By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Starr FmStarr FmStarr Fm
  • Home
  • Election Hub
  • General
    GeneralShow More
    Man, 23, sentenced to 7 years in prison for defilement in Hohoe
    April 24, 2026
    Julius Debrah donates to Village of Hope Orphanage in Gomoa Fetteh to mark 60th birthday
    April 24, 2026
    UMB appoints Bernice Asabea Kissi Boateng as group head for personal, business banking
    April 24, 2026
    La General Hospital to be completed by Nov 2027 – Mahama assures
    April 24, 2026
    Gov’t reaffirms anti-corruption commitment after High Court ruling on OSP prosecutorial power
    April 24, 2026
  • Business
    BusinessShow More
    UMB appoints Bernice Asabea Kissi Boateng as group head for personal, business banking
    April 24, 2026
    Zoomlion’s IRECOP concept is best solution to Africa’s waste revolution – Oti Bless
    April 24, 2026
    NEIP commences grant disbursement under Adwumawura Programme
    April 24, 2026
    Mahama engages CEO Network Ghana, pledges support for private sector expansion
    April 24, 2026
    PFAG honours Agric Minister Eric Opoku for farmer-centred leadership
    April 24, 2026
  • Politics
    PoliticsShow More
    Sack Free Zones CEO Over “Distasteful” attacks on Pentecost Chairman – Nana B to Mahama
    April 24, 2026
    Accommodate our people just as MTN operates freely in Ghana – Deputy MASLOC CEO to South Africans
    April 24, 2026
    NPP National Treasurer suspends working visit following motor accident
    April 24, 2026
    Gov’t reaffirms anti-corruption commitment after High Court ruling on OSP prosecutorial power
    April 24, 2026
    Friends of Julius Debrah donate to Kumasi Children’s Home, urge him to consider presidential bid
    April 24, 2026
  • Entertainment
    EntertainmentShow More
    Jazz Brothers set to headline launch of Soho Jazz Club in Accra
    April 21, 2026
    TGMA 2026: Venue constraints to shrink cut tickets, guest numbers, media access – Robert Klah
    April 18, 2026
    TGMA 2026: No preferred venue yet, but Plan B in place – Charterhouse
    April 18, 2026
    Bola Ray, Santokh Singh, other top EIB officials turn up at GHOne TV Alumni Power Games
    April 11, 2026
    GHOne TV Alumni Power Games set for exciting showdown at El-Wak tomorrow
    April 10, 2026
  • Sports
    SportsShow More
    Tahiru Haruna qualifies for 2026 Glasgow Commonwealth Games in historic first for Ghana
    April 22, 2026
    Ghana para-athletes secure 3 Commonwealth Games slots
    April 22, 2026
    Sports Minister Kofi Adams pays courtesy visit to Ga Manste Nii Tackie Teiko Tsuru II
    April 22, 2026
    Rosenior sacked by Chelsea after three months in charge
    April 22, 2026
    Wolves relegated from Premier League after eight-year stay
    April 22, 2026
  • Technology
    TechnologyShow More
    Yellow Card publishes 2026 report on data protection and AI governance
    April 23, 2026
    Master AI and cybersecurity to fight fake news – Dr Zanetor Rawlings to Ghana’s youth
    April 22, 2026
    The Hope Network meets Prof. Mark Appiah to chart path for growth, eyes STEM Center and donor partnerships
    April 22, 2026
    Suame Magazine spare parts dealers reject AI Import Valuation System, warn of 50-70% price increase
    April 16, 2026
    Digital divide could become Africa’s next economic divide – Osman Ayariga warns at Continental Youth Symposium
    April 10, 2026
  • International
    InternationalShow More
    “Direct your anger at the state, not innocent foreigners” — Dr. Norman to Xenophobic South Africans
    April 23, 2026
    Wolves relegated from Premier League after eight-year stay
    April 22, 2026
    Eight young Ghanaian women selected for 2026 ‘Ambassador for a Day’ programme
    April 22, 2026
    Thomas-Asante’s Coventry City clinch Premier League promotion
    April 18, 2026
    Gov’t releases funds to clear outstanding stipends and tuition fees for UK scholarship students
    April 17, 2026
  • Factometer
Search
© 2024 EIB Network Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
Reading: COCOBOD trial ‘a sham’ – Agongo
Share
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
Starr FmStarr Fm
Font ResizerAa
  • Headlines
  • Election Hub
  • General
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Factometer
Search
  • Headlines
  • Election Hub
  • General
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Factometer
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© 2024 EIB Network Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
GeneralHeadlines

COCOBOD trial ‘a sham’ – Agongo

Starrfm.com.gh By Starrfm.com.gh Published February 21, 2023
Share
SHARE

Businessman Seidu Agongo, who has filed an application for the recusal of Justice Clemence Honyenuga from the ongoing GHS217-million financial loss case, has expressed frustration over the trial Judge’s decision in rejecting 18 pieces of evidence tendered by his lawyers.

He argued in that court process that by rejecting 18 pieces of “exculpatory evidence” tendered by his lawyers during the trial and “marking them as ‘rejects’”, the trial judge has ensured that “we can never rely on the said exhibits at the trial while, at the same time, calling on us to open our defence in respect of the very same matters”.

This, Mr Agongo noted, “means that this court has already sealed our fate and only wants us to go through a sham of a trial when it has already predetermined our guilt even before we were heard, especially when similar evidence tendered by the prosecution was spared the wrath of this court”.

Mr Agongo, who is the second accused person in the case, is being tried along with his agrochemical company Agricult (the third accused person) and the ex-CEO of Ghana Cocoa Board, Dr Stephen Opuni (first accused person).

Dr Opuni, Mr Agongo and Agricult are facing 27 charges including defrauding by false pretences, wilfully causing financial loss to the state, money laundering and corruption by a public officer in contravention of the Public Procurement Act.

The two men have pleaded not guilty to the charges and are on a GHS300,000 self-recognisance bail, each.

Justice Honyenuga, on Monday, 20 February 2023, had to adjourn the hearing to Thursday, 23 February 2023, for the defence to move the application.

Mr Agongo’s lead counsel, Mr Nutifafa Nutsukpui, told the court on Monday that they filed the application on Friday, 17 February 2023 but their checks with the court clerk indicated that it was not served on the court.

Mr Nutifafa argued that the nature of the application makes its hearing imperative before the trial could continue.

In the application, Mr Agongo said: “The court dismissed our submission of no case and ordered us to open our defence in respect of counts 2, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 21, 25, 26 and 27, as, according to the court, the prosecution had proved the ingredients of the offences so charged in those counts and also because the case is a ‘sensitive’ one”.

“In order to arrive at its said decision, the trial court, presided over by Justice C J Honyenuga (JSC), rejected and marked as rejects, exhibits 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74 and 75, being exculpatory evidence and which were police caution statements provided to the accused persons by the prosecution on the orders of the very same court and were tendered at the trial through the police investigator without any objection from the prosecution, on the ground that this court was wrong in admitting the said exhibits, as the said exhibits violated the hearsay rules of evidence”, Mr Agongo argued.

“However”, he pointed out, “similar documents, also being police caution statements, tendered by the prosecution at the trial, through the same investigator, were, curiously not rejected but actually relied on by the said court in concluding that a case was made against us, for which reason, we needed to open our defence; and there was no explanation whatsoever as to why this court discriminated against us”.

For example, he cited: “Exhibits ‘69’ and ‘PP’ were police investigative caution statements obtained from the only farmers spoken to by the investigators during the investigations and were tendered through the investigator while the defence, on 11 March 2021,tendered exhibit ‘69’ in which the farmer confirmed that he found the Lithovit Liquid Fertiliser very good for young and old cocoa, the prosecution tendered exhibit ‘PP’ in which the other farmer complained that he harvested only 52 bags of cocoa after applying the said fertiliser instead of the 50 bags of cocoa he used to harvest and, as such, he did not find the fertiliser as good as the extension officers had claimed”.

He said “while the court rejected the marked exhibit ‘69’ as ‘reject’, it preserved exhibit ‘PP’, which was tendered by the prosecution through the same police investigator, without any explanation”.

Further, he said “another key evidence that was rejected by this court was exhibit ‘67’ tendered without objection on 1 March 2021 through the police investigator, which exhibit is also a police caution statement taken form Dr Baah, the head of the Cocoa Health and Extension Division of Cocobod (CHED) at the time, who confirmed that, through a farmer perception survey conducted by CHED, farmers had expressed preference for the Lithovit Fertiliser that CHED had distributed to them, so, he asked that this be documented”.

“Also rejected by this court and marked as ‘reject’ is exhibit ‘63’, a police caution statement obtained from the then-Chairman of the Board of Cocobod, which was, again, tendered without objection through the police investigator on 1 March 2021, wherein the said Board Chairman had confirmed to the investigators that all purchases and contracts carried out at the material time, were approved by the Board of Cocobod and that all the necessary rules and procedures for the procurement of chemicals and fertilisers by COCOBOD, were strictly adhered to”.

“Again”, he mentioned that: “A vital piece of evidence rejected by this court is exhibit ‘75’, which is a handing-over statement made by the head of the investigative team at the Economic and Organised Crime Office (EOCO), the entity which commenced the investigations into the matter at the time when the investigations were being handed over by EOCO to the Ghana Police to continue, wherein the EOCO official confirmed that we (the applicants herein) new nothing about the source of the sample of Lithovit Liquid Fertiliser used to conduct the first tests at the Ghana Standards Authority (GSA) and the Chemistry Department of the University of Ghana but that the only sample of the Lithovit Liquid Fertiliser picked from Cocobod’s warehouse jointly by the investigators together with the officers of Ghana Cocoa Board in my presence and used for a second test at the GSA, confirmed that the second sample tested was, indeed, fertiliser”.

Mr Agongo continued: “This court also rejected and marked as ‘rejects’, exhibits ‘71’ and ‘72’ tendered through the police investigators on 15 March 2021 without objection, being police caution statements obtained from the head of the Material Science Department of the GSA, who were the persons who actually carried out the test on the second sample of Lithovit Liquid Fertiliser received from EOCO at the GSA and concluded that it was, indeed, a fertiliser; a material piece of evidence which the trial court has now put beyond our use at the trial by the singular act of marking same as ‘rejects’ at the submission of no case stage while finding that the prosecution has proved that we had sold adulterated fertiliser to COCOBOD”.

He stressed that “the exhibits rejected and marked as ‘rejects’ by this court at the submission of the no case stage were police caution statements relating to key matters, were exculpatory in nature and their rejection by the trial court at this stage without having [accorded] us the opportunity to be heard before doing so, has, no doubt, prejudiced our case and hampered our ability to make any meaningful defence to the charges we face at the trial”.

“I am advised by counsel, and I verily believe the same to be true that this court could not have come to the conclusion that the prosecution had proved the offences so charged without curiously rejecting and marking as ‘rejects’, exhibits 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74 and 75”.

He added: “I am further advised by counsel, and I verily believe the same to be true, that this court exceeded its jurisdiction by acting contrary to constitutional and statutory provisions when it rejected exhibits 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74 and 75 on the ground that they offended the hearsay rules when those exhibits were, in fact, tendered with the consent of the prosecution signified by the prosecution not objecting to their tendering and, therefore, and exception to the hearsay rules”.

He continued: “I am, again, advised by counsel, and I verily believe the same to be true, that this court exceeded its jurisdiction by acting contrary to constitutional provisions when it unfairly, capriciously, discriminately and prejudicially purported to apply the hearsay rules only against the accused persons in not rejecting the police caution statements tendered by the prosecution, which were similar in character to exhibits 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74 and 75 at the trial”.

“I am further advised by counsel and I verily believe the same to be true, that the court acted erroneously and contrary to statutory provisions in rejecting exhibits 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74 and 75, which were, otherwise, admissible, as an exception to the hearsay rules being police caution statements taken by investigators during their official duties in investigating this matter, thereby, exceeding its jurisdiction”.

“I am advised by counsel and I verily believe the same to be true that for this court to have to reject exhibits 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74 and 75 in order to be able to come to the conclusion that we have a case to answer, means that the said court failed to exact the appropriate burden of proof from the prosecution contrary to the constitutional and statutory provisions”, Mr Agongo indicated.

“I am advised by counsel and I verily believe the same to be true that a fair-minded trial court in a criminal matter must be interested in evidence that [inures] to the benefit of an accused person and not seek to capriciously put such evidence beyond the use of an accused, as this court had done in rejecting and marking as ‘rejects’, all these documents, to the effect that we cannot rely on them in our defence at the trial”.

The businessman noted: “I am advised by counsel and I verily believe the same to be true that when this court, presided over by Justice CJ Honyenuga (JSC) suo moto decided to reject the exhibits, all of which had been admitted at the trial with the agreement of the prosecution, in not objecting to their being tendered, the said court ought to have given the accused persons, including the applicants herein, a hearing on the matter prior to making a decision, which the said judge failed to do”.

In his view, “for the trial court on its own to exclude all the exculpatory evidence without giving us a hearing is clearly and assault [on] our constitutional rights to fair trial and against the rules of natural justice, and, as a result, disqualifies the said trial judge from continuing with the further conduct of the proceedings in this matter”.

He noted: “While this court did not explain what it meant by saying in its ruling that because the matter is a ‘sensitive’ one, we should open our defence, I am advised by counsel and I verily believe the same to be true that the sensitivity of a criminal case is not a legally recognised ground on which to call upon an accused person to open a defence in a criminal matter and to that extent, the trial judge has shown that he is clearly being influenced by extrajudicial considerations in this matter”.

Mr Agongo said “apart from having unlawfully excluded those exhibits, as this court did, this court, in its ruling of 7 May 2021, also made sweeping, definitive, final and conclusive findings against us, the applicants, at the stage of submission of no case, to answer as though the said ruling was the final judgment of this court after full trial, when the said court was yet to hear us; demonstrably leaving no room in this court’s mind for the statutory reasonable doubt that we are required to raise, as to our guilt on the charges laid against us”.

For instance, quoting from page 54 of that ruling, Mr Agongo said Justice CJ Honyenuga (JSC) stated that: “…All these were perpetuated to facilitate the 2nd and 3rd accused’s [applicants herein] business and defraud COCOBOD. Indeed, these acts were all perpetuated to facilitate and intentionally, voluntarily, to aid the 2nd and 3rd accused [applicants herein] to perpetrate fraud on COCOBOD by supplying a different product from what was tested approved … However, the 1st accused, although he knew the correct state of affairs and knowingly facilitated and aided the 2nd and 3rd accused [applicants herein] to defraud COCOBOD… there was no way COCOBOD would have been defrauded of such huge amounts”.

“I am convinced beyond any doubt that with the above categorical and determinative statements made by Justice CJ Honyenuga (JSC) even before we could be heard, after he found ways of putting very vital evidence that would have assisted us to raise any doubts as to our guilt beyond our use at the trial by marking them as ‘rejects’, at the submission of no case stage, we [applicants] stand no chance before him, no matter what manner of evidence we adduce before the said court, for all practical purposes, our fates are sealed and any further trial proceedings before the same judge will just be an academic exercise.

You Might Also Like

Man, 23, sentenced to 7 years in prison for defilement in Hohoe

Sack Free Zones CEO Over “Distasteful” attacks on Pentecost Chairman – Nana B to Mahama

Accommodate our people just as MTN operates freely in Ghana – Deputy MASLOC CEO to South Africans

NPP National Treasurer suspends working visit following motor accident

Julius Debrah donates to Village of Hope Orphanage in Gomoa Fetteh to mark 60th birthday

TAGGED:cocobodseidu agongo
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print
Share
Previous Article NCA slapped with GHc20k cost over appeal
Next Article Baba Kamara appointed as Dep. Head of ECOWAS Observation Mission in Nigeria

Starr 103.5FM

Starr FmStarr Fm
Follow US
© 2024 EIB Network Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
newsletter icon
Join Us!

Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss our latest in news, podcasts etc..

[mc4wp_form]
Zero spam, Unsubscribe at any time.
adbanner
AdBlock Detected
Our site is an advertising supported site. Please whitelist to support our site.
Okay, I'll Whitelist
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?