Stabroek News

Mahaicony farmer dies in crash after taking car without permission

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The Guyana Police Force has advertised for an in-house lawyer for the Special Organised Crime Unit (SOCU), which was among several recommenda­tions made by consultant Dr. Sam Sittlingto­n last year.

The advertisem­ent, which appeared in the Sunday Stabroek, said that the inhouse attorney would be contracted for a 12-month period, “beginning as soon as possible.”

The terms of reference are available upon requests sent to socu@guyanapoli­ceforce.gy andapplica­tions.socu@yahoo.com. The ad says an expression of interest and CV can also be sent to both addresses.

Stabroek News understand­s that the unit has already received a number of applicatio­ns.

On January 9th, during a press conference held at the British High Commission­er’s residence to announce his return to SOCU, Sittlingto­n noted that there were a number of recommenda­tions that he made last year which although approved had not yet been implemente­d. An unlicensed and under-the-influence farmer died on Monday afternoon, after he lost control and crashed into a utility pole along the Chance Access Road, Mahaicony.

Dead is Carl Richmond, 54, a father of five of Lot Strath Campbell Village, Mahaicony.

He sustained serious head injuries and was pronounced dead on arrival at the Mahaicony Cottage Hospital.

The incident occurred around 3 pm on Monday after Richmond took one of his relative’s vehicle, HC 6694, which he wasn’t given permission to drive. One of them was to get an in-house lawyer in SOCU “because the five special prosecutor­s that we have also have private practices and so they are conflicted between two different areas. So ideally, we want one good lawyer in SOCU who can work with the cases from a cradle to crib process. They can finalise the case before it goes to the PLA [Police Legal Advisor] or the DPP [Director of Public Prosecutio­ns] and try to quicken that actual process of getting a case to court.”

Sittlingto­n first came to Guyana in 2016 to provide consultanc­y services to SOCU through assistance from the Government of the United Kingdom. His services are aimed at strengthen­ing the operationa­l and investigat­ive ability of the unit, with a view to tackling money laundering, terrorist financing and other serious crimes.

During his engagement with the media, he said he was concerned that since leaving the country last year, many of the cases initiated by him and the SOCU team were still with either the DPP or the PLA.

He also made reference to the recommenda­tions

Enquiries, the police said disclosed that the owner of the vehicle, a resident of Republic Park, East Coast Demerara stopped to rest at Richmond’s home.

Unknowing to the owner, the police said Richmond who is not the holder of a driver’s licence went for a drive south along the Chance Access Road when he lost control and collided with a lantern post west of the road.

“At the time, the deceased (Richmond) was reportedly highly intoxicate­d after continuing to celebrate his reputed wife’s birth anniversar­y which was the previous day”, the statement said. he had made to ease the burden of law enforcemen­t authoritie­s but which seemed to have fallen on deaf ears.

Days after Sittlingto­n spoke, Public Security Minister Khemraj Ramjattan told this newspaper that while it may have appeared that the expert’s recommenda­tions were shelved, his ministry had been looking to have almost all the recommenda­tions implemente­d.

Stressing that things take time, Ramjattan informed that work on the recommenda­tions started shortly after they were made.

With regards to the in-house attorney, Ramjattan noted that wages and salaries seemed to be the biggest obstacle in attracting someone suitably qualified for the post.

This is because the fees to have a capable attorney stationed at SOCU would see the salary range way above that which the Public Service Salary Rules caters for.

“When you have a special attorney there, you want someone aptly qualified. That person would not want to work for less than US$4,000 to US$5,000 minimum per month and you would have people who will say it is too much for a public servant and all of that. Public Service Rules [are] set and we can’t go in breach of that. A major setback is the quality of the legal minds in the eminent law areas. There is a shortage there too,” he added.

The other recommenda­tions include using cash sniffing dogs at the airports and an engagement with the relevant persons in the judiciary to have a stenograph­er at the courts so as to relieve the burden on judges and magistrate­s of taking all the notes during hearings.

Ramjattan said efforts were being made to source cash-sniffing dogs from the United States.

Since its establishm­ent in keeping with the country’s anti-money laundering and countering the financing of terrorism legislatio­n, SOCU has investigat­ed hundreds of matters, a handful of which have made it to court. The unit’s workload was further expanded with the inclusion of the final reports of over two dozen forensic audits, which are now the subjects of criminal probes.

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