Archive for May, 2009
No case for Levers’ removal
(CNS): In the final day of the tribunal to hear the case against Justice Priya Levers the lawyers drilled down to arguments of proportionality, fairness and even the question of all or nothing with regards to the tribunal’s terms of reference in relation to the Cayman Islands Constitution. Stanley Brodie QC (left) and Anthony Akiwumi argued on behalf of Levers that, given the most serious allegations that she was involved in the petition against the chief justice or was the author of the letters to Cayman Net News were not proven, there was no case for removal from the bench even if any of the other allegations were accepted.
They went on to argue that, as the constitution only provides for the tribunal to recommend removal and nothing else, as far as constitutional law was concerned there was no other lawful route open to them to reprimand or conclude that Levers had still misbehaved in a way that fell short of removal. In short, they suggested that the Lordships had to either recommend removal or exoneration.
Timothy Otty QC, however, said that while the Constitution might direct the tribunal to her removal, it does not expressly say they could not decide that there was still a question of misbehaviour.
Presenting their closing submissions today (Monday 18 May), both sides wrestled with authorities, precedents and legal details regarding definitions of misbehaviour, inappropriate conduct, proportionality and fairness. Otty took the stand first and argued that there was a case to answer in terms of disparaging remarks about the judiciary and inappropriate behaviour in court but conceded that there was no proof that Levers had written the critical letters.
He argued that despite the points of law raised in Brodie’s final submissions and his assertion that things were not proven, everything was still up to the tribunal to decide. He pointed out that the tribunal’s aim was to enquire and then to make recommendations to the governor. He noted that there was also a difference in opinion between the two sets of attorneys regarding the burden of proof and whether it should be based on the criminal burden of beyond reasonable doubt or based on the balance of probabilities.
Otty suggested the tribunal could consider whether there had been a breach of the Bangalore principles by Levers (a code of ethics and conduct for judges) and if so how much of a damaging impact such a breach would have on the jurisdiction.
Seeking clarification for Otty’s argument, Sir David Simmons, one of the judges sitting with Sir Andrew Leggatt on the tribunal, noted that the Bangalore Principles do not provide for sanction and in each case it is still for the jurisdiction in question to decide whether a breach warranted removal.
Otty contended that if the tribunal were to consider the allegations against Levers regarding her comments in the criminal proceedings, the family court and criticisms around the court of her judicial colleagues and the chief justice, they may still consider this amounted to misbehaviour.
He did, however, state that he was not submitting to the tribunal that Levers could be found to be the author of the Net News letters and as it was not part of the tribunal’s terms of reference to seek to identify who was the true author, but it was at least unlikely that it was Levers. Otty also noted as he closed his arguments that it was up to the tribunal to decide the issue of fairness and proportionality.
Brodie opened the presentation of his closing submissions with that point of fairness and proportionality and said an issue that had been entirely overlooked was the fact that Levers enjoyed “a first class reputation” and what was being examined was a relatively small number of complaints. Notingthat judges are human, he said misbehaviour was not an easy concept to define. He noted that, taking the letters out of the equation, there were no specific charges. He noted that even if they were to find she had fallen below standard on occasion this was not grounds for removal from the bench.
With no letters and no petition, Brodie noted the tribunal was left with a collection of allegations and complaints ranging “from pretty weak to some substance” but where not one alone would warrant removal. Both he and Akiwumi raised the issue of the latitude that judges must be allowed in order to maintain the independence of the judiciary and issues of freedom of speech.
Presenting his argument that the Cayman Islands Constitution simply did not allow the tribunal latitude for any negative finding other than recommendation for removal, he cited the report of Dale Simons from the UK FCO.
Simons had reportedly come to the Cayman Islands last year to conduct an investigation into the judiciary (something that had not until this tribunal been revealed to the people of the Cayman Islands). In her report, Simons had pointed out that there was no mechanism for reprimanding judges and the only option was a tribunal with a recommendation for removal. Unlike other jurisdiction where intermediate options have been put in place so that judges can be warned about their conduct, Cayman has no such system in the present constitution.
Citing an authority, Brodie noted how easy it could be to criticize a judge and for them to become targets of campaigns by rivals, disgruntled litigants and the media, and he said the dangers of that were clear in this case with regard the campaign in Cayman Net News against the local judiciary.
Talking of how Levers’ tribunal came about, Brodie said the chief justice’s decision was understandable given the position he was in, being hemmed in by his own staff at the court with the petition, attacked by the local media and then the hearsay that one of his own judges was criticising him. He said the chief justice had been “poisoned by false evidence".
Levers’ defence team also argued that any disparaging remarks that could be held against her were all made in private and therefore could not be considered serious enough to bring the judiciary into disrepute.
Backing his senior colleague, Akiwumi made a number of submissions from legal authorities and he also raised the reasonable expectation that Levers had following the memo regarding the transcript. He said that after her exchanges and discussions with the chief justice, her arguments and concessions to his points that matter had been laid to rest. She was appointed by him as acting Chief Justice when he was away in September 2007 further illustrating her belief that the matter was closed. The fact that they were resurrected following the accusations that she had written the letters, been involved with the petition and said disparaging things about her colleagues, none of which were proven, it was unfair for them to resurface. He suggested therefore it would also be unfair of the tribunal to consider them.
The final argument between Levers’ legal team and Otty was the issue of what was left if the letters were set aside and if that in itself could constitute enough misbehaviour or falling short of standards to warrant removal. If not, they pointed to the constitutional issue that there was little else for the tribunal to do but to exonerate.
Thanking all of the legal teams involved, Leggatt announced that the tribunal would consider the issues before them and make their report to the governor as soon as possible.
Joey may go back to the farm
(CNS): PPM North Side candidate Joey Ebanks has said that instead of the requirement for six months leave of notice from Boatswain’s Beach (Cayman Turtle Farm Ltd), as stated in his contract, he has agreed to act as a paid consultant for the same period. However, if elected he would not be able to accept the paid position offered by the Board but would still, in his role as MLA, offer advice to the new management team, as he would do for any government body.
Ebanks resigned from his post as managing director of the company on 24 March, the day before Nomination Day when he was declared a candidate for the People’s Progressive Movement in North Side. However, news that he had received a substantial salary advance during the period that he was employed by the Turtle Farm emerged shortly afterwards.
Turtle Farm Board Chair Joel Walton has said that while the Turtle Farm does offer advances to staff “ in unusual circumstance”, these are normally approved by its management. Asked about Ebanks’ salary advances, he said the Board became aware of them whilst conducting its due diligence procedures upon Ebanks’ resignation, and that there were several advances and trade credits obtained by Ebanks over a period of time. The repayment of salary advances, amounting to over $50,000, was made in cash. Walton said the cash payment was made, “Because the Board wanted it paid. It was the correct thing to do.”
Ebanks told CNS that he has been asked to do an audit on advances by the chief financial officer of the TurtleFarm, but that he had no issue with paying the advance salary back. He also noted that when he resigned his position, he still had $18,000 or $19,000 vacation pay due to him.
The terms of his separation from the Turtle Farm are being negotiated by attorneys, Ebanks said, and explained that because statuary bodies might be scrutinized by the complaints commissioner or the auditor general, they are now being very meticulous in taking advice from lawyers.
Walton said the Board had not yet revealed full details of Ebanks’ salary advances since the matter had yet to be closed. “The Board will not prejudice its position nor take lightly its responsibility to protect the interest of Company and it shareholders by making premature statements on the remaining matter,” he said.
Ebanks is running for the North Side seat long held by Edna Moyle, who officially nominated him for the elections. He is running against Ezzard Miller, a former minister and experienced politician, as well as Oswell Rankine, who previously ran for office in East End. Ebanks has himself taken to the hustings in the past when he tried his hand in Bodden Town in 2000 as independent.
The opaque & hypocritical Club OECD
“Nothing would be what it is, because everything would be what it isn’t”, said Alice. And the OECD (the rich man’s club that does not want anyone else to be rich) likes it just that way.
Resigned cynicism is the immediate reaction to the latest shifting of the goalposts by the OECD in its decision to kick the review of Cayman’s “unilateral measures” (for exchange of tax information) forward and up from the Harmful Tax Practices Sub-Committee (which reportedly approved the measures) to the Committee on Fiscal Affairs.
The immediate result is that Cayman stays on the grey list (which should please our competitors in the Channel Islands and the
Voters must check where to vote
(CNS): The Elections Office has released a list of the polling divisions and polling dis-tricts that voters should attend on Wednesday, 20 May, to cast their ballots in the General Elections and Referendum. The list tells each voter where to go to cast their vote and Supervisor of Elections Kearney Gomez points out that the polling place might not be the same as in the 2005 elections. Copies of the official List of Registered Electors have been placed in district post offices, major supermarkets and gas stations. Gomez stressed that voters are not permitted to cast their ballot at any other station – only the one assigned.
Ballot counting: The three electoral districts of Cayman Brac and Little Cayman, East End and North Side have only one counting station, referred to as the Main Counting Station.
For Bodden Town, George Town and West Bay, there will be a sub-count of election ballots at each polling division, but the Main Count Counting Stations are where the postal ballots and mobile ballots will be tabulated along with the sub-count totals. Therefore, each district’s Main Count Counting Station is where the final election results will be announced.
Voters are reminded that the referendum ballots will be counted at one venue on Thursday, 21 May.
Voting locations are as follows:
BODDEN TOWN POLLING DIVISIONS
SAVNEW = Savannah Primary School, 1659 Shamrock Rd
Station 1- surnames A-E; Station 2- surnames F-O; Station 3- surnames P-Z
BTE = Bodden Town Primary School, 6 Condor Rd
Station 1- surnames A-L; Station 2- surnames M-Z
BTW = The Grounds, 199 Agricola Drive
Station 1- surnames A-G; Station 2- surnames H-P; Station 3- surnames Q-Z
The main count is at the James M. Bodden Civic Centre, 445C Bodden Town Road.
CAYMAN BRAC & LITTLE CAYMAN POLLING DIVISIONS
CBE1 = Creek Primary School, 28C Student Drive
Station 1- surnames A-Z
CBE2 = Spot Bay Primary School, 107B Spot Bay Road
Station 2- surnames A-Z
CBW&LC = West End Primary School, 10A West End Road East
Station 1- surnames A-L; Station 2- surnames M-Z
The main count is at the District Administration Building, 19 Kirkconnell Street.
GEORGE TOWN POLLING DIVISIONS
GTN = Victory Tabernacle, 325 Eastern Avenue
Station 1-surnames A-L; Station 2- surnames M-Z
GTW = Prep Kindergarten School, 242 Smith Road
Station 1- surnames A-L; Station 2- surnames M-Z
GTE = Red Bay Primary School, 271 Shamrock Road
Station 1- surnames A-E; Station 2- surnames F-P; Station 3- surnames Q-Z
GTC = George Town Primary School, 42 Gresscott Lane
Station 1- surnames A-G; Station 2- surnames H-P; Station 3- surnames Q-Z
GTS = George Hicks High School Hall, 73 Academy Way
Station 1- surnames A-I; Station 2- surnames J-Z
PROSP = Prospect Primary School, 169 Poindexter Road
Station 1- surnames A-G; Station 2- surnames H-Q; Station 3- surnames R-Z
The main count is at Mary Miller Hall, 223A Shamrock Road.
NORTH SIDE POLLING DIVISION
NS = North Side Primary School, 907 North Side Road
Station 1- surnames A-L; Station 2- surnames M-Z
The main count is at the Craddock Ebanks Civic Centre, 923 North Side Road.
EAST END POLLING DIVISION
EE = William Allen McLaughlin Civic Centre, 80 John McLean Drive.
Station 1- surnames A-L; Station 2- surnames M-Z
The main count is also atthis civic centre.
WEST BAY POLLING DIVISIONS
WBNW = New Testament Church of God, 28A Boatswain Bay Road
Station 1- surnames A-F; Station 2- surnames G-Z
WBE = Church of Christ, 24 Batabano Road
Station 1- surnames A-G; Station 2- surnames H-Z
WBC = John A. Cumber Primary School, 44 Fountain Road
Station 1- surnames A-F; Station 2- surnames G-Z
WBS = John Gray UnitedChurch Hall, 26 West Church Street
Station 1-surnames A-H; Station 2-surnames I-Z
The main count will be at the John A. Cumber Primary School Hall, 44 Fountain Road.
Cop’s new beat in paradise
(Manchester Evening News): A top cop who once said Salford was over-run by `feral youths’ is quitting Britain – to take over policing in a Caribbean idyll. David Baines has left his job as assistant chief constable of Cheshire police to become commissioner at the Royal Cayman Islands Police Service. The officer came top of a list of senior police officers from Britain and America – among them North Wales Chief Constable Richard Brunstrom – who coveted the £112,000-a-year, tax-free job. He will be able to indulge his hobby of scuba diving – the crystal clear waters around the islands boast some of the best diving anywhere in the world.
CAL to fly direct to Honduras
(CNS): On 6 June, Cayman Airways Limited (CAL) will be launching a once-weekly non-stop Boeing 737 jet service to La Ceiba, Honduras. Flight 824 will operate on Saturdays, departing George Town, Grand Cayman at 9:00am arriving in La Ceiba, Honduras at 9:15am. The return flight 825 departs La Ceiba at 10:15am, arriving on Grand Cayman at 12:30pm. There is a one-hour time difference between the two gateways.
“Opening this new gateway is in response to overwhelming feedback from our customers, and we are excited about adding this new destination to our schedule,” said CAL Acting Chairman of the Board Johnny Brown.
Bookings can be made now through Cayman Airways reservations, 345-949-2311, and through travel agents in Cayman and Honduras.
Students’ prose commended
(CNS): The Royal Commonwealth Society’s 2008 Essay Competition award winners were lauded at a ceremony hosted by the Governor Stuart Jack at Government House last week. With improvements in both the numbers and quality of the local essays, the Cayman Islands accounted for entries from 42 children, representing 16 schools. Of those, seven were ‘highly commended’ and seven more were awarded under the RCS Commendation Scheme. (Left: Nicole Crance receives her award)
Numerous additional entries were commended through Cayman’s Department of Education Services Commendation Scheme.
At the occasion, which was attended by the students, educators and parents, the governor said “It is remarkable that a small group can produce such good work. I read some of the essays and was struck by the enormous variety of ideas and styles, presented in words which the rest of us could admire and relate to.”
He further encouraged local youths to improve their skills in English, and thanked the parents and educators for their roles in the students’ success. Noting that “there are many issues impacting our youth, from socialization to self-esteem,” Jack added “My heart is with you and I encourage this programme.”
RCS Honourary Representative, Cayman Islands Branch, Justice Charles Quin also expressed pleasure at the standards. “We clearly have some very good writers who have worked hard and have considerable talent,” he said.” He also thanked Butterfield Bank, which again sponsored the young writers’ cash prizes.
The students had a range of topics from which to choose, and they wrote on issues ranging from hurricane experiences to the local youth culture. The 2008 awards were slated to be presented last November, but that was postponed because of Hurricane Paloma, and the inability of Brac students to travel.
The Royal Commonwealth Society’s Essay Competition was established in 1883 following the society’s formation in 1868. It is a global educational project which aims to enable young people of different backgrounds to compete on equal terms with their peers around the world. It encourages young people to aspire to high standards of academic scholarship and creative writing. The competition involves over 50,000 students from 53 Commonwealth countries and jurisdictions. The RCS competition also seeks to inspire young writers while encouraging literacy, creativity and reflective thought.
Details of this year’s competition will be made public this summer.
Child ‘witches’ abused
(CNN): Christian Eshiett was a rambunctious pre-teen who spent a lot of time cavorting with his friends in southern Nigeria. He would skip school and run away from home for days, frustrating his grandfather, who oversaw the boy’s care. "I beat him severely with canes until they broke, yet he never shed a tear," saidEshiett Nelson Eshiett, 76. "One day, I took a broom to hit him and he started crying. Then I knew he was possessed by demons. … Nigerian witches are terrified of brooms." From that day two years ago, Christian, now 14, was branded a witch. The abuse intensified.
Cayman on display at Chelsea Flower Show
(Daily Telegraph): The Caribbean includes some of the most diverse, spectacular plant species on earth, many of which are among the annual highlights of Chelsea Flower Show’s Great Pavilion… Most arresting of all is an ambitious undersea installation from the Cayman Islands, which has as its backdrop a spectacular mural of the Little Cayman’s celebrated Bloody Bay Wall marine park. Exhibiting for only the second time – they made their Chelsea Flower Show debut last year with the award-winning Heritage Garden, which included a traditional Caymanian cottage and fishing boat – the Cayman team was keen to highlight a different aspect of the stunning islands.
Se also The Times Online
Business sectors join forces
(CNS): A number of local businesses and associations have joined together to form another organisation to promote the Cayman Islands. The primary purpose of the self-funded Cayman Islands Investment Council is, organisers say, to market and promote Cayman in what they describe as difficult economic times. CIIC includes representation from most of Cayman’s commercial sectors, and according to Tony Catalanotto of the CI Real Estate Brokers Association (CIREBA), one of the primary goals is to attract new business to the islands.