Jamaica Gleaner

Prove sources of wealth or be locked up – Mitchell

PSOJ boss proposes tough laws to crush corruption

- Paul Clarke/Gleaner Writer paul.clarke@gleanerjm.com

COLLARING CORRUPT criminal actors and untouchabl­es will require the Government to adopt tougher legislatio­n that forces them to prove their sources of wealth or be thrown into prison, says Howard Mitchell, leader of Jamaica’s most powerful business lobby.

In a scathing 20-minute address at Thursday’s Rotary Club of Kingston luncheon at The Jamaica Pegasus hotel, Mitchell slammed the authoritie­s for being too soft on corruption.

“I am suggesting that we adopt two pieces of legislatio­n (even temporaril­y) from the United Kingdom. We need the power to apply to a Supreme Court judge for an order to detain and question to the satisfacti­on of the authoritie­s persons who demonstrat­e wealth and resources without obvious evidence of how they obtained them,” said Mitchell, president of the Private Sector Organisati­on of Jamaica (PSOJ). “It is called an Unexplaine­d Wealth Order, and it could be a useful tool in the fight against corruption and against the financiers of gang activity.”

SEPARATE LAW

Mitchell told the audience that he would support a separate law (on a temporary basis) that would, with the prior approval of the court, allow for the indefinite and isolated detention of persons who present a clear and present danger to the State, even if the allegation­s or suspicions fall short of evidentiar­y burden of law.

“That order could be subject to periodic review by a civic tribunal properly establishe­d,” said Mitchell, who is an attorney-at-law. “Again, none of these measures can be successful without the will and intent of our leadership.”

Currently, the only measure in law that allows for indefinite detention is a state of emergency, which suspends constituti­onal rights, with minor exceptions. But even the extension of emergency powers is subject to two-thirds approval in the House of Representa­tives.

Mitchell used the occasion to call on the political directorat­e to “cease and desist from the game playing and mealy-mouthed avoidance of the truth”.

Widening his address to his private-sector colleagues and church leaders, the outspoken PSOJ president ripped into them for accepting the status quo.

“It is time to take a stand and demand that we, as a country, put an end to this charade. This hypocrisy of punishing little foot soldiers while allowing the generals and mastermind­s of corruption and contraband smuggling and gang warfare to get away with murder and mayhem. [It] must stop,” demanded Mitchell.

Last week, Transparen­cy Internatio­nal released its 2018 Corruption Perception Index results, which showed that Jamaica had slipped two points and is now ranked 70 out of 180 countries, with a score of 44. Jamaica also scored 44 in 2017 and 39 in 2016.

 ?? HEMANS/PHOTOGRAPH­ER KENYON ?? Howard Mitchell, president of the PSOJ, addresses a Rotary Club of Kingston meeting at The Jamaica Pegasus hotel on Thursday.
HEMANS/PHOTOGRAPH­ER KENYON Howard Mitchell, president of the PSOJ, addresses a Rotary Club of Kingston meeting at The Jamaica Pegasus hotel on Thursday.

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