The Zongo District police in Kumasi, the Ashanti Regional capital, are
holding a 30-year-old man for allegedly defrauding two bereaved Muslim
families of
GHc 9,600 in what the police see as a new modus operandi by criminals to defraud unsuspecting members of the public.
Sadat Mohammed, a teacher, who claimed to be a native of Bawku in the
Upper East Region but resides at Tafo Nhyiaeso in Kumasi, purportedly
defrauded the bereaved families after convincing them that their
relatives owed him before they died.
He is being accused of duping the family of one Gariba of GHc 4,900 and
the family of Alhaji Halidu Sulemana, 57, who was shot dead by armed
robbers in his house at Adiembra TUC, Kumasi, of GHc 4,700.
The Zongo District police commander, Superintendent Rev. Dr. Nyamkeye
Adane-Ameyaw, who briefed DAILY GUIDE on the matter, said the suspect’s
posthumous debt claims ought to be thoroughly investigated for the law
to deal with him.
He said several people might have suffered a similar fate and appealed
to members of the public to report any such incident to the police for
further investigations.
The police boss said on August 6, 2015, one Annatumi Gariba lodged a
complaint at the police station that Sadat Mohammed had defrauded his
family of GHc 4,900 while mourning the death of their relative.
According to the family, shortly after the demise of their kinsman,
Sadat approached them with a claim that the departed relative owed him
that amount of money being the cost of seven Dell laptop computers he
(Sadat Mohammed) had supplied him (deceased) for sale.
After paying the money to him, the family became suspicious and started
investigating Sadat’s claim which led them to a witness in the case, Adu
Poku Ernest, a teacher at Happy International School at Tafo Nhyiaeso
in Kumasi.
Police invited Adu Poku Ernest and in his statement, admitted being
approached by the suspect to assist him to retrieve the money from the
family. The witness said he was initially reluctant to offer his support
until the suspect assured him that there was nothing fraudulent in his
claim.
Ernest said he had no idea about Sadat Mohammed’s alleged dishonesty
until his (Gariba’s) family alerted him that the claim might not be
genuine.
In Alhaji Halidu Sulemana’s family’s case, Sadat allegedly deceived the
members into believing that he had given GHc 4,700 to their relative to
purchase for him unspecified number of tricycles prior to his death.
Superintendent Rev. Dr. Nyamkeye Adane-Ameyaw said Sadat admitted the offence and pleaded with the police for mercy.

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