
Ghana's presidential jet touches down months after mandatory technical inspection – IMANI's Bright Simons
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6th June 2025 11:16:29 AM
3 mins readBy: Amanda Cartey

Big Baby T, best friend of Ghanaian business mogul, Joseph Boateng, popularly known as Dada Joe, has warned persons making mockery of his friend's arrest by spreading falsehoods to pay dearly for it.
"It says a lot about us as a people. If you're ready to spread falsehood, be ready to pay punitive damages... For those creating animosity, I never respond to hate! I respond only to love. I haven't addressed the elephant in the room because our brother will address it in due time," he added.
Big Baby T expresses disappointment at how people are quick to spread bad news regarding Dada Joe's arrest, but fails to invest the same energy into ballooning his good works in society.
"I find it interesting how folks are excited and busily spreading news about the mishap that has befallen our brother, and yet these same people failed to put the same keenness and enthusiasm in reporting or sharing his philanthropic contributions," he said.
Last month, a secret FBI operation arrested Ghana’s nightlife mogul and alleged crypto kingpin, Nana Kojo Boateng, popularly known as Dada Joe Remix, with possible extradition to the United States of America (U.S.A).
Sources said he was “scooped up Rambo-style” over his alleged involvement in fraudulent financial activities.
Even though people have known him as a big player in the oil and gas business, rumors have it that he might have been involved in shady activities behind the scenes.
Panic reportedly gripped Accra’s elite social circles since the news broke.
Some prominent figures allegedly involved in cryptocurrency, forex trading, and high-end real estate also went into hiding.
Dada Joe Remix could stand trial and face significant legal consequences if convicted.
Official details regarding his arrest and the nature of the charges are yet to be released.
It will be recalled that in 2022, the Nigerian social media influencer, Ramon Abbas, who called himself Ray Hushpuppi and flaunted a lavish lifestyle supported by laundering millions of dollars was sentenced in Los Angeles to more than 11 years in federal prison.
Ramon Abbas, 40, was also ordered by a federal judge to pay $1.7m in restitution to two fraud victims, according to a statement from the United States Department of Justice.Abbas was “one of the most prolific money launderers in the world,” Don Alway, assistant director in charge of the FBI’s Los Angeles office, said in the statement.
Prosecutors said Abbas and a Canadian man laundered money from various online crimes, including bank cyberheists and business email compromise, or BEC, a prolific crime in which crooks hack into email accounts, pretend to be someone they’re not, and fool victims into wiring money where it doesn’t belong.
Abbas had more than two million Instagram followers before he was arrested in 2020 in Dubai in the United Arab Emirates.
His social media posts showed him living a life of luxury, complete with private jets, ultra-expensive cars, and high-end clothes and watches.
“I hope someday I will be inspiring more young people to join me on this path,” read one Instagram post by Abbas, who pleaded guilty in April 2021 to one count of conspiracy to engage in money laundering.
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