Dancehall star Shatta Wale has been questioned by the Economic and Organised Crime Office (EOCO) in Accra over a 2019 Lamborghini Urus at the center of a U.S.-linked fraud probe. According to briefings on Wednesday, August 20, 2025, the musician—born Charles Nii Armah Mensah Jr.—reported to EOCO with his legal team and was later released on bail, with the conditions adjusted the following day. His representatives say they are cooperating fully with investigators and assert the vehicle was acquired lawfully.

The case stems from an American prosecution that secured a 2023 conviction of Nana Kwabena Amuah for a multimillion-dollar fraud scheme. U.S. investigators have been tracing assets allegedly linked to proceeds of crime, including the Lamborghini in Ghana. Shatta Wale has publicly maintained he cannot identify the original seller beyond available documentation and is confident due process will clear his name. The artiste’s camp has urged fans to remain calm while legal processes play out.
In Ghana, the development has ignited intense online debate—especially among rival fan bases—about lifestyle optics, luxury car ownership documentation, and precedent from similar cases. While investigators have not announced fresh charges, the inquiry underlines EOCO’s increasing collaboration with international agencies on asset tracing and financial crimes. As the matter evolves, industry players are watching how celebrity brand equity intersects with legal risk—and whether the outcome shifts norms around public flaunting of high-end cars in the entertainment space.
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