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Abeng — Jamaica news

Translations for this language are still being generated. Showing the English originals in the meantime.
We Jammin has no equal in the Kingston
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We Jammin has no equal in the Kingston

The horse to beat WE JAMMIN does not exist in Saturday’s Kingston, a race in which none of the runners he outclassed prior managed to improve on their placing in subsequent defeats to the Triple Crown favourite.Take, for example, BIGGER BOSS, eight lengths behind WE JAMMIN in last December’s Jamaica Two-Year-Old Stakes, a quarter length closer in April’s Prince Consort, flattered by the winner being eased down.Next up, FERNANDO, seven and three-quarter behind in the Jamaica Two-Year-Old Stakes, nine and a quarter length in the Prince Consort. DASH ALL DAY, another Anthony Nunes runner, finished an insignificant five and a quarter lengths behind WE JAMMIN in the Prince Consort.Gary Subratie’s GOD PLAN was eight lengths behind WE JAMMIN in the Jamaica Two-Year-Old Stakes, stretched to a dozen in the Prince Consort.Richard Azan’s SENOR BISCOTTI didn’t start off all that badly, a neck behind when inexperienced WE JAMMIN met him on debut at seven furlongs, which became 22 lengths in the Jamaica Two-Year-Old Stakes 13 days later, followed by 12 lengths in the Prince Consort.It gets even worse for Jason DaCosta’s LONDON SPIRIT, who was three and a quarter behind at seven furlongs, 11 off in the Jamaica Two-Year-Old Stakes, and a distant 30 in the Prince Consort.Subratie’s STARDOM got his baptism of fire, meeting WE JAMMIN on his third start, resulting in an 11-length sixth-place finish in the Prince Consort

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Fraud case fallout MOCA commits to timely administration of justice after former TAJ cashiers walk free

The two law-enforcement agencies that investigated a multimillion-dollar fraud at Tax Administration Jamaica (TAJ) nine years ago are now in the process of consulting the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions (ODPP) after the case against the five accused persons collapsed in court on Monday.The director of public prosecutions (DPP) is Jamaica's prosecutorial authority.The consultation with the DPP is to explore “potential options for the way forward”, the Major Organised Crime and Ant-Corruption Agency (MOCA) said in a public statement released yesterday.Dermain Shakespeare, Kelly-Ann Wright, Sherine Leslie, Shanna-Kay Simmonds-Johnson and Sherika Stewart, all cashiers employed to TAJ at the time of their arrests in 2017, were freed in the Kingston and St Andrew Parish Court after a judge dismissed the charges against them for want of prosecution.Want of prosecution is a legal term used when a case is dismissed because it was delayed for various reasons over an unreasonable amount of time.However, legal experts told The Gleaner yesterday that the case can be reinstated against the women, but said they would have a compelling basis to challenge such a move as an abuse of the court process.All five women were arrested during a raid at TAJ’s Cross Roads, St Andrew offices, which was conducted by MOCA, with assistance from the Revenue Protection Division and the Financial Investigations Division.The raid was part of an investigation into a fraudulent scheme that cost the Government millions of dollars, the agencies indicated at the time.The women were charged with conspiracy to defraud, forgery, falsification of records and larceny as a servant, but over the nine-year period since the case was first placed before the court in February 2017, it has been plagued by over three dozen adjournments and an abandoned trial.MOCA acknowledged that over several years, the case was affected by a “range of delays due to a multiplicity of circumstances”, but said many of those issues “were outside the control of the prosecution”.The case was prosecuted by attorneys from MOCA and the RPD, acting on a fiat from the DPP.The agency said when the case was called up in court on Monday, the prosecution was in a position to proceed despite the fact that their attorneys were unavailable to attend.Two of the attorneys were “affected by illness” and a third was “unable to attend court due to particular personal circumstances”, MOCA explained.“These factors, when viewed against the background of the matter’s prolonged history, appear to have contributed directly to the court’s ruling in terminating the matter,” the statement said.While noting that it recognised the public concern following the court’s decision to dismiss the charges, MOCA indicated that as a law-enforcement agency, it was committed not only to the vigorous investigation and prosecution of serious organised crime, fraud, and corruption, but also to the observance of fairness, due process, and the timely administration of justice. [email protected]

NaRRA plea - Jamaicans urged to send message as Senate debates reconstruction legislation
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NaRRA plea - Jamaicans urged to send message as Senate debates reconstruction legislation

A leading accountability campaigner is pushing for Jamaicans to stand up and be heard while cautioning against the powers that the Government has arrogated to itself in the National Reconstruction and Resilience Authority (NaRRA) bill. Jeanette Calder, executive director of the Jamaica Accountability Meter Portal (JAMP), pointed to parallels in how Prime Minister Dr Andrew Holness overruled a regulatory agency and granted an environmental permit to Bengal Development Limited for mining activities in the Dry Harbour Mountains of St Ann.That 2020 decision by the prime minister was struck down by the constitutional court last week, when it ruled that the granting of the licence was unconstitutional and of no legal effect.Information Minister Dr Dana Morris-Dixon however indicated yesterday that the Government will be appealing the ruling, though it had not yet examined the implications of the court’s decision.Addressing members of the Kiwanis Club of Kingston on Tuesday night, Calder said the powers that are crafted in the NaRRA bill “are reminiscent of the decision that the prime minister made when he overturned the decision of a regulatory agency concerning Dry Harbour Mountain”.“Do look at this judgment because the concern that the other civil society groups, I do believe the Opposition and JAMP are saying, is that the Government, based on how NaRRA is written now, has really taken on, arrogated as you would say, certain powers unto itself that the very thing they did in Dry Harbour is what the law is now saying they can’t do,” she said.In her decision, Justice Sonya Wint-Blair said although the court acknowledged the projected economic benefits of the proposed 20-year project, the evidence pointed to significant risk of environmental harm in a fragile ecosystem known for its endemic flora and fauna.The constitutional court granted judgment in favour of six residents who challenged the approval of the project.JAMP’s executive director said in the same way the court pointed out that no justification was given for setting aside the decision of the regulatory body, in a similar manner NaRRA can reverse the decisions of the regulatory agencies and there is nothing in the proposed law to say a justification should be given.The JAMP boss argued that while citizens have the right to take matters they deem to have breached the Constitution to court, the process involves a lot of money and it takes time