A year ago
Alifa Adams, a man who was mentioned as being part of a group of suspects arrested in connection with the enlistment fraud that struck Ghana in 2015, has popped up again online about an alleged fraudulent travel and tour/recruitment agency. His name is linked to a new alleged fraudulent company at the airport.
This time, Alifa has been refered to as being behind the organization Counsel/Focal Movement Elegance Counsel (CMG) which is working from Air terminal, in Accra.
El Tctico Patrn Steezy X tweeted that Alifa Adams' business is highly protected by influential individuals in the country, despite the fact that it is led by graduates.
The tweet stated that the company currently has at least 50 agents who assist it in carrying out its alleged fraudulent activities, raising concern about the company's activities.
"A fraudulent travel and tour/recruitment agency is operating on the Atlantic Tower's 6th floor, office number Behind the Marina shopping center is the 608, Airport Residential Area. They operate under the name CMG Consult or Central Migration Grace Consult, are led by Alifa Adams, and they are well protected by influential Authority figures.
Alifa Adams, CEO of CMG, is the mastermind behind numerous frauds in Ghana that are led by Alifa Adams and are well protected by influential Authority figures. Alifa Adams, the Chief of CMG is the driving force behind various tricks in Ghana.
According to the post, "they have at least 50 Agents currently working for them" and "mostly post their fake overseas job offers/vacancies in class groups, old students association groups, Whatsapp statuses, etc., to lure their friends/colleagues to apply."
A specific MR Harris responded to the tweet by mentioning Alifa Adams and the manner in which CMG Consult Gh contacted him to assist him in obtaining a Canadian working visa.
He added that Alifa Adams turned around while they were going through the process to accuse them of trying to defraud him.
We offer him the service for 9500 dollars, along with a deposit of 10,000 ghc. We paid the 10,000 ghc for visa fees (340 cad), and the remainder was used for insurance, other documents, and documentation.
At the Canadian Embassy VAC, he personally made himself available for the submission. In a message that was also shared by the Twitter user, he wrote, "On April 14, 2023, as well as all waiting for the outcome because we inform him it will take six months and beyond, only for him to allegedly post that we have defrauded him."
Alifa Adams, also known as Cassidy or Baaba, is a 27-year-old unemployed individual for whom the Police Administration has offered a bounty of GH5,000 to anyone who can provide information that will result in her arrest.
Alifa, a member of the group of suspects arrested in connection with the enlistment fraud that hit the country recently, had jumped bail, according to the Head of the six-member Special Investigations Taskforce (SIT), DCOP Mr. Bright Oduro, and all efforts to rearrest him had so far proved futile.
He stated that Alifa, who is alleged to have been the mastermind behind the police recruitment scam, would be arrested, which would assist the task force in its investigations of the fraud and ensure that everyone involved was held accountable.
Alifa has tattoos all over her body, including on both of her arms, and is medium height. It is thought that he is hiding out in Adum, Kumasi.
The police CID or the nearest police station should be contacted by anyone with information.
The con On March 1, 2014, it was reported that hundreds of young people had attended five police training depots to enlist in the Ghana Police Service. However, they were dissatisfied when they learned it was a con.
It was discovered that their recruitment letters, which bore Mr. Timbila's signature, were forged, and that the alleged enlistment was a ruse.
It required the police a chaotic investment to drive away the people in question, the greater part of them college graduates, who had gone to the Kumasi, Koforidua, Pwalugu, Accra and Ho Police warehouses with their gear to start the preparation.
The perpetrators were said to have received payments from the victims that ranged from GH2,000 to GH3,500.
Arrest As part of their efforts to uncover the perpetrators of the most recent recruitment con, the police have since taken into custody eight individuals, including two police officers.
Two suspects, Aisha Asumda, false name Aisha Boku Masi, a 36-year-old shea spread merchant, thought to play had a critical impact in the trick, and her accessory, Alifa Adams, were captured at Tesano and Adenta, separately, following a tip off.
Amos Brown, a radio host in his 40s, is one of the five additional suspects; Gideon Sarpong, a General Corporal with the Visibility Unit in Takoradi; Ruth Agyiri, 27, of the Koforidua Central Police Station.
Pastor Paul Danso from Tarkwa and Richard Harrison, 30, make up the remaining group.
Total Comments: 0