
The High Court in Accra has discharged Gregory Afoko, the man accused of murdering Adams Mahama, a former Upper East Regional Chairman of the New Patriotic Party (NPP), in a trial that lasted for nearly eleven years.
Afoko had been accused of conspiring with Asabke Alangdi, who had already been convicted, for the murder of Adams Mahama in May 2015. The court also discharged Asabke Alangdi.
Justice Marie-Louise Simmons, presiding over the case, cited the stalled trial and multiple adjournments at the behest of the prosecution as reasons for the discharge. The two were facing their third trial for conspiracy to commit murder and murder, following a hung jury in the second trial.
The third trial began last year, in 2024, with the prosecution calling five of their 16 witnesses before stalling on November 24, 2024.
In court on Monday, December 1, 2025, Justice Mrs Simmons said the accused persons were before the court on a third trial for the offences of conspiracy to commit murder and murder.
The Court said that after the second trial ended with a hung jury, the accused persons were ordered to be tried again de novo (afresh).
The court said, relying on the earlier Bill of Indictment filed on March 22, 2019, the trial began again last year.
It was the case of the court that on January 18, 2024, the pleas of Afoko and Asabke were taken while jurors were empanelled.
In the third trial, five out of the 16 witnesses the prosecution was to rely on had testified between April 12, 2024, when the trial began, and November 24, 2024, when the fifth witness testified, with 11 more witnesses listed to be called.
Subsequently, the court said the trial had stalled with about six adjournments at the behest of the prosecution.
The court said it had been informed that a decision was to be taken on the case; meanwhile, the jurors have been appearing, and the “State has been paying or will pay for their allowances.”
On Monday, December 1, 2025, which, according to the court, was “about the seventh or eighth adjournment without any activity, there is no prosecutor present to inform the court about what is happening.”
The court also said only five out of seven jurors were present.
In the circumstance, the judge said, “I will discharge the accused persons, and the accused persons are accordingly discharged.”
The court also discharged and dissolved the jurors, and the court is grateful for their services.
The High Court in Accra on Friday, February 21, 2025, granted bail in the sum of GH₵500,000 with two sureties to Mr Gregory Afoko after almost a decade on remand while standing trial for his alleged role in the murder.
Afoko and his co-defendant, Asabke, are alleged to have poured acid on Adams Mahama, a former Upper East Regional chairman of the NPP, leading to his death on May 20, 2015.
Gregory Afoko is the brother of a former NPP National Chairman, Paul Afoko, who was suspended from the party in October of that same year, 2015.
In court on February 21, 2025, the prosecution did not oppose the bail application after the defence lawyers had offered sufficient proof that they could meet the bail conditions.
The suspect had two trials – one was aborted in 2019, and the other went through a full trial, and the jury returned a verdict on April 27, 2023. Afoko’s previous trial ended in a hung jury, with a 4-3 not guilty verdict in his favour on April 27, 2023.