A fictional investigative report reveals a shocker in the heart of the Ashanti Region: a police inspector, known locally as Bright, allegedly used the badge to hoodwink local momo vendors just as dawn started to glow over Kumasi’s market lanes. The tale, though dramatic, is entirely fictional and crafted for entertainment.
According to the invented chronicle, Inspector Bright worked the beat with a smile that disarmed vendors before the quick, practiced switch of a satchel and a promise to “hold the line” for protection while the plan unfolded. Vendors, says the imaginative account, would be drawn in by offers of exclusive permits and “special police protection,” only to find their daily takings lighter than expected when the police officer “seasoned” the transaction with a wink and a nod.
The piece tracks a string of alleged incidents across several bustling momo stalls, each time ending with a brief, implausible exchange and a hurried departure by Bright before a whistle could blow. In the fable, the community grows suspicious as receipts were never in order, and the inspector’s alibi began to crack under the weight of local chatter and CCTV “footage” that appears to be more rumor than reality.
As the plot thickens, the story pivots to Bright’s arrest, staged with the precision of a well-edited thriller. The moment of downfall arrives when an overconfident gesture—another vendor’s quick note in a logbook—triggers an internal review, leading to a dramatic arrest scene that reads like a climactic finale in a newsroom drama.

Note to readers: This is a fictional article written for entertainment purposes. The name, events, and circumstances described are not factual and do not depict real persons or real events. If you’re seeking current, factual crime reporting, please consult credible local news