The Chief Executive Officer of the now-defunct The Beige
Bank, Mr Michael Nyinaku, together with 12 of his subsidiary companies, are
expected to cough up over GH₵1.3 billion
to the Receiver of the defunct company, Nii Amanor Dodoo.
Mr Amanor Dodoo, who has dragged Nyinaku and 12 of his subsidiaries, including
Legacy Pension Trust Ltd, The Beige Group Ltd, BBS Logistics and Beige Village
to court, insists that the defunct bank transferred several millions of Ghana
cedis to the said companies ranging between GH₵1 million
and over GH₵100 million.
The Receiver is, among other things, praying the court to order Nyinaku and his
subsidiaries to refund a total of GH₵1,
363,851,590.35, including interest.
The writ has the Receiver and Beige Bank as plaintiffs and Michael
Nyinaku and his other 12 companies as defendants.
“A declaration that the various transactions described in the statement of
claim between 2nd plaintiff and defendants are unlawful. An order for the 1st
defendant to account and refund to plaintiffs for any profits resulting from
property transactions with or through the 12th defendant, and for a further
order rescinding all the transactions entered between 2nd plaintiff and
defendants,” Amanor Dodoo added in the writ.
The Receiver also wants “orders of recovery jointly and severally against the
defendants” the sum total of GH₵1.3
billion.
He also wants to take custody of assets “identified in this matter to have been
acquired with funds taken from the 2nd plaintiff and traced to be within
the possession or control of any of the defendants or any other persons.”
Some of the assets he listed included the Beige Village, residential properties
at Trasacco, as well as various vehicles of the said companies.
The Receiver also wants to hold, in trust for the defunct Beige bank, “all
property, plant and equipment, bank accounts, investments and any other assets
belonging to 1st to 13th defendants as at 1st August 2018.”
“An order directing the defendants to return and/or transfer to plaintiffs all
the assets identified to have been acquired with the funds taken from 2nd
plaintiff, proceeds from the sale of any assets, or any new substituted
assets.”
He is also seeking an order of “perpetual injunction restraining all the
defendants from selling, disposing off and/or dealing with the assets
identified by plaintiffs and any other assets acquired with funds obtained from
2nd plaintiff and an order directing the defendants to account to plaintiff all
advantages, benefits, gains and profits, derived or obtained from or through
any transaction with 2nd plaintiff’s funds.”
Beige Bank was said to have obtained a banking licence falsely.
An inventory asset and property report filed by the Receiver to the Bank of
Ghana revealed that Beige Bank had total assets of GH₵494 million.
Out of the figure, GH₵282
million, representing 57% were loans and securities.
According to the report, the bank gave an amount of GH₵274 million, constituting 31% of the loans to related parties.
The Receiver said Beige bank did not adhere to credit administration
policies and had inadequacies in recovery efforts.
Daily Graphic