Stabroek News

CCJ grants mother special leave to appeal conviction over Neesa...

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miscarriag­e of justice may have occurred, that genuinely disputable points of law of public importance have been raised and that the issues and points raised on behalf of the Applicant appear to be arguable and, in the interests of justice, ought to be fully ventilated at a hearing AND HAVING REGARD to Rule 9.7(c) of the Caribbean Court of Justice (Appellate Jurisdicti­on) Rules, 2021 IT IS ORDERED THAT: The Applicant be granted special leave to appeal,” a notice from the CCJ, which was seen by Stabroek News, states.

Sharima-Gopaul and Small were both found guilty by a jury in 2015 for the gruesome murder of the former Queen’s College student, whose remains were found on October 2, 2010, stuffed in a suitcase that was dumped in a creek at the Emerald Tower resort.

Lawyers for the convicts subsequent­ly filed appeals to challenge their conviction­s and sentences, arguing that trial judge Navindra Singh committed several errors during the conduct of the trial, including the admittance of evidence that was prejudicia­l and failing to properly direct the jury.

While the local appeal court upheld the conviction­s, it also reduced SharimaGop­aul’s previous 106-year jail sentence to 45 years, while Small’s 96-year sentence was reduced to 45 years as well.

Delivering the ruling on the challenges to the conviction­s, acting Chancellor Yonette Cummings-Edwards had said the Court found that in all the circumstan­ces, the Court said it found “no substantia­l miscarriag­e of justice.”

Sharima-Gopaul is being represente­d by attorney Arudranaut­h Gossai.

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