A former Director General of the Ghana Police CID, COP David Asante Apeatu, is likely to be named as the new Inspector General of Police (IGP).
COP Apeatu is currently the head of the General ICT Department of the police headquarters in Accra and could be replacing Mr. John Kudalor, sources at the Presidency have hinted Starrfmonline.com.
COP Apeatu was also the former Director General in charge of Research.
Mr. Kudalor was at the Jubilee House on Wednesday to bid farewell to President Akufo-Addo as his term of office ends. He was appointed in an acting position in November 2015 and was later confirmed IGP in February 2016.
President Akufo-Addo is expected to announce his new IGP later today.
COP Apeatu has also served as Director of the Specialised Crime and Analysis (SCA) Unit at the INTERPOL headquarters in Lyon France.
DCOP Asante-Apeatu is a Masters’ degree holder in Chemistry from the Kharkov State University in Russia and a trained Forensic Scientist in various disciplines such as Document Examination, Firearms and Ballistics, and Controlled Drug Analysis.
He is a Government of Ghana gazetted Firearms Examiner and also a gazetted Controlled Drug Analyst.
Profile
Mr Asante-Apeatu has performed various assignments in Ghana, as well as outside Ghana.
Internationally, he had worked at the Sarajevo Police Academy as an Instructor in Human Dignity, Police Ethics and Criminal Investigations under the auspices of the United Nations Task Force in Bosnia-Herzegovina from 1997 to 1998.
He was the team leader in a successful homicide investigation under the request of the United Nations Mission in Liberia (UNAMIL).
He was the team leader in investigations into the mass murder of more than 50 people, mostly West African nationals, in The Gambia.
In Ghana, he was the Lead Investigator in the serial killing of more than 30 women that led to the arrest of a culprit who had been prosecuted, convicted and sentenced to death.
Under the supervision of Mr Asante-Apeatu and based on intelligence, the CID successfully conducted an operation that resulted in the seizure of 588 kilogrammes of cocaine with the street value of about $38 million