2 Cops Face Service Enquiry

A service enquiry has been ordered into the conduct of two police officers who were alleged to have extorted money from one madam Victoria Afful after they arrested her for alleged human trafficking in 2013. The two police officers with the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) � Joseph Naab and Emmanuel Gyamfi Yeboah � are said to have extorted a total amount of GHC4,200 from Victoria as contained in a suit against the police pending before the Human Rights Court. In a police response to a petition against the raid of her house, seizure of vehicles, extortion of money and notice to the Attorney General, the police said: �We refer to your letter dated November 8, 2013 concerning the subject matter and wish to inform you that discreet investigation has been conducted into the matter and some of the concerns raised by your client (Victoria) were found to be credible. �Consequently, the two police officers involved have been interdicted and service enquiry ordered into their conduct.� It further stated that the Commander of the Anti-Human Trafficking Unit has been instructed to release the two vehicles and other items seized during the police operation. Justice Kofi Essel Mensah, the Human Rights Court judge hearing the case, said since the police has responded, the plaintiff (Victoria) should go and collect the items the police took from the house during the raid, and adjourned the case to April 4, 2014 for continuation. Victoria Afful has sued the Police Administration for damages for violating her human rights as well as that of her son. She is asking the Human Rights Court for an order directed at the respondents; the Director General of Police and the Attorney General to pay GHC200,000 as compensation to her for wrongfully depriving her of the use of her house and also wrongly detaining her two cars and depriving her of the use of the said cars since September 14, 2013 without any lawful order from a court. In her affidavit, she is also asking for an order directed at the respondents to pay GHC100,000 as compensation to her son for wrongfully detaining him for no reasonable cause from September 14 to 16, 2013. Further, she is also seeking for an order directed at the Director-General of Police to release the two cars belonging to her which the police have wrongfully detained to her forthwith. �An order directed at the respondents to pay to the applicants a total amount of GHC4,200 being money extorted from her by two CID men, Joseph Naab and Emmanuel Gyamfi Yeboah. An order that the GHC4,200 be paid at a prevailing bank rate form the dates of such extortion till date of final and full payment.� Other reliefs are an order that the respondents pay $2,900, �5,150, and GHC9,000, all belonging to the applicant which got missing from her metal safe when the police raided her house, adding the police did not have any excuse to open the safe. In September 2013, the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) raided the home of Victoria, an alleged human trafficker, in Weija following a report by Metro TV�s Samuel Agyemang. In the process, seven ladies whose ages range from 17 to 25 years were rescued by the police. Several items, including different passports of Victoria bearing different details of her, were said to have been recovered, as well as passports of different persons. The son of the alleged trafficker was also arrested as an accomplice since he was the only person present in the house with the victims when the raid took place.