Saturday, 27 July

COCOBOD trial: Judge blocks tendering of 'exculpatory' evidence of EOCO lead investigator

News
Dr Stephen Opuni

Justice Aboagye Tandoh, the judge in the trial of former COCOBOD boss, Dr Stephen Opuni and businessman Seidu Agongo, has declined to admit into evidence, a document lawyers for the accused persons say exonerate their clients of any wrongdoing.

The document in question is the statement written by the lead investigator at the Economic and Organised Crime Office (EOCO), when the state institution was "ordered" to curtail investigation into fraud allegations against the accused persons.

The document spells out all the investigations and facts on written statements obtained when EOCO investigated the case led by Mr. Paul Agyei Gyang, then as the Head of Organised Crime Unit. 

It also included the fact that a second test conducted at the appropriate department at the Ghana Standards Authority proved that lithovit has the necessary ingredients which qualify it as a fertilizer, after a first test by the same Authority at a cosmetics department, which the investigator confirmed was not equipped to test fertilizer, gave a contrary result.

Prior to the unsuccessful attempt to tender the EOCO document, Mr. Agyei Gyang was made to identify the document as the “investigator’s statement” he authored and signed as the head of the investigative team, which was handed over to the Ghana Police Service together with the docket.

“My Lord we deal with case docket, once the investigator writes his statement it means the docket has been called for by any consumer of the docket. It could be the Attorney General, either a superior wants to peruse it or it is to be handed over to a different person so that he can understand what the investigator has done so far,” the EOCO investigator explained.

As a “seasoned investigator”, Mr. Agyei Gyang who is currently at the Operations Directorate of EOCO as a Senior Staff, was asked to tell the court whether both the Ghana Police Service and EOCO have standards or procedure for taking investigative sample for analysis.

This is his answer, “My Lord in every sphere of investigation process, the principles of clarity, credibility and fairness should always be applied. And for that matter, depending on the exhibit to be tested, there is something called chain of custody should be taken into consideration using what I have already told the court of being clarity, fairness and credibility. Depending on the context, and how the exhibit is found, these principles are very important.”

He further explained that it was based on these principles that, after Seidu Agongo objected to a test on a sample which was collected without his involvement, that the management of EOCO “deemed it necessary that all parties be present for the selection of the [second] sample [from COCOBOD warehouse]”.

Benson Nutsukpui, the lead counsel for Seidu Agongo decided to tender the investigator’s own statement in evidence but it was objected to by the prosecution led by Chief State Attorney, Evelyn Keelson on Tuesday, February 20, 2024.

Her objection was influenced by a similar circumstance which transpired on December 5, 2023.

Benson Nutsukpui had sought to tender a document in evidence through the former Executive Director of CRIG, Dr. Gilbert Anim Kwapong, whom he was cross examining after the witness admitted to authoring that document.

That evidence was a statement the witness gave to police investigators when he was interrogated in January 2018. It was once tendered by counsel for the first accused, lawyer Samuel Codjoe, when he cross examined the seventh prosecution witness who happened to be the investigator, Police Detective Chief Inspector, Thomas Prempeh Mercer.

The statement was tendered in an open court without any objection by the prosecution and was therefore marked as Exhibit 58.

However, in a twist of event, the retired justice of the Supreme Court, Justice Clemence Honyenuga, who was then sitting on the case at the high court, marked the admitted evidence as reject suo muto in his bid to establish a prima facie case against the accused persons in his ruling on the submission of no case.

Justice Aboagye Tandoh rejected the document, saying the court would “not discern into admitting, then reject and then admit”.

Lawyer Benson Nutsukpui had then entertained the fear that if care is not taken, parties can conspire and tender evidence that exonerate another party through the wrong witness just for the court to reject exculpating evidence, and place same beyond the reach of the party it exonerates.

However, on Tuesday, in objecting to the investigator’s statement, Evelyn Keelson reminded the court that the statement was one of the evidence Justice Honyenuga’s court rejected.

“This statement is one of the statement which was rejected in the course of the trial judge's evaluation of the submission of no case. My Lord in line with a decision my Lord has already given in respect of an earlier statement falling in the same category, indicating that your lordship would take a decision on the statement now that the witness has appeared before the court in the course of your evaluation of the evidence, my Lord we submit that the same decision be applied to this case. 

“My Lord this was also rejected and marked as R and my lord earlier decision on a similar statement given by Dr. Anim Kwapong should apply,” Mrs. Keelson argued.

Benson Nutsukpui also responded, “My Lord the objection raised by the prosecution should be seen and put in the proper perspective. My Lord the high court is a court of justice, and must always be guided by the principles to do justice to all manner of persons that appear before it. Luckily this court is not bound by that ruling which I refrain from giving any name today. 

“My Lord that is a ruling in which a judge ruling on a submission of no case set out deliberately to deprive the accused persons of any material and or evidence that is exculpatory of them.  This court should not follow what was done, that court stated that the statements tendered by the police investigator and not objected to by the prosecution was hearsay evidence. And so without giving a hearing to the parties, that court rejected the evidence and marked it reject in his chambers, nothing can be further from an act of a court not wanting to do justice than that. 

“Now my Lord, at this point, you have the witness before you, he was the investigator, he wrote the statement, he signed it, it is on the file of EOCO. The prosecution generously discovered it and gave it to us, there is nothing hearsay about this document. What the prosecution is asking you to do is that I'm bound by the wrong judgement of a court of coordinate jurisdiction. My Lord, the interesting part of this case is that, if even it was a hearsay, the court never gave the parties the opportunity to bring the person who made the statement. 

“Having tied our hands, we have brought the person who made the statement, he has not denied it, he has admitted it, and to say that sometime ago it was rejected by a court of coordinate jurisdiction is totally unacceptable. My Lord there is no law of practice which states that a document rejected suo muto by a judge in his chambers cannot be readmitted. The new normal is that a document that has been rejected for a purpose, can be readmitted for another purpose. So my Lord what we are saying is that the position of the prosecution is not the law, and this court should not be persuaded by that. 

“And I will finally say, that a court of law in a criminal matter must made the findings of exculpatory evidence its priority and should not under any circumstance seek to gag the accused persons for the benefit of the prosecution.”

Lawyer Samuel Codjoe supported the tendering of the document.

He argued, “my Lord it's our position that a court seeking to do justice in a criminal matter is required to allow evidence and or exhibit which do not under any circumstance takes the prosecution by surprise, especially if it is exculpatory. Indeed the supreme court in the reference case of the Republic vrs Baffoe Bonnie and four others which is reported in 2017-2020 1SCGLR, it's clear that the job of a prosecutor under the provision of the 1992 constitution and specifically under the fundamental human rights provision 19 to provide all documents, and more especially exculpatory evidence which shows that the accused person is not liable of the offence. Adinyira JSC who read the unanimous decision of the court quoted with approval, the English case of Republic vrs Boucher, where the court held that the duty of a prosecutor is not to win the case by all means, theirs is a public duty to lay the evidence equally before the court for the court to make a decision.

“In this case, the exhibit sought to be tendered was given to us by the prosecution, the element of surprise to the prosecution is nonexistent. This is an exculpatory evidence which this court has to admit. We will add further that there has never been any order from any court prohibiting admission of the rejected document by Honyenuga JSC who was sitting as an additional high court judge in the case. I will end my statement that justice demands that this document be admitted especially when we are dealing with a criminal case. I'm done.”

But Justice Aboagye Tandoh after hearing arguments from all the parties, stuck to his previous ruling on a similar matter and rejected the document.

He ruled, “The statement or document counsel for A2 and A3 is seeking to tender is already on record marked as rejected R2O, PW1 /A2 and A3 in his evidence in chief in this court, has stated before this court, that all that is in the statement to the court in answer to the question that have you told the court what you stated in the document, the answer was, owning from what is going on from yesterday I have told the court everything in the statement. 

“In order to avoid the tendency of having the same exhibit being marked as Rejected (R) and later as admitted especially when the content is on record, the same has been repeated in DW1/A2 and A3 examination in chief. In my candid view, a court has the opportunity to evaluate the totality of the evidence at the end of the trial and the issue of whether or not an exhibit was rightly or wrongly admitted or rejected will come to the fore for a determination. See section 124 of the Evidence Act.

“Accordingly, the objection is upheld and the exhibit is rejected and marked as R23.”

Dr. Stephen Opuni, businessman Seidu Agongo and Agricult Ghana Ltd are currently facing combined 24 charges: Abetment of crime, defrauding by false pretence, contravention of the Public Procurement Act, willfully causing financial loss to the state, manufacturing fertilizer without registration, selling misbranded fertilizer and selling adulterated fertilizer, Corruption by public officer. Seidu Agongo and Agricult Ghana Ltd were however acquitted on three counts of money laundering they were charged with when the case began.

The three have pleaded not guilty to the charges and are on a GH¢300,000.00 self-recognizance bail each.

Source: classfmonline.com