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Eastern Region: Fuel attendant and manager jailed 15 years for stealing GHC102,000

Two workers of Ready Oil, an oil marketing company, in the Eastern Region have been sentenced to a total of 15 years imprisonment for stealing an am

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Two workers of Ready Oil, an oil marketing company, in the Eastern Region have been sentenced to a total of 15 years imprisonment for stealing an amount of GHC102,000.

Emmanuel Ohene Amankwah, 27, and Douglas Twumasi, 25, will serve eight and seven-year jail terms respectively after pleading guilty to charges of conspiracy to commit crime.

The prosecutor, Chief inspector Joseph Damfei, told the court that the first convict is the Kwabeng branch manager of Ready Oil while the second is a fuel pump attendant.

The complainant in the case is Samuel Kwaku Owusu-Manu, the CEO of Ready Oil Limited.

According to him, on 20 May 2022, at about 10:20 pm when he had returned to Kwabeng from Accra, he spotted someone siphoning fuel into a tipper truck at his station at Kwabeng.

Owusu-Manu met the first convict but the driver of the tipper truck bolted upon seeing him.

The prosecutor said when the complainant confronted Amankwah, he told him all the workers were aware of what was going on at the fuel station.

Chief inspector Damfei explained that on 21 May, the complainant went back to the station to check on the previous day’s sales and it was GHC48,000 but the convicts could account for only GHC17,617.

Owusu-Manu confronted the second convict who claimed to have sold the fuel to one Awudu and accounted to the first convict, the manager.

The police prosecutor added that the complainant also detected petrol and diesel shortage in the underground tank valuing GHC19,109.50.

An audit inquiry revealed that the convicts could also not account for fuel sold on credit to Tommy, Richard and Gandhi at GHC31,000.00, GHC20,000 and GHC2,800, respectively.

Tommy and Richard denied ever buying fuel on credit from the station. Gandhi, however, confirmed buying on credit at GHC1,400 and not GHC2,800.

In his ruling, Franklin Titus Glover, the Anyinam circuit court judge directed that an unregistered Toyota Camry the manager had bought should be sold to offset part of the cost.

John Attafuah

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