Nana Agradaa will be a free woman on March 3, 2026, as the lawyer confirms the evangelist’s release after the remission policy applied.
That’s the word from Richard Asare Baffour, the lawyer representing convicted evangelist Patricia Asiedua Asiamah, better known across Ghana by her popular moniker.
Speaking about his client’s fate, Baffour confirmed that the controversial preacher will benefit from the country’s remission policy, which has effectively shortened her stay in prison.
“It’s official,” Baffour disclosed. “She’s expected to be released on March 3, 2026.”
The news brings some certainty to a case that has captured public attention for years.
From her days as a flamboyant evangelist to her legal battles and eventual conviction, Agradaa has rarely left Ghana’s headlines for long.
Now, with a fixed date in sight, speculation is already building about what the future holds for the outspoken preacher once she returns to society.
Will she return to ministry? Rebuild her brand? Or chart an entirely new path?
For her supporters, the wait now has an endpoint. For her detractors, the countdown has begun.
And for Nana Agradaa herself, March 3, 2026, simply means one thing: a second chance.
