Abu Trica extradition case to continue as court dismisses objection by lawyers
The ruling keeps alive a request from the United States, where authorities want him surrendered to face allegations linked to wire fraud and money laundering conspiracies.
An attempt to stop extradition proceedings against Frederick Kumi, widely known as Abu Trica, has failed after the Gbese District Court rejected a preliminary challenge brought by his lawyers.
The ruling keeps alive a request from the United States, where authorities want him surrendered to face allegations linked to wire fraud and money laundering conspiracies. The case forms part of a wider push by American prosecutors to pursue suspected cross-border financial crime.
Before the court could move into the substance of the extradition request, the defence sought to knock out the process on legal grounds.
Lawyers for Kumi, led by Oliver Barker-Vormawor, argued that the offences cited by the US do not fall within the scope of the extradition treaty signed between Ghana and the United States in 1931. Their position was that the treaty does not specifically mention wire fraud or money laundering as offences for which extradition can be granted.
The defence also argued that Ghana could not use newer domestic legislation to broaden the reach of that older treaty framework. In their view, the agreement must be interpreted strictly as it stands, without later legal developments being used to add to the list of extraditable offences.
They further contended that the treaty’s references to conspiracy were too narrow to cover the charges now being relied on by the United States.
The court, however, was not persuaded.
By dismissing the preliminary objection, the judge effectively removed the first major legal obstacle facing the extradition application. That means proceedings can now continue, with the court expected to consider the request on its merits rather than being stopped at the threshold stage.
