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Ameri Probe: Police may frame me up – Former Deputy A-G

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General News of Tuesday, 1 August 2017

Source: ghanacrusader.com

2017-08-01

Dominic Ayine  DEPUTY AGDominic Ayine fears Police will frame him up

The Member of Parliament for Bolgatanga East and a former Deputy Attorney General Dr. Dominic Ayine has stated that his greatest fear is that the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) of the Ghana Police Service may frame him in connection with a probe into the controversial $510million power deal between the Mahama administration and private firm Africa and Middle East Resources Investment Group’s (AMERI Energy).

Last week some armed police officers raided the home of Dr. Ayine and seized his phones and laptop as part of investigations into the AMERI deal.

The Bolgatanga East MP said although his hands are clean, he fears the CID could tamper with his laptop and phones to frame him.

“I have nothing to hide and I just hope that when the warrant said I have caused financial loss to the state that is what they are investigating. If they are investigating other crimes, that would be grossly unlawful. And in any case, even if they are investigating other crime, I have nothing to hide.

Get All The Latest Politics Here – GhanaCrusader Political News “My only fear is that given what they are doing now, they could tamper with the laptop, hack into it, install emails that I didn’t write, put matters there that I didn’t communicate and so on and so forth, but I don’t want to preempt anything”.

“I just hope that the men and women of the Ghana Police Service who came and who are working on this case will have sufficient integrity to be able to say that: ‘When they took my phones, these are the conversations that I had with anybody connected with the AMERI deal. And I can assure that none of those conversations concerned any act of criminality,” he said.

He said the charge levelled against him “is based upon the government’s own calculation of what the AMERI deal ought to have cost, not what in reality it cost, so for me that is the basis of the reasonable suspicion.”

“…The most worrying aspect” of the probe, Dr Ayine said, is that: “I’m yet to come across a situation where the Attorney General’s opinion becomes the subject matter of criminal liability; that an Attorney General issues an opinion saying that an agreement that has been entered into between a government agency and a private investor accords with the laws of Ghana, I had nothing to do with the sum of money that was agreed”.

“I had nothing to do with the technical aspects of the agreement, that was the work of technical people from VRA, GRIDCo and so on, the Power Ministry and so on, so if an Attorney General issues and opinion and you say that that opinion has caused financial loss to the state, I’m yet at a loss as to why.

READ THIS: Ayariga Recommends Suspension Of EC Boss And Her Deputies “I just hope that they are not using that as a basis to raid our houses in a bid to fish for evidence of other crimes; that would be very unprofessional,” he noted.

According to him, “after having come from a very poor background to achieve the status of a law lecturer and a practitioner, I have sufficient means to support myself, I don’t need to do anything untoward in order to be able to enjoy life, so I never engaged myself in any deals that were inimical to the public interest and I was lucky to have a Minister who was so principled that she never engaged in anything that you would call bribery or corruption or anything, so that was an example that I followed and I would just hope that they would do the correct thing and make sure that they don’t damage the reputations of people like me just because they want to score political points.”

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