Jamaica Gleaner

TCI judge rules Misick, defendants have case to answer

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JUSTICE PAUL Harrison yesterday rejected an applicatio­n to discontinu­e the corruption trial against former Turks and Caicos Premier Michael Misick and eight defendants, saying there was indeed a case to answer.

The judge yesterday said there was sufficient evidence to continue the high-profile, highstakes corruption trial of a former Progressiv­e National Party (PNP) government administra­tion, including Misick and four of his ex-Cabinet ministers.

The eight accused are fighting to defend their not-guilty pleas.

The prosecutio­n and the judge, however, are of the view that the trial, which is expected to run for another two years, is warranted.

Even though the no-case submission was filed in unison by the nine people accused of malfeasanc­e, going forward, each defendant will have to try to disprove the evidence presented by the prosecutio­n individual­ly.

The prosecutio­n wrapped up its case almost a year ago.

NEW WITNESSES

It will likely mean new witnesses will be called in the effort to discredit prosecutio­n witness testimony and it is far less likely that defence attorneys will progress directly to summation.

Defence attorneys previously lamented the sheer volume of evidence presented for them to sift through. It includes more than 200,000 pages of documents and 2,000-plus witness statements.

In January, the lawyers demanded the trials be dismissed because the Crown had failed to make them “manageable”. Judge Harrison disagreed, adding that the long delays experience­d had been unavoidabl­e.

Misick himself is fending off a litany of charges including conspiracy to receive bribes, conspiracy to defraud the government, and money laundering.

Prosecutor­s also claim endemic corruption saw public officials line their own pockets with under-the-table dealings, many of them pertaining to the sale of Crown land.

Other charges range from avoidance of customs duties to handing out ‘belonger status’ citizenshi­ps to entitle foreigners to purchase Crown land.

The Crown asserts that various bribes were received between 2003 and 2009 in relation to eight separate developmen­ts when the political defendants were in office.

The conspiracy is said to have taken place between four members of the then Cabinet, namely Misick and ministers Floyd Hall, McAllister Hanchell and Jeffrey Hall.

Also apparently involved were two attorneys, Chalmers Misick and Clayton Greene, and Hall’s wife Lisa.

Other allegation­s centre on the way political donations were spent, including a charge of conspiracy to defraud the then ruling PNP and its members of donations.

The other two defendants on trial are former Health Minister Lillian Boyce and attorney Melbourne Wilson.

The cost of the near 10-yearold investigat­ion and trial has mounted to $100 million.

The trial is adjourned until September 9 when Michael Misick is said to be among those expected to take the stand.

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