CID, Registrar of Companies deepen collaboration to tackle corporate fraud
The Criminal Investigations Department (CID) of the Ghana Police Service has welcomed a delegation from the Office of the Registrar of Companies to discuss measures to strengthen institutional cooperation in the prevention, investigation, and prosecution of corporate fraud and related offences.
The high-level strategic engagement, held at the CID Headquarters, focused on the increasing sophistication of corporate fraud schemes, including the forgery of statutory documents, identity theft, impersonation of company officials, fraudulent alteration of company records, falsification of filings, and other criminal activities designed to compromise the integrity of Ghana’s corporate register.
Speaking at the meeting, the Director-General of the Criminal Investigations Department, COP Lydia Yaako Donkor, reaffirmed the Ghana Police Service’s commitment to supporting the Office of the Registrar of Companies in safeguarding the integrity of the national corporate register.
She assured the Registrar of the Department’s readiness to deepen collaboration in the detection, investigation, and prosecution of offences within the corporate regulatory space, while providing the necessary institutional support to combat emerging forms of corporate and economic crime.
For her part, the Registrar of Companies, Mrs. Maame Samma Peprah, underscored the strategic importance of the corporate register as a critical national asset relied upon by investors, financial institutions, regulatory bodies, businesses, and the general public for informed commercial and investment decision-making.
She noted that any unlawful interference with the authenticity and accuracy of statutory corporate records extends beyond individual corporate interests and poses a direct threat to the credibility of Ghana’s corporate governance framework and the trust that underpins commercial transactions.
Mrs. Peprah further emphasized the need for a coordinated and integrated approach to tackling corporate crime, stressing that effective law enforcement interventions must be complemented by robust corporate regulation.
She added that sustained collaboration between regulatory and investigative institutions is essential to promoting transparency, accountability, and confidence within Ghana’s business ecosystem.
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