In the quiet hours of this morning, a digital wildfire was ignited. A Facebook post from a page ironically named “We Love Ghana” began circulating a claim as hollow as it is hazardous: that the suspected murderers of Andrews Amankwah, the father-in-law of Lawyer Sammy Gyamfi, had escaped from the Adabraka Police Station.
It is a narrative designed to bleed. It bleeds public confidence; it bleeds institutional integrity; and it bleeds the very fabric of our social order. But beneath the sensationalist “JUST IN” headline lies a truth far more solid than the flickering pixels of a smartphone screen.
The three suspects, men whose faces are now etched into the public consciousness are not wandering the streets of Accra. They are, in fact, exactly where the law demands them to be: in lawful custody within the walls of Tarkwa Prisons, under investigation by the Regional CID for further crimes.
Misinformation is the modern-day arson. While the physical arsonist burns wood and mortar, the digital arsonist burns trust.
To suggest that a high-profile trio of suspects could simply vanish from police custody is not merely a “post”, it is a direct assault on the Ghana Police Service. It seeks to paint our officers as incompetent and our stations as porous, all for the cheap currency of social media engagement.
We must be clear: the capture of the “Duku Syndicate” was a masterclass in intelligence-led policing. Following the tragic events of February 10, the Inspector-General of Police (IGP) did not offer platitudes; he offered results.
Within weeks, through a coordinated strike, the suspects were neutralized and brought to heel. To now manufacture an “escape” is to spit in the face of the bravery that led to their initial arrest.
The constitution provides for the freedom of expression, but it does not provide a sanctuary for the deliberate destabilization of the state through falsehoods. The Cyber Crime Unit of the Ghana Police Service has shown, through recent crackdowns on deepfakes and digital fraud, that it possesses the teeth to bite back.
The source of this “Adabraka Escape” myth must be traced, unmasked, and held to the strict standards of our laws. If a person uses a megaphone to shout “Fire!” in a crowded cinema when there is none, they are held liable for the ensuing stampede. Why then do we allow digital accounts to shout “Escape!” in a crowded nation without consequence?
We cannot build a nation on a foundation of sand and “shares.” We owe it to the memory of the deceased, to the peace of mind of the bereaved family, and to the hardworking men and women in uniform to reject these digital ghost stories.
The Ghana Police Service has proven its mettle. It is now up to the Cyber Unit to ensure that while our officers patrol the streets, our digital borders are equally protected from the vultures of misinformation. Let the culprits find that the law is not just a concept, but a living, breathing force that reaches from the physical cell to the virtual server.
By Raymond Ablorh




















