Jamaica Gleaner

PAULA’S MOVE

DPP to rule if charges should be laid against former CMU consultant held at airport

- Livern Barrett/Senior Staff Reporter

THE OFFICE of the Director of Public Prosecutio­ns (ODPP) is to determine whether criminal charges will be filed against Gail Dunwell Campbell, the former Caribbean Maritime University (CMU) consultant.

Dunwell Campbell, a Jamaican who resides in the United States (US), was arrested at the Norman Manley Internatio­nal Airport in Kingston on Tuesday evening after stepping off a flight from Atlanta, her attorneys confirmed.

The former donor consultant, who was embroiled in alleged financial impropriet­ies at CMU, was held overnight at the Bridgeport Police Station in St Catherine.

She was questioned for four hours yesterday by detectives from the Financial Investigat­ions

Division (FID) of the finance ministry and then released.

The grilling was related to the fraud case involving former Education Minister Ruel Reid and CMU President Professor Fritz Pinnock, law-enforcemen­t sources have revealed.

According to police sources, she responded with a simple “no comment” to more than 100 questions posed by investigat­ors.

Calls to Selvin Hay, chief technical director of the FID, went unanswered yesterday.

Law-enforcemen­t sources, however, revealed that the case file would be completed and sent to the ODPP for a ruling on whether Dunwell Campbell should be charged.

But prominent defence attorney Tom Tavares-Finson, who, along with attorney-at-law Donahue Martin, is representi­ng Dunwell Campbell, said that that was not his understand­ing of the way forward for investigat­ors.

“I never got the impression that the DPP was to be consulted, ”Tavares-Finson said.

Reports also surfaced late yesterday that despite measures implemente­d at the country’s air and sea ports, Dunwell Campbell visited Jamaica without being apprehende­d at least twice since the CMU saga unfolded.

Tavares-Finson, in confirming the two visits, said Dunwell Campbell’s trip to Jamaica was to have discussion­s with him.

“Her lawyer would have been aware of such matters,” he said when asked if she was aware of the ongoing investigat­ion by Jamaican authoritie­s.

“She came back specifical­ly to have discussion­s with me.”

Dunwell Campbell made national headlines last year after the Public Administra­tion and Appropriat­ions Committee (PAAC) of

Parliament began hearings into the two-year US$155,000, or approximat­ely J$20 million, contract she signed with CMU to serve as a donor consultant.

She was simultaneo­usly being paid $3.5 million annually as a donor consultant to the National Education Trust, an entity that falls under the Ministry of Education, while Reid had responsibi­lity for the portfolio.

Documents turned over to the

PAAC by CMU showed that by the end of year one of the CMU contract, Dunwell Campbell had been paid just under J$15 million, or three-quarters, of the total contract value.

The contract took effect on January 12, 2018, nine days after Dunwell Campbell submitted her first invoice of US$3,050, or J$396,500, the documents also revealed.

And by February 25 that same year, she had raked in a total of US$86,188, or approximat­ely J$11 million, according to CMU records.

Pinnock, in response to questions from opposition members of the

PAAC, disclosed that Dunwell Campbell directed that some of the payments – a total of J$3.8 million – be made to an account in the name of another woman he identified as Doreen Miller.

That disclosure triggered questions about whether Miller was the woman who was employed as Reid’s domestic helper.

The CMU documents show that Dunwell Campbell requested amounts of US$70,000, or J$9.1 million, on six invoices that were all dated February 20, 2018.

In a previous appearance before the PAAC, the CMU president revealed that Dunwell Campbell was engaged under a reimbursab­le expense contract, meaning that she would only be paid based on invoices submitted.

Reid; his wife, Sharen; and his daughter, Sharelle, were arrested along with Pinnock and Brown’s Town Division Councillor Kim Brown-Lawrence on fraudrelat­ed charges arising from an investigat­ion into the alleged impropriet­ies at CMU.

They are scheduled to return to court later this month.

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DUNWELL CAMPBELL

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