Missing Cocaine Baking Soda Saga: CID Boss Denies Arrest Of Top Policewoman

The Police Criminal Investigations Department Chief, DCOP Prosper Agblor, has told Citi News he is aware his officers have been �assisting the Bureau of National Investigations� in their investigations into the circumstances under which some 1,020 grammes of cocaine-turned into sodium bicarbonate. He, however, denied knowledge of the reported detention of one of his top female subordinates over the latest cocaine scandal which made big headlines late last year. Reports broke this afternoon that the BNI is holding DSP Gifty Mawuenyega, the Chief of the Commercial Crimes Unit of the Police CID over the cocaine-turned-baking soda scandal. �What I know is that my officers have been assisting the BNI in their investigations into the case,� the CID chief said, denying knowledge of the reported detention of one of subordinates about the scandal. News reports quoted BNI insiders as having said DSP Agbenyega met the suspect from whom the cocaine was seized more than a dozen times, whilst she was in custody. The BNI is said to be interested in probing why the female police chief, reportedly had meetings with the suspect when her unit was not responsible for investigating the case, which has become a source major embarrassment for both the Police Service and the Judiciary. The four-member Committee set up by Chief Justice Georgina Theodora Woode to investigate circumstances under which some 1,020 grammes of cocaine turned into sodium bicarbonate finished its public sitting nearly two weeks ago, but Ghanaians are yet to be told the findings of the week-long probe. CitiNews investigations have revealed that ahead of the just-ended Christmas holidays, a bulky report was reportedly prepared by the Mrs Justice Agnes Dodzie-led Committee that probed the cocaine-turned-washing soda scandal and handed it over to the nation�s third most important public servant. However, nearly two weeks on, not a single word has come from the office of the nation�s first female boss of the Judiciary as to the exact content of the fat document. �The report is being heavily guarded like a state secrete instead of telling Ghanaians what the committee did and what they found,� said a senior judge who wished to remain anonymous. According to CitiNews reporter Richard Sky, �insiders have refused to give details as to the true content of the report, but say the report holds the key to unravelling the whereabouts of the missing cocaine. � �I am worried and I know majority of Ghanaians are equally worried. Considering the swift nature in which the committee,� David Amliba, lawyer and known critic of the Judiciary, told Richard Sky in an interview on Wednesday. �The committee sat in public therefore, the more the report delays, the more it will deepen the public perception that the committee was set up to white-wash the judiciary,� he added. �The public perception about the judiciary is not good and it is my view that the Chief Justice, by keeping this report is not helping matters,� David Amliba said, adding �it is in the Chief Justice�s own interest and in the very best interest of the Judiciary as an institution to swiftly release the report, just as she was swift in setting up the committee to investigate the missing cocaine. � But a top official of the Judiciary is denying claims that the committee�s report has been submitted to the Chief Justice. �The report is not ready yet,� said Judicial Secretary Justice Alex Acheampong when reached on phone Wednesday morning. But, sources within the Judiciary insist that �the report was indeed handed over the Chief Justice. �