Justice Srem Sai, the Deputy Attorney General and Minister of Justice has revealed some looters implicated in corruption-related investigations have offered to return the stolen loot unlawfully acquired.
According to Justice Srem Sai, some of the individuals under investigation have also expressed their readiness to serve as witnesses to testify in court against certain accused persons.
Speaking to the media at the Supreme Court on May 13, 2025, Deputy Attorney General, Justice Srem Sai disclosed, “Let me tell you, a number of people have approached us making offers to return loot, including (sic), and we have agreed with some of them. Some of them have agreed to be witnesses for us against some of the accused persons”.
The deputy AG disclosed the Office of the Attorney General is firmly on course to recover all looted assets in line with Operation Recover All Loot (ORAL).
He further revealed that the Office of the Attorney General is open to persons who voluntarily want to return such assets.
“So, I think we are on track when it comes to the recovery. There’s no better way of recovering the money than voluntary recovery. So, if the people are willing to give us what they looted(sic), we will take it,” he added.
Justice Srem Sai reassured Ghanaians that the government remains fully committed to recovering all stolen assets to ensure that public resources are reclaimed and those responsible are held accountable.
The Office of the Attorney General has since filed 11 charges against the former National Signals Bureau boss, Kwabena Adu Boahene, his wife Angela Adjei-Boateng and two others who have been charged by the state for stealing, defrauding by false pretences, money laundering, conspiracy to commit a crime.
According to the charge sheet Kwabena Adu Boahene, his wife stole state funds to the tune of GHc 49 million.
The Attorney General, Dr Dominic Ayine, filed 11 charges against Kwabena Adu-Boahene and three others at the High Court in Accra.
Also, the Office of the Attorney General has filed charges against suspects involved in the $2m Sky Train scandal.
The charges have been filed against the former Board Chair of the Ghana Infrastructure Investment Fund (GIIF), Professor Christopher Ameyaw-Akumfi and one Solomon Asamoah.
According to reports the charges brought under Section 23(1) and Section 179A(3)(a) of the Criminal Offences Act, 1960 (Act 29), indicate a $2 million payment made in 2019 to Africa Investor Holdings Limited for the development of an urban Sky Train system in Accra—a project that was never executed.