Kennedy’s Last-Ditch Plea to the Judge

Kennedy’s Last-Ditch Plea to the Judge

Kennedy’s Last-Ditch Plea to the Judge

1. When news broke on Tuesday evening that investigative journalist  Anas Aremeyaw Anas had won a historic amount in damages in a U.S.  libel suit against former Ghanaian legislator Kennedy Agyapong,  many suggested that Anas received no justice in Ghana.

2. Some have argued that in Ghana, there was an orchestrated judicial  scheme unfairly targeting Anas. However, few have highlighted the  key differences between the court proceedings in the U.S. and  Ghana.

3. The U.S. case was decided by a jury, while the Ghanaian case was a  bench trial. In a jury trial, a panel of selected individuals from the  community determines the outcome based on evidence presented.  Though guided by legal principles, jury decisions tend to be more  discretionary and may be ungovernable.

4. In contrast, a bench trial; where the judge alone presides; places all  decision-making authority in the hands of the judge, including  findings of fact and legal conclusions.

5. Juries are well known for being generous with financial awards, often  outrageously so. Their decisions do not necessarily have to be  strictly legally justifiable; they only need to seem fair to the jurors.

6. Judges, however, are far more restrained in awarding damages. Their  discretion is tightly guided by legal principles, meaning they cannot  simply assign arbitrary figures. A judge’s ruling must align with  established legal standards and be supported by evidence. The  judge’s function is to give only what a person can prove.

7. For example, if a judge had awarded Anas $18 million, they would  have had to justify how they arrived at that amount. Did Anas lose a  contract? What factors were considered in valuing his reputation at  exactly $18 million? How was the extent of the reputational damage  determined? How was Anas’s reputation so badly damaged?

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8. In the Ghanaian trial, the judge had to reach conclusions strictly  based on evidence, evaluating its credibility, drawing reasonable  inferences, and applying the law. This fundamental difference makes  jury trials and bench trials incomparable.

9. Recognizing that juries can sometimes be excessive in awarding  damages, U.S. law provides for a procedure known as “remittitur.”

10. Through remittitur, a defendant who believes the damages awarded  are excessive can ask the judge to reassess and reduce them to a  more reasonable figure.

11. This explains the one-page submission by Kennedy Agyapong’s  lawyers requesting the judge to grant a remittitur on the grounds that  the $18 million award is excessive.

12. Kennedy’s legal team argues that the amount “shocks the judicial  conscience” due to:

• The nature of the evidence Anas presented.

• Alleged procedural improprieties in how Anas made his case.

• The manner in which Anas closed his case.

• The overall handling of the trial.

13. On the remittitur, two options are possible. The judge may reject the  [Hail Mary] prayer OR may reduce the amount of damages. If the  judge decides to reduce the amount of damages, two options are  possible. Anas has the choice to reject the reduced damages. If he  rejects it, then the next option will be a new trial.

14. The general law however, which Kennedy’s own lawyers acknowledge, is that the judges do not easily overturn jury awards. The view is that  the jury reflects what members of the community think of the justice  of the case presented. If that is what the community thinks, then the  judge should not interfere hence the Hail Mary.

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15. Hail Mary, pray for us sinners in this time of Lent, for blessed are you  among ALL women, and blessed is the fruit of your womb, JESUS. Happy  fasting.

Last Updated on March 21, 2025 by Senel Media

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