source: myjoyonline
Lawyer Samson Lardy Ayenini says hiplife musician Wisa, known for the hit song 'Ekiki Me', if found guilty for removing his manhood on stage during a performance, may only pay a fine of GHc120.
The fine, he noted, is the maximum
charge for misdemeanour offences in Ghana.
Wisa who showed his manhood at the December to Remember concert organised by citifm on 24 December.
Midway through his performance on
stage, the musician while wiggling his waist behind a voluptuous lady drew down
his white boxer shorts which was already showing in his saggy jeans and pulled
out his manhood, rubbing it behind the lady.
Wisa had personally, as well as his
management in a statement, apologised to Ghanaians for his behaviour
the rapper pleaded not guilty to the
charge of gross indecent exposure when he appeared before an Accra Circuit
Court.
In court, his counsel Jerry
Avenorgbor argued that what the artiste did was for the “beauty of
entertainment" but people did not get the drift. He suggested later in an
interview that the penis he displayed was a fake.
“If you know what a doodle is and
what you can get from different sex shops all over the world then you can
understand where we are coming from basically…what you saw, to you it’s a dick
or looks like a dick. Can you prove that it was a dick?” he said.
Samson Lardy Ayenini commenting on
the issue in an interview on Rhythmz A-Z on Joy FM with Mamavi Owusu-Aboagye
Saturday said Wisa would be charged GHc120 if found guilty.
“The law is clear on it. It’s a
misdemeanour and the sanction it attracts is a maximum of GHc120. He will be
given the fine, if he is unable to pay in default of the fine, then you go into
jail,” he explained.
The legal practitioner added that,
“I do not see any judge saying he should pay the fine and go into jail at the
same time. In any case it’s a misdemeanour and in a misdemeanour your inability
to satisfy the fine that is impose on you will only attract just a couple of
weeks in prison perhaps one or two months in prison…the purpose is just to
caution you so you don’t do it again.”
“You could actually get just a
caution and bonded to be of good behaviour,” Mr Ayenini noted.
The legal practitioner refuted
arguments that Wisa’s public apology will be irrelevant in court due to the
legal stance taken by his lawyers.
“Watch the prosecutors, they are not
jokers. They didn’t go to the court to joke. They will take the video
interviews or they will simply take the statement he issued and signed and they
will tender in court. Unless he goes to say this is not my statement or that
this interview, I’m not the one who granted that interview, I’m not the one you
are hearing on that interview,” he explained.
Mr Ayenini, who is also the host of
Newsfile on Joy FM and JoyNews on MultiTV, cited Dr Sulley Ali-Gabass denying
his statement he made to Manasseh Azure when he was investigating the sodomy
matter as an example.
He said the medical practitioner is
now in jail serving the maximum jail term of 25 years.
“Let’s be serious about all of
this,” he said and added that any attempt to think that it will not be tendered
in or used in court is “the biggest joke I have heard.”
The court has meanwhile granted Wisa
bail and will reappear on January 13, 2016.
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