The right of many Ghanaians are violated anytime they are arrested or are in the custody of the police or other law enforcement agencies. Here are 10 things the police should not do to you when you are arrested.
Because of the fear of being in the grasp of the law when arrested, many individuals end up committing bungles that rather affect them when they are taken to court.
Some police officers also sometimes unprofessionally deny suspects in their custody, their constitutional rights.
Broadcaster and lawyer Sampson Lardy Anyenini together with law lecturer at GIMPA, Justice Srem Sai and lawyer Daniel Korang, on Joynews’ ‘The Law’ program outlined what they say are the lawful rights of Ghanaians which must be respected during an arrest or when in the custody of the police.
They also noted some things police must see when they have suspects in their custody.
10 Things The Police Should Not Do To You When You Are Arrested
1. The police do not have the right to access the gadgets of suspects. Suspects are entitled not to give out the password of their phones, laptops and other gadgets to the police. The police can only access the phones of suspects when they have an order from the courts to do so. So, they (the police) can seize gargets but they can’t access them until they have the express order from the court.
2. The police cannot force suspects to make a statement. They are legally necessary to tell accused persons in a language they understand that they have their preferred right to a lawyer and that anything they say could be used against them in a court of law. Suspects arrested can decide not to give any statement to the police.
3. Police are not allowed to use unlawful force or brutalize suspects during an arrest. They are also not to manhandle and torture criminal suspects in their custody and are also not allowed to unnecessarily handcuff suspects.
4. The Police are also not to disallow suspects from reaching their families, it is unlawful and unconstitutional.
5. Police cannot also prevent suspects from seeking assistance when they are arrested. They must allow suspects in their custody to make phone calls, access medical care among others.
6. The Police cannot arrest an innocent person just to procure the appearance of a criminal suspect. This means that a son of a suspected criminal can not be arrested because the police are looking for him and they know the arrest of his son will make him emerge from hiding.
7. The police cannot keep suspects in custody beyond 48 hours including weekends.
8. The police cannot take orders from complainants including denying suspects bail and beating them up.
9. Police are not supposed to keep suspects in the dark about the crimes they are being accused of. Police are supposed to serve them (the suspects) with the charge sheet of the crimes they are being accused of days before they are to appear in court.
READ:OMCs Reduce Fuel Prices Further, Check Current Prices Here
10. Police are not allowed to create unnecessary prejudicial publicity about the arrest of suspects including organizing question and answer sessions on arrests they have made.

The Ghana Education News Editorial Team is a specialized collective of education researchers, journalists, and policy analysts dedicated to providing high-fidelity reporting on the Ghanaian academic landscape. Serving as a primary bridge between governing bodies—including the Ghana Education Service (GES) and WAEC—and the public, the team leverages over a decade of combined experience to serve students, parents, and educators nationwide.
Lead Architect & Editor-in-Chief
The team is led by Wisdom Kojo Eli Hammond, a distinguished Ghanaian Edu-Tech Entrepreneur, AI Solutions Developer, and Product Architect with over 25 years of cross-disciplinary experience in education, finance, and digital media. Wisdom is the visionary force behind SkulManager, Ghana’s premier school management ecosystem, and the Lead Consultant at Education-News Consult.
A self-taught innovator, professional Web Designer, and regular columnist on GhanaWeb, Wisdom engineered SkulManager.com as the only platform strictly tailored to the GES Curriculum. His technical leadership has redefined educational assessment through a Hybrid Marking Ecosystem, pioneering the BECE and WASSCE Home Mock services—a unique fusion of WAEC-trained human examiners and advanced AI marking engines operational since 2022.
Wisdom’s 360-degree view of institutional challenges is grounded in his tenure as College President and Lecturer at Pinnacle College (Achimota), as well as his background as a school administrator and accountant. He is a dedicated lifelong learner currently advancing his studies at the Accra Institute of Technology (AIT), with academic ties to the University of Professional Studies, Accra (UPSA).
An accomplished author, his works include Returnees of the Dead Forest (UK Published), Simplified Beacon of Light (850+ Q&A), and The Leader in Me. A foundational pillar of the award-winning NGO Human Rights Reporters Ghana (HRRG), Wisdom is committed to building intelligent systems that solve societal problems and prepare the next generation of Ghanaian students for a digital future.
Contact: 0550360658 | Portals: GhanaEducation.org, GhanaEducationNews.org, SkulManager.com, BECEPrep.com. Educationnewsconsult.com etc
