T’di woman fined GH¢7.2k over fake pregnancy, kidnap in 2021
Reading out his judgment, which took more than two hours, presiding judge Michael Ampadu explained that though the publication was not made by Josephine Panyin Mensah, it was her account to the police that led to the publication “which in no doubt caused fear and panic throughout the country”.
The Takoradi District Court A presided over by His Worship Michael Ampadu has fined Josephine Panyin Mensah, famed and subsequently accused to have faked a pregnancy and staging her kidnap, a sum of GH¢7,200 on a charge of publication of false news with intent to cause fear and panic.
Reading out his judgment, which took more than two hours, presiding judge Michael Ampadu explained that though the publication was not made by Josephine Panyin Mensah, it was her account to the police that led to the publication “which in no doubt caused fear and panic throughout the country”.
He further added that the police in the first instance were only acting on a reported case of a missing wife but the issue later turned into fake pregnancy and kidnapping after the police had found Josephine Panyin Mensah, who admitted same in her caution statement to them.
“She told the police that she was kidnapped and when she gained consciousness she saw 12 other pregnant women where she was who had all been killed. So if you have a relative who is pregnant and maybe had traveled this piece of information when you hear it will obviously make you panic,” he stressed
Though the maximum sentence for the count of publishing of false news with intent to cause fear and panic is three years, Michael Ampadu opted for a fine of 600 penalty units because Josephine Panyin Mensah is pregnant.
On the first charge of deceiving a public officer, the court found Josephine Panyin Mensah not guilty as, according to the presiding judge, ingredients necessary to make the charge stick were absent.
“In establishing the charge of deceiving a public officer, we need to establish that the complaint is a public officer and the one the offence directed at was a public officer performing or in active duty. Unfortunately, the complaint was the husband of Josephine Panyin Mensah, who is Michael Simmons and a business man. And it has been clearly established that the complaint is not a public officer as even the police admitted that he is a business man. And with that, the issue of a public officer and being on active duty cannot be established”, parts of his ruling stated
Josephine Panyin Mensah was accused of faking a pregnancy and staging her kidnap.
She was charged with two counts of deceiving a public officer contrary to Section 251 (B) of the Criminal Offences Act and publication of false news with intent to cause fear and panic contrary to Section 208 (1) of the Criminal Offences Act.
Source: 3news.com|Ghana