About GhanaCrimes
Ghana's most comprehensive crime news and public safety platform, delivering verified, factual reporting to keep communities informed and accountable.
Our Mission
GhanaCrimes exists to provide the people of Ghana with timely, accurate, and responsibly reported crime news. We believe that access to reliable information about public safety is a fundamental right, and that informed communities are safer communities.
We aggregate, verify, and publish crime-related news from across Ghana's sixteen regions, drawing from official sources, court records, police reports, and established news outlets. Our goal is to become the single most trusted reference point for crime reporting in Ghana.
We are modelled on the editorial standards of the world's leading news organisations, including the Financial Times and The Economist, and hold ourselves to the same rigorous standards of accuracy, neutrality, and visual integrity.
Editorial Standards
Every article published on GhanaCrimes must meet the following editorial requirements before publication.
Verification
All stories undergo a live verification scan. We cross-reference every claim against at least two reputable sources, prioritising primary materials such as police statements, court filings, official government releases, and direct quotes from named officials. Where a detail cannot be independently confirmed, we state this clearly and attribute the claim to its original source.
Presumption of Innocence
We respect the presumption of innocence at all times. Suspects are described as "alleged" or "suspected" until proven guilty by a court of law. We do not publish accusations as established fact.
Source Attribution
We name our sources plainly within the body of every article. Readers will see attributions such as "Ghana Police Service statement," "Accra High Court filing," or "Citi Newsroom report." We do not present unattributed claims as fact.
Writing Tone
Our writing is factual, neutral, and professional. We do not use sensationalist language, emojis, hashtags, bullet points, or formatting tricks. Our articles read as serious journalism, not social media posts.
Photo-First Image Policy
GhanaCrimes maintains a strict photo-first editorial image policy. Every article is illustrated with an image that reads as a real photograph. Our site must visually behave like a serious international newsroom at all times.
"Would this image feel normal on the Financial Times or The Economist website?"
This is the test every image must pass before publication.
Image Sourcing Priority
For each article, we attempt image sourcing in this exact order:
- 1.Real photos tied directly to the story — Government buildings, offices, press rooms, farms, factories, ports, markets, infrastructure, and exterior shots of institutions mentioned in the article.
- 2.Contextual real-world photos — Generic but truthful photographs of the sector, such as cocoa farms, oil storage facilities, data centres, banks, or ports.
- 3.Representative environmental photography — Streets, skylines, offices, meeting rooms, workspaces, or objects involved in the story such as documents, commodities, and machinery.
What We Never Publish
The following are never acceptable as article imagery:
Image Tone
All published images must be calm, neutral, and observational. They must be free of drama, cinematic filters, or effects. Low saturation, realistic lighting, and clean cropping are required. Images should feel as though they came from a wire service or a serious photo desk.
Data & Privacy
We take the privacy of our readers seriously. We do not sell personal data to third parties. Our newsletter subscription service collects only email addresses, and subscribers can unsubscribe at any time. Comments submitted on articles are published under the name provided by the commenter, and we do not require account registration to participate in discussions.
Our Sources
GhanaCrimes monitors and cross-references news from Ghana's most established and reputable outlets, including:
The GhanaCrimes Desk
Our editorial desk operates around the clock, monitoring news feeds and official channels to ensure that breaking crime stories reach our readers as quickly and accurately as possible. Articles are published under the GhanaCrimes Desk byline to reflect our collective editorial responsibility.
Our newsroom continuously scans trusted sources throughout the day, producing verified reports that meet our editorial standards before publication. Every article is subject to the same rigorous fact-checking and sourcing requirements regardless of how it is produced.
Contact Us
For corrections, tips, partnership enquiries, or general feedback, reach us at:
editor@ghanacrimes.com
We aim to respond to all legitimate enquiries within 48 hours.