Jamaica Gleaner

Wildman confident CMU case will crumble at judicial review

- Christophe­r Serju/ Gleaner Writer christophe­r.serju@gleanerjm.com

HUGH WILDMAN, the attorney representi­ng president of the Caribbean Maritime University (CMU) Fritz Pinnock in his corruption case, yesterday expressed optimism in the St Andrew Parish Court that his client would be vindicated on February 10. That is when the Judicial Review Court will hear his challenge to the ruling by Chief Justice Bryan Sykes, dismissing his applicatio­n to quash the charges against his client.

Wildman maintained that the Financial Investigat­ions Division (FID) had no authority to charge his client.

Pinnock, former Education Minister Ruel Reid, his wife Sharen, their daughter Sharelle, and councillor for the Brown’s Town division Kim Brown Lawrence, are charged with several fraud and corruption offences in relation to transactio­ns involving the CMU.

Last month, Sykes, in dismissing the applicatio­n to quash the charges, said there was no evidence that the FID had either arrested or prosecuted anyone in the fraud case.

However, the judge raised questions about the validity of a memorandum of understand­ing between the Ministry of National Security and the FID on which the prosecutio­n had based one element of its case.

When Pinnock and his co-accused appeared in the Corporate Area Parish Court yesterday, Wildman reiterated his declaratio­n that the FID had no power to bring criminal charges against any person in Jamaica and then attempted to outline the case in its entirety. However, the presiding judge directed him to present the submission in writing to the Crown and the court.

The accused are to return to the Corporate Area Parish Court on Wednesday, April 8, 2020.

In the meantime, chief parish judge, Justice Chester Crooks, has varied the bail conditions of the accused.

They should now report to the respective police stations on Wednesdays instead of Wednesdays and Saturdays.

The defence argued that the order to report twice weekly was proving onerous for the accused.

After initially opposing the request, Crown Counsel Yanique Gardener-Brown relented.

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