Stabroek News

Witness denies ties to accused in alleged plot to kill president

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A witness on Monday denied telling police that he was a supporter of Nizam Khan, the man accused of offering to pay for the assassinat­ion of President David Granger, and he denounced a claim that he was seen joining a car with Khan last week as a lie.

Leon Baldeo issued the denials when he faced the Commission of Inquiry investigat­ing the plot and the police’s handling of the probe.

Baldeo, a friend of Andrif Gillard, the man who claimed Khan offered him money to kill Granger, was one of six witnesses who testified on Monday at a public hearing at the Department of the Public Service on Waterloo Street.

Baldeo was asked extensivel­y by retired Assistant Police Commission­er Paul Slowe, who is leading the inquiry, about how he had left the commission’s office last week after he had been summoned.

Baldeo related that he had taken a bus both to and from the commission, but this was disputed by Slowe, who said that Baldeo was “creased” after he left.

“Are you familiar with motor vehicle #PMM 7762? ...Would it surprise you if evidence is produced that when you left here Wednesday afternoon, you joined PMM 7762, you did not go in any minibus? And furthermor­e, would it surprise you to know that PMM 7762 is registered and owned by Nizam Khan? Would that surprise you?” Slowe questioned.

Baldeo said that he did not know anything about such and that the statement was a lie.

He had also denied telling police in his statement that he had gone to support Khan, although he later admitted that he did not bother to reread the entire statement, just the part listing his personal details.

Speaking on the event in question, Baldeo told the commission that on March 29, he had gone over to Gillard’s to get his hair cut, when Gillard began sharing his personal woes, and his desire to get back at his neighbour, Khan, for alleged wrongdoing­s committed against him.

He said that it was then that Gillard asked if he would make a statement to police claiming he had been present when Khan allegedly offered him money to be a part of an assassinat­ion plot to murder the president. According to Baldeo, he had tried to reason with Gillard to have the two work out their problems.

The man related that while he was friends with Gillard, he only knows Khan informally.

Baldeo said that he was in a pool shop one day when he heard that Gillard and Khan had been locked up and so the next day he proceeded to the Criminal Investigat­ion Department (CID) to give a statement.

This, he said, was because he did “not want any problems” as he has had prior brushes with the law, having been convicted before, and did not know what Gillard would have told the police.

When attorney Ian Chang SC, who is representi­ng the police, asked Baldeo during cross-examinatio­n if he had been worried that Andrif would falsely implicate him, Baldeo said yes. Pressing, Chang asked if it was that Gillard has the tendency to make up stories, to which Baldeo responded, “He got he ways.”

Slowe had questioned why it was Gillard would go to Baldeo three days before he actually made the report to the police. Inspector Mitchell Caesar, while giving evidence, had said that he understood this to be Gillard’s “planning phase,” as he was looking for support in his allegation­s.

Caesar had spearheade­d the investigat­ion, after an instructio­n from Crime Chief Wendell Blanhum.

Caesar then went on to relate that just last week a woman had made contact with him claiming that prior to Gillard making his report to the police, he had contacted her and informed her of the plan. He related that she then reportedly questioned if Khan had not been the one to help him start his business, and chastised him, which allegedly resulted in problems between the two.

No informatio­n of such an occurrence was provided to the Commission, however.

Corporal Heranjan Deonarine, one of the three officers that had been a part of the initial leg of the investigat­ion, also testified on Monday.

Like his colleagues Komal Pitamber and Jermaine Laundry,

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