Jamaica Gleaner

Going too far?

Court of Appeal ruling raises concerns that parish judges crossing the line

- Livern Barrett Senior Gleaner Writer

ARULING by the nation’s highest court that overstayin­g in Jamaica is not among the list of offences for which an individual can be deported has triggered concerns that parish court judges have, for years, been oversteppi­ng their authority.

The landmark decision was handed down in the Court of Appeal last Thursday in the case of a United States citizen, Kwane Abayomi, who pleaded guilty in July 2015 to overstayin­g his time in the island.

In addition to a $5,000 fine, parish judge Judith Pusey also signed a recommenda­tion order to the justice minister that Abayomi be deported. At the time, it was alleged that the American was wanted in the US for offences that were not included in Jamaica’s extraditio­n laws.

However, the Court of Appeal, in its decision, ordered that the recommenda­tion order for Abayomi’s deportatio­n be set aside, siding with his attorney, Able-don Foote, that overstayin­g in Jamaica, though a breach of the Aliens Act, is not an offence for which a parish judge has the authority to recommend deportatio­n.

Abayomi has already been deported, but according to Foote, the decision of the Appeal Court

addresses a more fundamenta­l issue.

“A parish judge may only recommend deportatio­n for specified scheduled offences pursuant to the Aliens Act,” Foote told The Gleaner, summarisin­g his legal arguments before the Appeal Court.

He also said that he believed that the method used to turn his client over to the American authoritie­s was an end run around the country’s extraditio­n legislatio­n. “They couldn’t extradite him, so they locked him up for overstayin­g. Then, as it turned out, they send the man away wrongfully,” Foote asserted.

According to reports at the time, Abayomi was wanted in the US state of Virginia for allegedly eluding the police and for possession of a concealed weapon. It is believed that he came to Jamaica in 2012 while on bail.

The ruling was also embraced by another attorney who charged that for years, parish court judges, aided by the Passport Immigratio­n and Citizenshi­p Agency (PICA), have been “routinely” making recommenda­tion orders for individual­s to be deported for the offence of overstayin­g their time in the island.

“PICA representa­tives would come to the parish courts with a

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica