A 31-year-old Nigerian woman has been granted a ₵12,000 bail by an Accra Circuit for impersonating the Minister for Information, Kojo Oppong Nkrumah.
Vivian Sajida Imran has also been accused of posing as ministers to defraud unsuspecting victims to the tune of about ₵10,000.
According to the police, Imran together with her husband, Prince Joel, currently at large, have been charged with eight counts of falsely pretending to be a public officer and defrauding under false pretence.
Her was bail comes with two sureties, one of whom must be a public servant, earning not less than ₵1,200 after her lawyer prayed the court to grant her bail.
Presenting the facts of the case to the court on Friday, State Prosecutor Detective Frederick Sarpong told the court that in April, the accused persons used the names of Information Minister, Kojo Oppong Nkrumah; Foreign Affairs Minister, Shirley Ayorkor Botchway; and the Deputy National Security Minister, Henry Quartey, to create multiple Facebook accounts, pretending to be the Ministers.
According to the Detective, Imran and her husband, through online chats and phone calls informed their unsuspecting victims that they could secure jobs for them at Tema Oil Refinery, Ghana Gas or COCOBOD.
Following this, the suspects requested the victims to pay various amounts to mobile money accounts in order for their application forms and interviews to be facilitated.
The monies amounting to about ₵10,200 were paid to their mobile money accounts. The Prosecutor told the court that a search conducted in the suspect’s rooms revealed six mobile phones, including the three mobile money numbers, used to receive the monies from the victims.
He explained that an order of the court was sought and a forensic examination was carried out on the retained mobile phones. One of them was found to contain a SIM number which had been registered in the name of the first accused person, Imran.
The same number was found to be the final destination where the ‘booties’ obtained from the victims were transferred and later withdrawn.
During investigations, the prosecutor said the Imran admitted being the owner of the mobile money number. With the number in hand, the police contacted the victims, and they narrated their ordeal.
The case has been adjourned to June 3, 2020 as efforts are being made to track the second accused person, Joel.
Latest Stories
-
DAMC, Free Food Company, to distribute 10,000 packs of food to street kids
14 minutes -
Kwame Boafo Akuffo: Court ruling on re-collation flawed
34 minutes -
Samuel Yaw Adusei: The strategist behind NDC’s electoral security in Ashanti region
36 minutes -
I’m confident posterity will judge my performance well – Akufo-Addo
48 minutes -
Syria’s minorities seek security as country charts new future
1 hour -
Prof. Nana Aba Appiah Amfo re-appointed as Vice-Chancellor of the University of Ghana
2 hours -
German police probe market attack security and warnings
2 hours -
Grief and anger in Magdeburg after Christmas market attack
2 hours -
Baltasar Coin becomes first Ghanaian meme coin to hit DEX Screener at $100K market cap
2 hours -
EC blames re-collation of disputed results on widespread lawlessness by party supporters
3 hours -
Top 20 Ghanaian songs released in 2024
3 hours -
Beating Messi’s Inter Miami to MLS Cup feels amazing – Joseph Paintsil
3 hours -
NDC administration will reverse all ‘last-minute’ gov’t employee promotions – Asiedu Nketiah
3 hours -
Kudus sights ‘authority and kingship’ for elephant stool celebration
3 hours -
We’ll embrace cutting-edge technologies to address emerging healthcare needs – Prof. Antwi-Kusi
4 hours