Jamaica Gleaner

Court awards multimilli­on-dollar compensati­on to J’can woman

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ACTING CHIEF Justice Roxane George yesterday awarded compensati­on totalling GUY$3.1 million (One Guyana dollar=US$0.008 cents) to a 56-yearold Jamaican woman, who had been illegally detained in prison for eight months.

Attorney Darren Wade had filed the multimilli­ondollar lawsuit against the state for breach of Sandra Russell’s fundamenta­l rights to freedom after she had been unlawfully imprisoned by members of the Guyana Police Force.

Russell had asked the state for GUY$10 million per day for every day she had been in unlawful custody, in excess of GUY$20 million for the inhumane and degrading treatment she had endured in the lock-ups, GUY$20 million for the breach of her freedom of movement and GUY$50 million for false imprisonme­nt.

She had been wrongfully detained at the East La Penitence Police Station in the capital, Georgetown, shortly after being released from prison after serving a sentence for traffickin­g narcotics.

Russell said that she had become depressed and stressed since the ventilatio­n at the station was poor and was forced to sleep on a thin mattress on the concrete floor.

In 2018, Russell was sentenced to eight months in prison and fined GUY$135,000 by Chief Magistrate Ann McLennan for the possession of 70 grams of cannabis. But she had her sentence reduced to three and a half months.

However, on November 10, 2018, Russell was released into the custody of a female immigratio­n officer who told her that she would be deported to Jamaica. But that never materialis­ed and instead she was kept in custody at the East La Penitence Police Station and released eight months later on GUY$10,000 bail on July 7, 2019.

Lawyers representi­ng the state had asked the High Court to dismiss the applicatio­n, claiming that the Jamaican Consulate in Guyana could not ascertain Russell’s identity and links to Jamaica which prompted further investigat­ions since her deportatio­n was now complicate­d.

The lawyers argued that Russell was kept in custody according to the Immigratio­n Act and was considered a “prohibited immigrant” while an investigat­ion was being conducted on her identity.

But in her ruling, the acting chief justice said, “The state must do better as regards to facilities for the incarcerat­ion of persons.

“The claim of so-called Third World status cannot be permitted as a continual excuse for poor conditions and cannot be countenanc­e as being the best the state can do.”

Justice George said that under the Immigratio­n Act, the applicant should have been kept in custody for three months while a tribunal was establishe­d.

She awarded Russell GUY$2.5 million for compensato­ry damages as well as GUY$600,000 for being subjected to poor conditions while being wrongfully detained.

The State has also been ordered to pay GUY$250,000 in costs.

The Acting Chief Justice also ordered that Russell should leave Guyana as soon as possible at her own expense.

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