Jamaica Gleaner

Caricel bosses perplexed at being named persons of interest

- Judana Murphy/Gleaner Writer judana.murphy@gleanerjm.com

THE PRINCIPALS of Symbiote Investment­s, the operators of Caricel, have expressed shock that they and four other business partners have been listed as persons of interest by the Counter-Terrorism and Organised Crime (C-TOC) Investigat­ions Branch.

C-TOC said that the six – Symbiote Investment­s CEO Lowell Lawrence and his wife, Minette Lawrence; Livingston Hines, Eugenia Hines, Courtney Hurlock, Natalie Neil – could help them in the ongoing investigat­ion into the raid of premises at Eastwood Avenue, St Andrew, on February 21. The raid was in relation to alleged breaches of the Telecommun­ications Act, Deputy Commission­er of Police Fitz Bailey had said.

Minette Lawrence, Symbiote’s company secretary, is listed as a director of the company along with Neil.

The Lawrences have denied that Caricel was operationa­l since Symbiote’s licence to operate was revoked.

Lowell Lawrence has insisted that he and his wife are accessible to the police, saying that he was surprised that he and the others were named as persons of interest.

“I have no knowledge of that. We are not in hiding, and as a matter of fact, when this whole thing started, we contacted C-TOC and expressed our willingnes­s to come in and have a talk with them,” Lawrence told The Gleaner yesterday.

Hurlock and the Hineses are listed as directors of Xtrinet, the Internet service provider that was incorporat­ed in 2014, according to Companies Office of Jamaica records.

Mrs Lawrence said recently that when the Court of Appeal last year denied an applicatio­n by Symbiote to stay the minister of science, energy and technology’s decision to revoke its telecommun­ications licences, it transferre­d its network assets to Xtrinet Limited.

“We have always insisted that we were not running that network, and we have been prepared to go and talk with them, and to date, we haven’t heard anything from anyone,” Mr Lawrence said.

The six are to report to C-TOC detectives at 45 East Queen Street, Kingston, by 10 a.m. today.

Combat-style police stormed Xtrinet’s Eastwood Avenue premises last month, conducting a raid that lasted several hours. Lawrence said his knowledge of the raid is limited to what has been reported in the media.

Last year, the Court of Appeal also refused the company’s request that a temporary stay be granted until it makes an applicatio­n for permission to appeal to the Privy Council.

Prior to that, the Supreme Court denied an applicatio­n for judicial review of the decision by then energy minister Dr Andrew Wheatley to revoke the telecommun­ications licence granted to Symbiote.

In 2017, Wheatley told Parliament that Symbiote had not complied with all the conditions that were attached to its domestic mobile spectrum licence.

Caricel was granted licences to operate in Jamaica by the Government in 2016 despite a contrary recommenda­tion from the contractor general.

 ?? FILE ?? Minette Lawrence, company secretary of Symbiote, listens as her CEO husband Lowell Lawrence addresses a press conference on April 3, 2019.
FILE Minette Lawrence, company secretary of Symbiote, listens as her CEO husband Lowell Lawrence addresses a press conference on April 3, 2019.

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