By Ghana Media | July 10, 2026
Ghanaian socialite Frederick Kumi, popularly known as Abu Trica, has been extradited to the United States to face charges connected to an alleged multimillion-dollar romance scam, triggering a fierce public debate over Ghana’s justice system and the role of his lawyer, Oliver Barker-Vormawor. Multiple reports on July 9 confirmed the extradition after a prolonged legal battle.

The case has now taken a dramatic turn beyond the extradition itself. Viral posts circulating online have attacked Barker-Vormawor over his handling of the case, while others have accused him of choosing social-media confrontation over courtroom success. Those attacks are public commentary and allegations, not established findings of professional misconduct. Claims in one circulating graphic that he made “millions of cedis” from Abu Trica are also unverified and should not be reported as fact.
Barker-Vormawor raises serious due-process concerns
Barker-Vormawor has responded with grave allegations of his own, accusing the State of frustrating access to his client before the extradition. According to reports, he said he was not formally notified before Abu Trica was handed over to US authorities and questioned whether proper legal process had been followed.
The timing is especially contentious because earlier reports said the High Court was expected on July 9 to hear a motion seeking to stay the extradition. Citi News had reported days earlier that both parties were directed to appear before the court on that date.
Barker-Vormawor has since criticised Ghana’s justice system, reportedly describing the situation as evidence that the system had become “a mockery.” His reaction has intensified public anger, with some social-media users blaming him for failing to stop the extradition while others argue that the deeper issue is whether the State respected Abu Trica’s access to counsel and pending legal processes.
Abu Trica now faces US proceedings
Abu Trica is expected to face US proceedings over allegations linked to an approximately $8 million romance-scam case. The accusations remain allegations unless and until proven in court, and he is entitled to due process and the presumption of innocence.
The controversy is now bigger than one lawyer or one suspect. It raises a serious question for Ghana: Can a person be removed from the jurisdiction while lawyers are still pursuing urgent court processes intended to challenge or pause that removal? That question may define the next phase of the legal and political fallout.
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