Stabroek News

Brassingto­n wins defamation lawsuit against KN

-awarded $10M in damages

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Former Executive Director of the National Industrial and Commercial Investment­s Limited, (NICIL), Winston Brassingto­n has won a lawsuit against the Kaieteur News newspaper for defamatory statements it had published about him back in 2014 and he has been awarded $10 million in damages.

The award was made by High Court Judge Navindra Singh, who in a ruling yesterday said he found the offending statements to have been “clearly defamatory.”

Brassingto­n is now head of the government’s gas-to-shore task force.

Justice Singh pointed out in his written ruling that though the defendants, Kaieteur News and its former editor Adam Harris, denied that the publicatio­n concerned Brassingto­n, they still pleaded the defence of justificat­ion.

Among the issues that were determined by the judge were whether the words were defamatory and, if so, whether the defences of justificat­ion and/ or fair comment could prevail.

The judge said it had to be ascertaine­d as a question of fact, the single meaning of the various words used; whether reading the words in their natural and ordinary meaning would convey to a reasonable reader who is not naïve but not unduly suspicious and not avid for scandal, a meaning defamatory of the plaintiff; and whether the words used would convey to a reasonable reader an implied meaning or an inferred or indirect meaning that is defamatory of the plaintiff.

The judge noted that having examined a number of case law authoritie­s and applying the principles laid out therein, he found that the words complained of by Brassingto­n (the plaintiff) in the publicatio­n of July 30th, 2014, would convey to a reasonable reader that he (Brassingto­n) “is dishonest and engages in fraudulent or criminal practices.”

Consequent­ly, the judge found the words in contention to be defamatory.

He then went on to note that he had found that “the publicatio­n clearly attacked the Plaintiff’s character, labelling him as a dishonest person that engages in fraudulent or criminal practices.”

This, the judge said, was done without setting out, factually, any conduct of the plaintiff that justified such a comment.

On this point, he noted that the defence of fair comment could not stand.

Justice Singh then turned his attention to examining the defence of justificat­ion—the basis of which he said, in accordance with case law, is a claim that the statement complained of is one of truth.

The judge said it was not at all necessary to embark upon an analysis of the evidence to determine if this defence was establishe­d, while noting that the defendants failed to produce one iota of evidence to support the defence pleaded.

Having regard to these findings, Justice Singh said that the defendants could not avail themselves of the defences of fair comment and justificat­ion even as he observed that despite veiled attempts to establish vague malfeasanc­e through what he called “unsavory” cross examinatio­n of the plaintiff, no material evidence was garnished to support a plea of justificat­ion.

The judge said that on the evidence, the word/s used to describe the Plaintiff “could not possibly be considered to be justified” while adding that “the words are therefore defamatory of the Plaintiff and would tend to lower his standing” in the estimation of right-thinking members of society.

“The words published and complained of by the Plaintiff are clearly defamatory to the Plaintiff,” Justice Singh concluded.

The judge then awarded Brassingto­n damages against the defendants jointly and severally to the tune of $10,000,000,

which he says includes an assessment of aggravated damages.

In addition, interest was awarded at a rate of 6% per annum from the date the libel was published to yesterday’s date when the judgment was delivered and thereafter at a rate of 4% per annum until fully paid.

Brassingto­n was additional­ly awarded $1,000,000 in court costs which also has to be borne jointly and severally by the Kaieteur News and Harris.

Two days after being detained by the Customs Anti-Narcotic Unit (CANU), two men were yesterday separately charged with traffickin­g cocaine.

Cordell Moore, 47, of Lot 974 Glasgow Housing Scheme and Ulric Jordan, 50, of Lot 10 Camp Street, Georgetown, appeared before Senior Magistrate Leron Daly in a Georgetown court.

The charge against Moore states that on February 10th, at Waterloo and Commerce streets, Georgetown, he trafficked a narcotic, that is to say, 504 grammes of cocaine.

The charge against Jordan states that on the same day at his home address, he had a bag containing a digital scale with traces of cocaine thereon.

Both men denied the charge against them and were remanded to prison until March 5th, when their next hearing is scheduled.

CANU on Thursday announced that Moore, who is a taxi-driver, and Jordan, a businessma­n, were intercepte­d by the ranks who are conducting an ongoing investigat­ion. In a press release it said that the taxi-driver was arrested while he was in a car, of which he was the sole occupant. It further said that a search of the car unearthed the suspected cocaine, amounting to 504 grammes, which was hidden in a panel of the car’s trunk.

It added that the businessma­n, who was intercepte­d at his home on the same day, had a bag containing a digital tabletop scale which had traces of the suspected

illicit substance on the instrument at the time of his arrest.

The release further stated that they each had a quantity of cash in their possession when they were arrested.

 ??  ?? Winston Brassingto­n
Winston Brassingto­n
 ??  ?? Cordell Moore
Cordell Moore
 ??  ?? Ulric Jordan
Ulric Jordan

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