed to show up in court.
Latest Stories
-
Court sentences man to life imprisonment for murdering girlfriend; daughter
12 mins -
Bawumia’s $80 bn value claim for Spotify, false – Dubawa
23 mins -
GBA President calls for transparent and fair December election
38 mins -
November 8 not a public holiday – Interior Ministry
40 mins -
Policies the Church can promote to ensure every birth by a congregant is wanted, not unintended
43 mins -
Next NPP government to build new AG offices in all regions – Godfred Dame
1 hour -
Why corporate leadership can no longer be silent on sustainability
1 hour -
The Keeper’s Music unveils Neyty with new single ‘Most High God’
1 hour -
Bawumia outlines 8 initiatives to create 4 million jobs for youth if elected president
1 hour -
Over 4,000 unpaid teachers demand payment of 16 months arrears from government
2 hours -
I’ve apologised to Gloria Sarfo over flight issues – AMAA Country Director
2 hours -
Ghana nearly lost $9 billion to arbitrary claims in last four years – Attorney General
2 hours -
FWSC responds to CLOGSAG strike declaration, urges return to negotiation
3 hours -
Members contribute to ‘transport’ national team – Volleyball Vice President laments financial struggles
3 hours -
New SHS curriculum provides adaptive learning pathways – EduWatch
3 hours