Posted on: www.dailyguideghana.com
By William Yaw Owusu
Monday, August 29, 2016
A top police officer stationed at the
Airport District in Accra, Superintendent Felix Agbenyegah Anyidoho, who has
been arrested, is facing administrative enquiry for allegedly engaging in fraudulent
activities.
Superintendent Anyidoho, the Crime
Officer at the Airport Police Station, was said to have been handcuffed
alongside a junior colleague of his and taken to the Police Headquarters last
Thursday.
His arrest followed incessant complaints
to the Police Administration by some business people, especially vehicle
dealers, that he was using his office to perpetrate fraud and theft.
In one of such cases, he purportedly collected
a 2013 Toyota Highlander from a car dealer under the pretext of buying it but
vanished with the vehicle.
He reportedly used his influence to block
any attempt to investigate him.
Supt. Anyidoho reportedly issued dud
cheques on different occasions to the complainant, refused to release the vehicle
when the owner said he was no longer interested in the deal and succeeded in
preventing investigations into the case.
Even petitions the complainant sent to
the Police Intelligence and Professional Standards (PIPS) Unit of the Ghana
Police Service and other follow-ups to the Police Headquarters fell on deaf
ears, leaving the complainant Ernest Asare, a car dealer, frustrated.
Narrating his ordeal to DAILY GUIDE, the complainant said about
three months ago, a lady whose name he gave as Araba visited his garage near
the Achimota overhead bridge in Accra and expressed interest in buying a Toyota
Corolla saloon car from him.
“The lady then said her boyfriend- Supt.
Anyidoho works at the Airport Police Station and had asked us to accompany her
with the car to the station for inspection,” Mr Ernest Asare narrated.
He said, “On our way to the Airport
Police Station, the lady made a call to the police officer to the effect that
we were on our way to the place and the policeman redirected us to the Polo
Ground which is near the station and we met him there.”
Mr Asare said the officer then requested
for another vehicle and he mentioned the Toyota Highlander (2013 model) to him which
was yet to be cleared from the port.
“Mr. Anyidoho said he wanted to buy the
yet-to-be-cleared Highlander and immediately asked us to send the Corolla back
to the garage, which we obliged,” the complainant posited.
He said 11 days later he called the police
chief to inform him that the Highlander had been cleared from the port, adding
that the “police chief asked us to send him pictures of the vehicle.”
The complainant said the crime officer then
asked them to meet him at the Mile 7 Police Station at Achimota where he
(complainant) said Mr. Anyidoho resides.
“On June 13, 2016, we went to the Mile 7
Police Station and met him where he took possession of the car and handed it
over to his colleague Mile 7 crime officer and said he would ask his auto
mechanic to come over and inspect the vehicle,” Mr Asare disclosed.
He said around 5pm the same day, Mr.
Anyidoho telephoned him and said he was going to purchase the vehicle and asked
them to meet him in his office at the Airport by 9am the following day.
“We met the officer in his office the
next day where we agreed on the price at GH¢150,000 and he immediately issued
two Stanbic Bank cheques in GH¢80,000 to be cashed on 24/06/16 and GH¢70,000 to
be cashed on 29/07/16.”
He said the first cheque bounced so the
officer called them and pleaded with them and issued another set of cheques to
be cashed at the UBA Bank.
He said the UBA cheques were GH¢50,000 to
be cashed on 06/07/16 and GH¢30,000 meant to be cashed on 12/07/16 but the
first cheque again bounced.
Mr Asare claimed that the officer is
operating a car stealing syndicate that clones chassis numbers of vehicles to
prepare fresh documents and use them to perpetrate fraud.
The complainant also said that at one
point Mr. Anyidoho brought his in-laws from Kumasi to plead on his behalf to
give him until July 30, 2016 to pay the money but reneged on the promise.
When DAILY GUIDE contacted the officer early
last week, he promised to pay the money by last Saturday but the complainant
said it had not been paid yet.
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