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A story that is a blight on the landscape of Barbados and will never grows old – Blogmaster

Dear Mr. Leacock,

I am a citizen and taxpayer of Barbados. I am also a pension actuary.

My fundamental responsibility, as an actuary, is to provide services skilfully and competently, to operate with integrity, and to uphold and protect the public trust. I believe your chosen profession has imposed similar responsibilities upon you. By definition, therefore, whenever the public trust is involved, your objectives and mine are always convergent.

For the past couple of years, I have watched in dismay as pieces of information doled out for public consumption revealed how a major life insurance company operating in Barbados was stripped of almost four hundred million dollars of its assets.

Barbadian observers have recoiled in sheer disgust and anger as evidence from reliable sources suggest that our laws were systematically and disdainfully trampled by a group of persons, some of whom masqueraded as executive managers of the ill-fated insurance company, and some of whom pretended to be statesmen.

Many citizens deeply believe that any villains involved in this sordid raid of a life insurance company’s assets should be brought to justice. They also believe that a serious effort should be made to recover as much of the diverted policyholders’ premiums as possible. I share the views and concerns of those citizens, but so far, I have noticed that the boisterous and unified cries clamouring for justice appear to be falling on deaf ears.

Sir, I know that you are a very busy man, presumably dealing with far heavier legal matters than this one, who probably have not found enough time to tackle this problem as yet. Nevertheless, I have decided to construct and package some of the major arguments advanced from various quarters, which support the prosecution of this case before the law courts. I now attach and present them to you, along with the errors that would naturally flow from a mind with no legal training whatsoever.

I fervently hope that your reply to me will give an indication as to whether you believe the ‘evidence’ in this case to be lacking in substance, or whether you think it is credible enough for your department to pursue legal action against the wrongdoers.

We need to reach out to the United States, the United Kingdom, and Canada, our major international trading partners, to make them aware of the extent to which our traditional Barbadian values of respect for law, honesty, and hard work are being relentlessly eroded at the corporate and political level. We also must alert them to the fact, that, when it comes to combating white-collar criminality and corruption, Barbadian citizens currently feel that they will have to rely on international assistance in one form or another, since no help ever seems to come from the local governmental agencies.

BACKGROUND

In 2009, Mr. Lawrence Duprey, head of the largest regional insurance company in the Caribbean, approached the Central Bank of Trinidad & Tobago and asked for a loan to assist his company with paying its bills. That request, and the implied financial horror associated with it, emitted scandalous shockwaves that reverberated throughout the West Indian financial and retirement communities. By the time the dust had settled, Trinidadian taxpayers were forced to part with TT$22 billion to restore some semblance of stability to the Colonial Life Insurance Company (CLICO) of Trinidad & Tobago.

Recognizing that the value and security of the life insurance policies purchased by their citizens from CLICO Barbados were now exposed to the dangers of systemic risk, the Prime Ministers of the other Caribbean islands became quite solicitous and agitated. Mr. David Thompson, on the other hand, as Prime Minister of Barbados and Minister of Finance, was actually enjoying a lucrative but shady relationship with the subsidiary CLICO Barbados group of companies. To safeguard whatever personal and financial benefits he was surreptitiously receiving through his unscrupulous business dealings with Mr. Leroy Parris and other executive members of CLICO, the Prime Minister of Barbados had to invent a charade which would also quell the rising fears and doubts of his fellow Prime Ministers from the Windward and Leeward Islands.

In response to the nervousness and uneasiness coming from Caribbean leaders and citizens, the Thompson-led Barbados Government assured everyone that there was a qualitative difference between CLICO Trinidad and CLICO International Life Insurance Limited (CIL) of Barbados. CIL was being managed well, declared the government’s propaganda machinery. Most interestingly, the Governor of the Central Bank at the time went on to inform Barbadians that CIL had not asked for any assistance, but the Government of Barbados was going to “ put its money where its mouth is” by giving BDS$10 million to the insurance company.

The charade had now masterfully crafted a one-way conduit so that $10 million of Barbadian taxpayers’ money could flow into CIL’s account. Generally speaking, once money entered the CIL account, Mr. Leroy Parris’ first step was to take control of it. Next, with the assistance and facilitation of executive management, he diverted it away from the insurance company and channelled it towards whatever uses he deemed fit.

Of course, the whole narrative related to CIL being a well-managed insurance company was merely a convenient fabrication. So much so, that no one was really surprised when CIL, drained of significant amounts of its assets, eventually collapsed into the arms of Court-appointed Judicial Managers.

At present, no one knows how much taxpayers’ money will be needed to bring some stability and confidence back to the Barbadian insurance market. What everyone knows, however, is that the despicable and horrendous behaviour of the principal actors in this scandal has caused irreparable damage to the international reputation and brand of Barbados.

INFORMATION IN THE PUBLIC DOMAIN:

In December 2008, an invoice for BDS$3.333 million was submitted for payment by the law firm of Thompson & Associates to CLICO Holdings (Barbados) Limited (CHBL) purportedly for the provision of legal services. The invoice, making its first public appearance on a political platform two days before the 2013 General Election in Barbados, was approved by Mr. Leroy Parris who was Chairman of CHBL.

Mr. Leroy Parris used his corporate position to get CIL to issue a cheque for BDS$3.333 million dollars payable to Thompson & Associates. The cheque publicly appeared on the same date, and in the same fashion, as the invoice. One of the signatures on the CIL cheque belonged to Mr. Terrence Thornhill, an accountant by profession, and President of CHBL.

Mind you, CIL was not involved in the transaction, did not receive any legal services, and therefore had no accounting or legal right to pay Thompson & Associates for the provision of such services.

The invoice from Thompson & Associates showed a charge of $250,000 for some legal work done by Mr. Maurice King. Mr. King reportedly denied doing such work. In the face of such a denial, the $250,000 which was removed from the assets of CIL would have been removed under false pretences. This false claim would have been initiated by Thompson & Associates.

It should be noted that in 2008, Mr. David Thompson, perceived head and owner of Thompson & Associates, was also Prime Minister of Barbados and Minister of Finance. Mr. Leroy Parris was the Chairman of CHBL and CIL. Mr. Terrence Thornhill was a professional accountant, and President of CHBL.

All over the world, Value Added Tax (VAT) administrators have to struggle against the scourge of carousel fraud, a criminal technique used by groups of businessmen and their businesses to complicate, hide, erase and offset transactions as a method of evading payments of VAT.

The transaction between CHBL and Thompson & Associates for the provision of legal services in 2008 would have attracted VAT at the rate of 15%. Therefore, the invoice from Thompson & Associates should have shown an amount of $499,950 as VAT due.

It did not.

Bear in mind that Mr. David Thompson, as Minister of Finance, would have also been the political head of the VAT department in 2008 and therefore had a legal obligation to protect government’s revenue. Furthermore, Prime Minister Thompson ought to have been concerned that money was being so easily diverted from a life insurance company to pay bills for another entity.

Mr. Leroy Parris, when he approved the invoice as Chairman of CHBL ought to have known that the transaction would have attracted a VAT rate of 15%.

Mr. Terrence Thornhill, as a professional accountant, must have known that an amount of $499,950 in VAT was due to the Government of Barbados as a result of the transaction.

Collusion had now taken place among CHBL, CIL, and Thompson & Associates as companies, and among Mr. Leroy Parris as Chairman of CIL & CHBL, Mr. David Thompson as Prime Minister of Barbados and Minister of Finance, and Mr. Terrence Thornhill, as a professional accountant and President of CHBL. The effect of this collusion would have been to keep VAT revenue amounting to $499,950 out of the hands of the Government of Barbados.

The way our VAT system works, the first transaction involving the invoice and payment for legal services was a terminal and independent transaction. There was no more value to be added once the company of Thompson and Associates was paid for its legal services.

It has been asserted by others that, although the check was written to Thompson & Associates, the 3.333 million dollars ended up in the hands of Mr. Leroy Parris as partial payment of a gratuity.

However, if the assertion is true, then it must be stressed that neither Thompson & Associates as a company, nor Mr. David Thompson as Prime Minister of Barbados, was in any position to legally pay Mr. Leroy Parris a gratuity. Under such circumstances, partial payment of a gratuity would have to be viewed as a false and illegal reason offered by Thompson & Associates, Prime Minister David Thompson, and Mr. Leroy Parris to cover up a multi-million dollar racket.

One cannot help but notice the depth of planning and collusion as the second phase of this scheme was put into action.

It must be emphasized that as far as VAT is concerned, this was a completely new transaction now taking place.

Since there were no physical goods involved, VAT legislation would have assumed that a service was provided by Mr. Leroy Parris in order for Thompson & Associates, or anyone for that matter, to pay him $3.333 million.

That service would have attracted $499,950 in VAT.

Therefore, the two independent transactions aimed at diverting $3.333 million from CIL into the personal account of Mr. Leroy Parris, should have brought $999,900 of VAT revenue into the coffers of government. Unfortunately, the actions of the principal participants in these transactions left a VAT department too petrified by fear of political victimization to act.

This information in the public arena shows clearly that Mr. Leroy Parris had no legal right to the $3.333 million of policyholders’ money that was paid into CIL as premiums.

This leads us to the following question: How can $3.333 million dollars end up in an account belonging to Mr. Leroy Parris, with no credible legal or accounting explanation being given for its arrival?

This feat could only have been achieved through one mechanism – money laundering. Money laundering is a crime in Barbados.

How many illegal and fictitious transactions were conceived and entered into by the principal actors, in order to quench the insatiable thirst of Mr. Parris, and others, for the premiums paid by CIL’s policyholders? How much of these transactions resulted in a transgression of our tax and money laundering laws? How much of the premiums paid by poor hard-working Barbadians and other West Indians to purchase insurance protection from CIL ended up in Prime Minister Thompson’s estate as kickbacks? How much of it supported the lavish and jet-set lifestyle of Prime Minister Thompson, Mr. Leroy Parris, and other executive members of CIL and CHBL?

It would be an extremely serious mistake for you to believe that these two transactions were random and isolated events. The truth of the matter is that, over time, significant sums of money (almost $400 million) were taken from CIL and diverted for the use of CHBL, its subsidiaries, and executive membership.

I am sure you would be shocked if you were to discover that no advance Board approval was given or secured for the divergence of these funds from CIL. Recognizing that Mr. Terrence Thornhill was a professional accountant and an executive member of CHBL, I am also confident that you would be absolutely appalled if you were to discover that no accounting documents could be readily found or made available to support or explain the divergence of almost $400 million from CIL.

Life insurance is a highly technical and esoteric business. At any point in time, the value of the total premiums paid on a policy by the policyholder, minus the total cost of insurance protection that he or she has received, represents a ‘reserve’ amount which must be calculated by an actuary and held by the insurance company. Insurance regulators worldwide establish levels of statutory reserves which insurance companies must keep on hand to ensure that benefits to policyholders can be paid as they fall due. These reserves are established by using extremely conservative actuarial assumptions which focus primarily on ensuring the solvency of the insurance company, and protecting the interests of policyholders.

Additionally, an insurance contract protects the interests of policyholders by making non-forfeiture options available to them whenever they decide to terminate a policy. One of these non-forfeiture options involves the calculation and payment of the policy’s cash value.

Establishing an adequate level of statutory reserves, determining when premium income is currently earned, and using policyholders’ premiums to pursue a prudent investment strategy aimed at matching the nature of assets with the nature of liabilities are some of the basic roles and responsibilities of the executive management of a life insurance company.

By failing to timely file reports on the reserve situation of CIL to the accommodating regulatory authorities in Barbados, and by habitually and illegally diverting assets away from CIL to other accounts, Mr. Leroy Parris and the executive membership of CHBL effectively destroyed the viability of CIL as an insurance company. In doing so, they brought immense financial and economic hardship to bear upon thousands and thousands of policyholders and life insurance agents across the Caribbean. As CIL thrashed about spasmodically in its death throes, terminating policyholders, despite being protected under the law, could not get the cash value of their policies as promised by their contracts.

There is one final twist to this strange eventful history.

In August 2009, the office of the Supervisor of Insurance issued a cease and desist order to CIL aimed at preventing the life insurance company from issuing new policies. Believing that their unholy alliance with the Prime Minister of Barbados rendered them untouchable by the law, Mr. Parris and some of the executive management of CIL and CHBL chose to treat the order by the office of the Supervisor of Insurance with the same level of contempt with which they treated the tax laws, insurance laws, corporate laws, and money laundering laws of Barbados.

In June 2010, Ms.Vernese Brathwaite, the Deputy Supervisor of Insurance, filed an official complaint urging the Commissioner of police to probe the illegal sale of over 800 life insurance policies which were sold despite the regulatory order issued the year before.

Any policyholder resident in the USA, Canada, Britain or any other overseas jurisdiction who received solicitations from CIL by mail, e-mail, or any other means after August 2009 urging them to purchase a life insurance policy, should take the evidence to their respective governments. Mail fraud would have been committed.

In February 2012, given the collaborative efforts between Ms. Vernese Brathwaite as Deputy Supervisor of Insurance, and Mr. Darwin Dottin as Commissioner of Police, charges were filed against Mr. Leroy Parris and Mr. Terrence Thornhill for violating the cease and desist order imposed by the office of the Supervisor of Insurance.

Ms. Vernese Brathwaite as Deputy Supervisor of Insurance, and Mr. Darwin Dottin as Commissioner of Police, have been unceremoniously removed from their desks. Neither explanation nor reason has been provided to the taxpayers of Barbados for the termination of the careers of these senior government officials.

As for the “cease and desist” case against Messrs. Leroy Parris and Terrence Thornhill, it has been adjourned without a set date after Mr. Parris failed to show up for his first scheduled court appearance.

Is Barbados on the road to becoming a banana republic?


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360 responses to “Open Letter to the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) about the CLICO (Barbados) Scandal”


  1. Walter Blackman | July 9, 2014 at 7:32 PM “Almost 400 million dollars were diverted from CIL ”

    How much money was “diverted” to the parent company and or it’s owner in Trinidad ?

    Clico was owned and controlled by it’s Trinidadian owner and I would expect he would have taken a hefty return on his investment.


  2. @ Reality Check
    You are telling us that the two lawyers that David put in his office in 2008 are responsible for the 3.3 M that was paid
    into that office for invoices from that office , and that Mara Thompson don’t know about anything so ask the lawyers

    @ David/ BU
    Reality Check have given you some info to work on .


  3. @Hants
    Correction–U meant a heavy return on your ie the Peeps $$$$


  4. Hants
    It was revealed at the CoI held in Trinidad that Duprey was paid $90 million repeat 90 million a year.


  5. @ Reality Check
    The words , Two Hoots are words you used in most of yours letters to the press in the 1976-86 years .
    You are David Thompson’s , mother Margaret Knight so state your name on BU and go down fighting for your son name because his wife is not going to ,
    She is busy living sweet with the loot
    While his name is in the mud ,


  6. ALL OF THIS LONG TALK PEOPLE WANT ANSWERS, WALTER, THE DAY YOU BECOME PM, A LOT OF PEOPLE GOING TO JAIL. YOU HAVE THE KNOWLEDGE TO RUN BARBADOS GO FOR IT…..


  7. @Gabriel,

    90 x 5 = $450 million dollars..allegedly paid to Duprey in 5 years.

    My sympathy is with the policy holders but it seems Bajan insurance policy holders keep getting screwed

    Remember the Manulie class action?


  8. @Hants
    Wasnt there a settlement in Tdad for 90 cents per $?
    Since LP was EXCEEDINGLY WELL Politically connected and the teefing was not all here ,there is NO solution in Bim for innocent maligned Bajans. This is what one attains from permitting a culture of CORRUPTION!


  9. Hants
    I am one of the unfortunate ones holding 2 fully paid up British American Whole Life 100K policies since the late 60’s and have heard nothing from the company since 2009.I have no clue what is going on.Everyone is talking CLICO not BAICO so I am resigned to losing the thousands I paid in premiums over the 40+ years while the Leper lives off part of my hard earned money.


  10. Make no mistake they will all pay for their greed and dishonest behavior. God is not asleep, he sees the injustice that we the policy holders are experiencing. I am confident that He will act for us and the sweetest justice will be served.


  11. @ Walter’
    Keep up the pressure. This thing must bw settled, and it will, but it will take time. Check Enron, and other Like Big situations in the U.S.
    Alin Cummins


  12. To the credit of the government Barrack matter appears to have reached a head several millions in interest later. Let us hope Clico is next.

  13. Walter Blackman Avatar
    Walter Blackman

    alvin cummins | July 31, 2014 at 2:02 PM |
    @ Walter’
    Keep up the pressure. This thing must be settled, and it will, but it will take time.

    Alvin,
    Thanks for the encouragement.
    It took almost 30 years of planning, co-operation, facilitation, and corruption among politicians, civil servants, and Duprey’s handpicked puppets in Barbados to gorge themselves uninterruptedly on the premiums paid by CLICO policyholders from the eastern Caribbean. This ‘thing’, as you referred to it, must be settled on two fronts – civil and criminal. Civil proceedings have begun, and you are optimistic that they will culminate in a settlement. I hope you are right.

    The financial lives of over 30,000 people have been savagely traumatized by the criminal acts of some modern, high-flying crooks who make Ali Baba and his infamous group look like Anglican choir boys. Obviously, the government of Barbados ought to analyze the actions of every culprit involved in this tragedy with a view to ensuring that it does not happen again. The first step, therefore, is to lay criminal charges against all of those persons who engineered, accommodated, and executed “The Greatest insurance Robbery” in the history of Barbados.

    How long do the citizens of Barbados and the OECS have to wait before criminal charges related to CLICO Barbados are filed by the government? Will such court action cause the government or the political class to self-destruct?

    It is extremely important to note that Leroy Parris and his accomplices are not ‘lepers’. Therefore, if found guilty, they will pose no threats (neither social nor physical) to the inmates at Dodds Prison.

    I hope all is well at your end. Keep the faith.


  14. Walter, well presented, but as we all can see at the moment Barbados is very Currupt, with a dictator,under the guise of he’s a good man a god fearing man! But not a just man, let’s see what the courts does.


  15. @Walter

    This submission is creating a sir on Facebook. Good job!


  16. To those visiting BU for the first time note our Lawyers in the News page.

  17. Walter Blackman Avatar

    David,
    Thanks for the compliment. However, I honestly believe that I should be the one telling you “good job”. You have provided an outstanding service to Barbados and Barbadians by making this blog available so that we all can “listen to others, even the dull and ignorant. They too have their story.” Keep up the good work!


  18. Solid information. Thank you for putting it all together. What can I say, all of them should be in jail. I see no reason why the Court chose not to freeze the assets of David Thompson’s estate. It looks like there will not be a Thompson Dynasty in St. John. A vote of no confidence is needed against the PM and his Ministers, everyone of them. It is inconceivable to think that they have no knowledge of this.


  19. @ Heather, based in the information presented here and the overall context of this debacle one hopes that the St. John dynasty is not the only political house of cards that is dismantled.

    Several politicians should never grace the doors of the Chamber again unless as a visitor.

    At the end – whenever that may be – if the corrupt behaviour chronicled does not result in the political death of others then it’s clear that Bajans deserve the political cesspool into which they are submerging.

    I say this with absolutely no ill intent or malice to any one but as the US ponzi schemer Madoff languishes in jail with several of his office staff , the most telling aspect for him was that of his family members.

    Both his sons have since died. One of shame by his own hand the other of cancer.

    If what is said of PM Thompson’s involvement is accurate his entire legacy is badly tarnished and there will always be a shroud of despair and distrust hanging over his name and that of his children.

    Oh how the mighty doth fall.


  20. A read of the JM’s view featured in today’s newspaper suggest he does not agree the plan to retrieve Clico by setting up a different company to transfer assets is the way to go. Are we getting close to criminal action by the DPP.

  21. St George's Dragon Avatar
    St George’s Dragon

    Someone should start criminal proceedings going but I am not sure it is the DPP. From the DPP’s Code:
    “Proceedings are usually started by the police. Sometimes they may consult the Department of Public Prosecutions before starting a prosecution. Each case that the Department of Public Prosecutions receives from the police is reviewed to make sure it meets the evidential and public interest tests set out in this Code. Crown Prosecutors may decide to continue with the original charges, to change the charges, or sometimes to stop the case.”
    Isn’t it a police matter?Why are they not investigating?


  22. @st.Georges Dragon

    In cased you missed it the police has investigated the matter of Parris and Clico.

    http://www.nationnews.com/nationnews/news/9233/story-clico-action


  23. Well written and pointed.


  24. Walter Blackman well written,however BRA is headed by Margaret Sivers a Chris Sinkler appointee. FSC is headed by Randy Graham who is David Thompson nephew. Leroy Parris had policemen on his personal payroll and Charles Leacock wants to be a judge so he will not muddy his chances.


  25. @ DeeWord February 8, 2015 at 12:13 AM
    Very well said sir.
    shiite man ….yuh got Bushie shame for ever doubting you… 🙂

    @ Town Rat
    After all the lotta talk, you just explained in one paragraph what the damn problem is….

    This lotta shiite of politicians ensuring the appointment of family, their women, low life lackies and yardfowls to positions in public service that rightfully should have been filled with sensible, upright, honest, hard-working Bajans.

    We all sat back when big-named politicians changed the laws to give themselves such power. The various opposition parties complained – BUT DID NOTHING WHEN THEY WERE ELECTED.

    As DeeWord said, we are all complicit and deserving of the bed we have made for ourselves…
    Perhaps, as Pacha has said all along, we may need to burn the bed and sleep on the floor for a while as a new bed is constructed…..

    If only Caswell would BUP….


  26. @David, “A read of the JM’s view featured in today’s newspaper suggest he does not agree the plan to retrieve Clico by setting up a different company to transfer assets is the way to go. Are we getting close to criminal action by the DPP.”

    No David. We’re getting close to liquidation, which would currently mean less than 20 cents on the dollar, but in reality, after the expense of the exercise, more like 10 cents on the dollar.

    Of course that’s just the policyholders. Without an unlimited forensic investigation (previous ones have been extremely limited in scope), others may have already done so well, one way or another, that they would be untouched by a liquidation and so couldn’t care less either way.

    Unless the GOB acts with unparalleled haste in moving forward with funding for this supposedly already set up interim handling company, it will all be over very shortly for policyholders, and every word of reassurance, comfort and promises like Stuart’s oft repeated “Government is committed to ensuring that policyholders will get back their principal investments in CLICO” and Mr Sincklers bold statement in December 2014 that liquidation was “premature, unwarranted and unecessary”, will show the true colours of the people involved and the nature of the games that have been played on tens of thousands of Bajans in this matter since January 2009.

    The most telling part of all of this is that there was a detailed reconstruction plan presented to the goverment by the Judicial Manager in December 2013 which was fully approved in all its detail by Cabinet in a letter dated April 3rd. This included modest amounts of cash injections, the first of which was to be paid in June of 2014 to enable the company to continue to operate, pay out its pensions on traditional policies (which it has successfully been doing ever since) and commence the restructuring plan which would not only have preserved the ‘traditional’ policyholder funds, but even start paying annuities on the infamous Individual EFPA plans.

    The fact that Cabinet approved such a detailed plan, but then failed to act on its own decision within the critical timescale of which it was fully aware, has resulted in the all but hopeless position in which we now find ourselves. This fact alone must surely question whether Cabinet decisions have any validity, or authority and if this is indeed the case, it strikes a fatal blow of utter lack of confidence at the very heart and foundation of the present system and quality of governance.


  27. @Bush Tea

    Reading your comment why are you against Transparency Legislation?

    @bdosmike

    Does liquidation preclude criminal proceedings taking place?


  28. @ David. No. Two separate issues. Not that we seek it as a resolution by any means, but liquidation strengthens BIPA’s law suit against Parris and Directors and Officers of CLICO and others for the money. You can only sue for what you have lost. If you have lost virtually everything, you can sue for virtually everything.


  29. @bdosmike

    But our regulators should have good grounds to pursue this matter.


  30. There are two versions of TRUTH ! one is”trute” and one is TRUTH and as the PM resonantly said . TRUTH is not like milk it does not sour , it stands fresh forever until the appropriate place and time to be used, stay tuned,


  31. @David February 8, 2015 at 7:33 AM :In cased you missed it the police has investigated the matter of Parris and Clico.

    Whatever investigation the police initiated seems to have been curtailed indefinitely based on Walters remarks:

    “As for the “cease and desist” case against Messrs. Leroy Parris and Terrence Thornhill, it has been adjourned without a set date after Mr. Parris failed to show up for his first scheduled court appearance.”

    Also great to see that you have this CLICO matter as your current ‘sticky’.


  32. @DeeWorld

    Exactly!

    If this high profile case follows the others it will languish in never never land for decades.


  33. @ac February 8, 2015 at 9:55 AM…There are two versions of TRUTH ! one is”trute” and one is TRUTH and as the PM resonantly said . TRUTH is not like milk it does not sour , it stands fresh forever until the appropriate place and time to be used, stay tuned,—————-

    The PM is quite accurate and for that reason the detailed reports completed by the independent JM staff have revealed important facts and truths and more will be revealed as other documents are unearthed.

    And thankfully however long it takes when the truth is discovered it will still be good.

    I hope all of us can return to these pages and continue to speak with such conviction when all is known.

    Some of the current truths mentioned make the PM and his team look less than pristine.

    But I am pleased that the PM is looking forward to getting all of the truth.

  34. are-we-there-yet Avatar

    David;

    There are so many wheels within the wheels within the wheels of this matter.

    PUDRYR is always telling the BU family, very authoritatively, that the former COP, allied with MAM, conducted illegal surveillance of several top members of society including former PM, OSA? Might PUDYR have been a tad misled in some of the details?

    Could it be that some of such surveillance materials might have been gathered primarily to make an ironclad case against Parris and other CLICO collaborators?

    If that has any validity, couldn’t one explanation for such actions be that they (the COP and MAM) were seeking only to gather actionable facts on matters of national security importance? The CLICO matter is of national security importance, right?

    Might’nt the facts that the COP was removed from his office and Vernese Brathwaite had been earlier removed from hers around the time that the matter of CLICO and the continued selling of the EFPA policies had been made the subject of a case by the COP against LP be pointers to a cause and effect linkage?

    The COP versus LP case appeared to have been dropped after the new acting COP took up office since no reported effort was apparently made to conclude the case since then?

    Could it be that the wheels of a putative tarnished officialdom that successfully moved against even someone as powerful as the top cop to assist Parris, could have easily manufactured and spread rumours of indiscriminate phone tapping and other alleged surveillance infelicities to justify the top cops removal?

    Could protecting Parris have been the overarching rationale for the top cop’s removal?

    Was there a coup by agencies and trough feeders unknown?

    If the allegation by a BU poster that a number of Police Officers were on LP’s payroll is true, could it be that the case brought against the COP might have been informed by flawed testimony? Why were the authorities unsuccessful in the timely serving of court papers?

    Is there a possibility that the untimely death of the eminently honest Anderson Bowen could be weaved into a best selling novel that chronicles the rise and fall of an insurance company similar in many respects to CLICO?

    Wow! A global best selling novel and motion picture in the making about intrigue in a small country. It could get into the best selling conspiracy theory novels of all time.


  35. David wrote “If this high profile case follows the others it will languish in never never land for decades.”

    I am betting a lot of pensioners will die without getting their money back. If they are lucky their beneficiaries may get to spend money that should have enhanced the quality of life of the pensioners.

    I have empathy for all those who suffered in this debacle but there are probably people with only a few years to live and some who may need medical care.

    They need their “Clico money” asap.


  36. @Hants

    Many have died already.


  37. @ David, “But our regulators should have good grounds to pursue this matter.” But so far, they have not. BIPA is the only party collectively suing Parris, the Directors and Officers of CLICO, the auditors, the SOI and others, However, that is a civil case. It would be up to others to bring the criminal case.


  38. @ David,”Many have died already”

    The Lawyers will have extra work to do settling estates.

    Lawyers keep “winning” lol


  39. @bdosmike

    Then we the citizens have to keep blowing the whistle to maintain the squeeze on the fat cats.


  40. A tragic story, one which exposes the human condition placed under protracted stress with political poppycock tossed it. 

    BODY FOUND BY COPS: Solomon Hem-Lee

    CLICO AGENT CHOPPED TO DEATH

    …had received death threats after collapse of insurance company

    By Dave Persad

    Story Created: Jan 20, 2012 at 9:49 PM ECT

    Story Updated: Jan 20, 2012 at 9:49 PM ECT

    CLICO agent Solomon Hem-Lee, who said he had received death threats as a result of the collapse of the insurance company, was found murdered in Enterprise, Chaguanas, just after midnight yesterday.

    Hem-Lee’s body was found by police, lying face down on a recreation ground at Enterprise, Chaguanas.

    His gold-coloured Nissan Almera was found parked nearby.

    Police said Hem-Lee was chopped across the forehead, and there were marks of violence on the body.

    The rear seat of the car was stained with blood.

    Police said they were able to identify Hem-Lee by tracing the registration number on his car, which led to an address at San Fabian Road, Gasparillo.

    Hem-Lee was a senior sales representative with Clico, and worked out of the company’s Cipero Street, San Fernando, branch.

    He was also chairman of the South Action Group, which represented a group of agents.

    He had called a series of press briefings in 2010, to complain that agents were receiving death threats from policyholders who blamed them for the collapse of the insurance company, because they were instructed to tell customers all was well with the company, even as it fell apart.

    The South Action Group is now defunct.

    Police were tipped off by a caller to the Chaguanas Police Station informing them of the body at African Grounds, Enterprise Street, Chaguanas. No weapon was found and no witnesses have come forward.

    Hem-Lee’s body was removed to the Forensic Science Centre in St James.

    The latest killing has taken the murder toll for the year to 29, according to an Express tally.

    Central Division police are investigating.


  41. Was an ex head honcho of PWC also one of CLICO’s directors? If this be true, would it not be considered a glaring conflict of interest?


  42. thank you for you quick and pristine response, also ac would be looking forward to the TRUTH in the weeks and months ahead without out any cherry pickers taking what they believe is ripe enough for the pickings,
    hav a bless day,
    the court of BU will remain open and as usual only one side will have their say,


  43. By Dave Persad|Story Created: Jan 20, 2012 at 9:49 PM ECT|Story Updated: Jan 20, 2012 at 9:49 PM ECT: “… because they were instructed to tell customers all was well with the company, even as it fell apart…”

    This is still too prevalent in many companies where employees do not know how to say no.

  44. St George's Dragon Avatar
    St George’s Dragon

    @ David
    Yes, I remember the court case now but that is really a side-show. The police should be investigating the alleged money laundering and financial irregularities, not the sale of 800 policies after a ban was instituted.


  45. Alien February 8, 2015 at 11:50 AM “This is still too prevalent in many companies where employees do not know how to say no.”

    Oh but some CLICO employees did say “NO” and were swiftly fired/let go/severed.

    The forensic audit nor the judicial report is not complete unless and until that talk to all such former employees. They should all be interviewed under oath.

    Wunna tink that Leroy Parris (and his enablers) is a sweet bread?


  46. Just watched Rihanna perform at the Grammys. Awesome. Now back to cricket. West Indies batting. Smith and Gayle opening.

    pardon the interruption. lol


  47. Errol Barrow was a fool. He led Barbados to independence from Britain either thinking that he would live forever, or that the politicians who followed him would be honest and have the interests of the people of Barbados before their own. Either way he was wrong. Britain could have investigated any matter if they suspected a “high probability of systemic corruption or other serious dishonesty”, and suspended local Government as they did in the TCI. Our independence functions as a corruption shield for our politicians. Happy Independence fellow Barbadians.


  48. @Andrew Clarke February 8, 2015 at 11:58 PM …Errol Barrow was a fool. … or that the politicians who followed him would be honest and have the interests of the people of Barbados before their own. —————-

    Errol Barrow can be called many things but a fool he certainly was not.

    So, tongue firmly in cheek that I understand your comment to be are you actually suggesting that there were no matters of malfeasance or dishonesty under Mr. Barrow’s long political tenure ?

    Or are you saying that corruption started from back them?

    Just wondering as I read your post in my sleepless mode this early in the morn.

  49. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    @ Dee Word

    I hope you ent suffering with the same ting de ole man got – fear dat deat catch you while you sleeping so you does stand up to fight him when HE WILL COME

    Andrew Clarke, judging from what he is saying, meant “Errol Barrow was a fool <IF, he thought > (h)e led Barbados to independence from Britain <certainly knowledgeable that he (c)ould live forever.

    that the politicians who followed him would be (dis) honest and (NOT) have the interests of the people of Barbados before their own

    An emotive opening statement like that of Mac Fingal (who as you pointed out did not do real justice to that opening statement and now is getting BU licks) designed to capture the eye and solicit further reading by astute readers like yourself.

  50. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    I am going to ask two questions which might possibly be as evocative as Mac Fingals’ recent Rainbow Coalition Statement.

    Do any of you think that any such “killing” like that of this CLICO official Solomon Hem-Lee who was seen to be “living large on the ill gotten proceeds of the CLICO debacle”, or a party seen to be connected with this insurance matter long languishing in our local courts, could occur in Bulbados

    If not, why?

    Docility?

    You know how many contracts for personal security specialists and surveillance cameras are going to result from this incident in Trinidad?

    Well perhaps this might be a line item in the expenditure of the other millions missing locally, whu wunna think?

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