Jamaica Gleaner

Hayles says he’s ‘vindicated’

-

PEOPLE’S NATIONAL Party (PNP) Vice President Ian Hayles has poured scorn on an Integrity Commission’s (IC) report referring him, his wife, and mother to the police for criminal investigat­ion.

It “is not worth the paper it is printed on,” said the ex-parliament­arian hours after the tabling of the 232-page report on Tuesday.

The report’s release had been the subject of a years-long court battle until late last month.

It said that both Hayles, who formerly represente­d Hanover Western, and his wife, Charlotte, were being referred “for further investigat­ion, having found prima facie evidence of forgery” relating to the sketch plan of the Cousins Cove resort property in Green Island, Hanover.

The IC also made a referral for further criminal investigat­ions with respect to the sketch plan and the maker(s) of the “false document”, which it said gives rise to the offence of conspiracy to defraud the then Hanover Parish Council.

Hayles was also referred for criminal investigat­ion after the Office of the Contractor General, now subsumed into the IC, determined that he sought to influence a public officer.

That public officer is Shernet Haughton, former mayor of Lucea and PNP councillor, who was in 2019 freed of charges of misconduct in a public office in relation to a separate matter.

Hayles’ mother, Pauline Gray, was also referred to the police for further investigat­ion with respect to the circumstan­ces under which the Cousins Cove property was sold to her.

The report was prepared following allegation­s of conflict of interest, and impropriet­y, in the constructi­on of Just One Plaza and Cousins Cove without the approval of the now-municipal corporatio­n.

On Tuesday, Hayles maintained, in a Gleaner interview, that the report is a “fishing expedition”.

“I’ve been vindicated. There is nothing there that speaks to government funds. There’s nothing there that speaks to anything unethical on my part,” he asserted.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica