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Aggrieved persons can petition CJ for retrial – Okudzeto

An investigative piece by Anas Aremeyaw Anas has established complicity of some thirty four (34) high profile Judges in an explosive corruption scandal.
Sam Okudzeto , Former President of the Ghana Bar Association
Sam Okudzeto , Former President of the Ghana Bar Association

READ MORE: > 34 judges cited for corruption

People who are confident that any of the 34 judges cited in the latest corruption exposé by ace journalist, Anas Aremeyaw Anas, ruled against them on any case can petition the Chief Justice for a retrial, Former President of the Ghana Bar Association, Sam Okudzeto has said.

“It is appropriate for the parties affected to petition exactly for that purpose because if a judge has actually collected money and gave judgment against you, and it is established that, that is what happened then you have every right to petition the Chief Justice for a retrial,” he told TV3 news.

READ MORE: > Anas’ investigation is not genuine - Fmr. State Attorney

The Judges have been captured on tape in discussion with suspects or assigns of suspects on how to compromise the cases before their respective courts.

Some of the culprits have also been linked to sex scandals in the three-hour edited video emanating from a two-year investigation into corrupt practices in the Judicial Service.

Reports suggest that two of them have in a panic-reaction, tendered their resignation.

READ MORE: > One judge suffers stroke, another hospitalized

One judge has suffered mild stroke and another hospitalized at Nyaho clinic after news of their involvement in a corruption scandal broke.

22 judges implicated in the scandal have been suspended by the Judicial Council while 12 High Court judges under investigation

READ MORE: > 22 judges suspended

Meanwhile, private legal practitioner, Dr Maurice Ampaw is asking the Chief Justice, Georgina Theodora Woode to resign ‘honourably’.

According to him, the office of the Chief Justice has failed in dealing with corruption in the judiciary.

READ MORE: > Chief Justice must resign – Maurice Ampaw

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