December 24, 2024

A week after he was granted bail, Lawrence Nana Asiamah Hanson (Bulldog) has in an epistle given a narration of how he was arrested by some officials of the Bureau of National Investigations (BNI), now National Intelligence Bureau (NIB).

The artiste manager was picked up on Monday, January 11, 2021 following his comment that President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo will not complete his 4-year-term in office if aggrieved customers of gold dealership firm, Menzgold, do not get their locked-up funds.

He had argued on UTV’s United Showbiz on Saturday, January 9, 2021, that suggestions that customers invested at their own peril hence, cannot hold the government responsible for the inconvenience caused them is unacceptable.

“We’ll get our monies back else Nana Addo will run; he won’t finish his 4 years. I’m telling you. He won’t finish his 4 years,” a visibly angry Bulldog barked but later said his comment was not a threat, rather, it is to point out that the president should take the blame and do the needful.

“There is no way I have anything personal against the president. I am a citizen. I haven’t said I was going to kill him or anything. All I’m saying is that he should pay the customers because it was under his government they lost their monies.”

After spending more than 24 hours in police custody, he was granted bill with three sureties.

The outspoken personality subsequently showed gratitude to all persons who showed compassion and facilitated his release, including the security officials who he saluted for being professional.

In his latest write-up, however, Bulldog gives a breakdown of how the “orders from above” were carried out. While labeling the incident as a “presidential swoop”, Bulldog said he was abducted.

“…we were pounced on by four strapping men in bulletproof vests menacingly brandishing guns, as they bawl and bluster in demand of our phones. They had disembarked from a Land Cruiser, one out of a motorcade of five that had pulled up to a screeching halt, blocked my car and surrounded my premises as two police officers leaped out wielding AK47 assault rifles,” portions of his account read.

“My Miranda rights weren’t read to me. I was abducted.”

Below is his full post.

Chapter One

Orders From Above — The Presidential Swoop

In the sweltering heat of January eleventh, twenty twenty one, between thirteen hundred and fourteen hundred hours my rights as a citizen of Ghana was infringed on.

I had finished a radio programme ‘Best Entertainment Show’ on Okay FM as a discussant and proceeded to Adabraka afterwards. I arrived at my journey’s end at a quarter to thirteen hundred hours.

With my engine still on, I held out a little longer in the car attending to a client on the phone.

I alighted after the call and engaged Joshua, my personal assistant in a conversation, just under two minutes we were pounced on by four strapping men in bulletproof vests menacingly brandishing guns, as they bawl and bluster in demand of our phones.

They had disembarked from a Land Cruiser, one out of a motorcade of five that had pulled up to a screeching halt, blocked my car and surrounded my premises as two police officers leaped out wielding AK47 assault rifles.
For a moment I fell into a light trance and it seemed we were on a set of an action film, an insistent and peremptory request from them to me — to get into the vehicle broke my reverie.

The main gate to my premises was cracked open, I was escorted into the house and the swooping began.

During the poke about, I queried what they were after, I got a question for an answer — Do you own a weapon? I will be amazed if someone like you doesn’t have one, he babbled out.

My response was dissenting, he impressed on me how crucial his query was but my riposte had no revision.

Professionalism gave in to overzealousness when a member of the sleuths pulled out their phone as if they were receiving a call and stole a shot of me in handcuffs. I patiently await the publication of the photograph.

I was ushered back into the vehicle after the raid and the anterior of my premises had been besieged to make way for our exit, I asked their identity and in a haughty response I learned they were BNI operatives.

My disputatious self nearly offered a rebuttal by saying: there’s no security firm by that moniker, but I held my peace based on clairvoyance.
A sudden shriek from the team leader to his boys, had my car added to the motorcade. We sped off through thick traffic and headed to the ridge offices of the National Intelligence Bureau, (NIB).

Protection of Personal Liberty:

Under Article 14(2), any person who is arrested or detained by law enforcement authorities has the right to know the reasons for his arrest or detention.

“(2) A person who is arrested, restricted or detained shall be informed immediately, in a language that he understands, of the reasons for his arrest, restriction or detention and of his right to a lawyer of his choice.”

My Miranda rights weren’t read to me. I was abducted.

The cloak and dagger snatch by trigger happy gumshoes sent from the presidency on that momentous afternoon was meant to cower.

However, I remain resolute with God as my strength.

Psalm 23:4

#InHisPresence #sikanhyiraadomaseda

 

Source: www.ghanaweb.com

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