The popular local reaction to the impending Integrity in Public Life legislation has been intriguing. Given the populist perception of politicians in general and our seeming inability to rein in the lawless conduct of some notorious sectors of society, cynicism naturally abounds. A fellow columnist and learned friend, in his column last week, categorized it as an attempt to legislate morality; what some lawyers call a brutum fulmen (empty threat). At one level, he is right. Integrity cannot be created by legislative fiat but rather resides in the heart of the individual to be exercised accordingly of his or her own free will. At the same time, however, there is a clamant need for such an injunction, if only to attempt to deter those who might be inclined to act contrarily. Stealing is also immoral, yet none denies the need for condign legislation in this regard.

In last week’s essay, we examined the declaration of financial affairs by specified persons in public life. We also noted the avenue for such an individual to put his or her assets in a blind trust to be administered by an independent trustee. The blind trust is not a device with which most Barbadians will be familiar but it is of critical importance to its validity that the cestui que trust or beneficiary retains absolutely no control over the trust assets during its subsistence. Hence, as I suggested textually last week, there appears to be a drafting error in section 28 (5)(b) that reads as follows in my copy of the Bill-

…income derived from the management of the assets is to be distributed, in accordance with the agreement, to him, his spouse or his children until he ceases to be a specified person in public life…

Arguably, any such distribution and, indeed, any such agreement would be antithetical to the concept of a trust and would amount to the mere transfer of property as a stakeholder. The word “not” should therefore be inserted between “is” and “to” in the first line.

Once the declaration has been duly made to the Commission or the Governor General as the case may be, that entity or its staff will examine it and “make such inquiries as it or he considers necessary in order to verify or determine the accuracy of the financial affairs, as stated in the declarations, of persons who are required to file declarations under this Act”Clause 29 (b).

Where the Commission is satisfied that a declaration has been fully made as defined in Clause 31 (5), it will issue a certificate of compliance. Where it is not satisfied with the information given, however, it may report the matter to the appropriate Service Commission, board or other authority and the Director of Public Prosecutions.

There is a curious (I put it no higher than that) time bar for the commencement of an inquiry by the Commission in Clause 32 (5). According to this –“An inquiry shall not be commenced after 2 years from the date on which the person ceased to be in public life”.

As has already been pointed out elsewhere, this may amount to “a rogue’s charter”, whereby a specified person in public life may arrange for his or her financial affairs to be significantly altered to his or her advantage after retirement when he or she is no longer subject to regulation by the Commission. It might perhaps be more advisable here to have the specified person in public life report his or her financial affairs to the Commission after retirement for a period of five years or other sufficiently lengthy period or until death. Of course, what might give such a provision even more teeth is the enactment of civil forfeiture legislation, but that is purely a matter of legislative policy.

Where, in the opinion of the Governor General, further information is required from a member or staff of the Commission in respect of his or her declaration, the Governor General is mandated “after consultation with the Prime Minister and the Leader of the Opposition, to appoint a fit and proper person as a tribunal to require the declarant to furnish such further information or documents and to conduct any inquiry, where found necessary, to verify the declaration, document or other statement filed with the tribunal”.

As with the inquiry pertaining to the affairs of a specified person in public life, there is also a time bar in respect of such an inquiry; this time five years after the date on which the declarant ceases to be a specified person in public life –Clause 33 (3). The reason for the difference in limitation periods here is not immediately apparent.

The Commission declarant is also differently treated in respect of the results of the inquiry. If the appointed Tribunal finds that the disclosure is full, he or she shall publish a statement to that effect in the Official Gazette and in a daily newspaper with nationwide circulation in Barbados, and reimburse the declarant for all expenses reasonably incurred by him or her in connection with the inquiry.

The Bill employs the concept of naming and shaming for the failure to file a required declaration in Clause 34 and also provides for the sending of a report to that effect to the appropriate Service Commission, board or authority and to the Director of Public Prosecutions.

As is traditional, the contents of the individual declarations are to be treated as confidential and it is an offence punishable on summary conviction to a fine of $ 20 000 or to imprisonment for 3 years to contravene this proscription.

The severity of this penalty contrasts with that in Clause 36 (1)(d) for an offence that seems much more blameworthy. There any person who fails, without reasonable cause, to comply with a direction of the Commission given pursuant to section 28(2) within the time specified by the Commission, or knowingly gives any false or incomplete information in the trust deed filed with the Commission, is guilty of an offence and is liable, on summary conviction, to a fine of $15 000 or to imprisonment for one year or to both. [Added emphasis]

As one astute commenter on my columns has pointed out, this fine may be even less onerous comparatively than the much ridiculed fine of $2 500 was in 1929 under the Prevention of Corruption Act. It clearly needs to be more dissuasive.

To be continued…

354 responses to “The Jeff Cumberbatch Column – On Preventing Corruption 4”


  1. On Preventing Corruption 4 ! Its to late the corruption is already deep in this government and started with the same player in the government more than 30 years ago, Now all the crooks at top crooks, i don’t have to read your post just the heading for it may go into long talking , Sam Lords Castle, 4 SEASONS, HIGH COURT BUILDING,THE OVAL, UDC, NHC, HYATT,HILTON,LAND TAXES,VAT MOH, WATER,URD,NIS, ARCHIVES, LAND REGISTRY, Town &country,insurance company,Banking laundering, CLICO COP, DPP, AG , PM is just part of all crimes and the departments that cover it up, So save your blog wasting and DO something about , Use what law you to know and move on these Bitches , I have more proof that you can read, They say go CIVIL this is CRIMINAL, then we go CIVIL ,, A civil case will go on well after they are all dead and see no jail, Lawyer Man, BFP/CUP


  2. The same goddamn crooks and thieves for lawyers drafted this new integrity legislation…it is an insult to the population and they know it, but are hellbent on getting away with it….but next ekection is not far off.


  3. Very educational Jeff.

    now will the legislators listen?

    Can a vice and culturally systemic practice such as corruption be truly stamped out by law?

    Are their laws to circumvent the blind trusts and re-channelling of “proceeds”

    Doesn’t all of this further stop the “honest average” man from entering public life, leaving the “honourable above average man” who already used corruption to become “honourably above average” to so continue to do under different premises????

    More questions than answers, I know.

    Keep up the good work.

    Just Observing

  4. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    Dean Jeff in a Bajan context exactly how effective will the legislators make this Act which is expected to ensure the “beneficiary retains absolutely no control over the trust assets during its subsistence”!

    Will the investments of stocks for example be sold at the inception of the Blind Trustee’s control and equivalent stocks purchased?

    Surely before the official took on his public role he could see clearly and like any person deprived of vision those prior sights are etched perfectly well in memory. Thus if as a private citizen he had shares let’s say in an investment to rehabilitate Sams Lords Castle and in his public role he is directing discussions for a major sovereign fund investment in the property how blind can that be!

    Unless the trustee dissolved that particular investment unknown to him then he is benefiting significantly….are you sure that clause you highlighted was a drafting error or more loudly echoes the sense that not only is legislating morality a fool’s gold but that this is cynically establishing legal ways to earn the gold derived from public conflicts of interest or corruption.

    You spoke earlier of the non interest of certain citizens to divulge their finances and surely if this legislation is to be given real teeth then even more who have expansive portfolios will be disinclined to public life….certainly they would need to divest themselves of certain stocks at the time of elevation to public role or very bluntly ensure they remove themselves from any decisions that may relate to them…..I find it very difficult in a Bajan context to accept a true ‘Steve Wonder blindness’ of any such named trust.


  5.         @Dee Word
    

    What is wrong with politicians making money from honest investments?


  6. David

    September 23, 2018 9:36 AM

    @Dee Word
    What is wrong with politicians making money from honest investments?

    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Example, Donville!!

    Where do you think he can honestly invest the $36K he obtained from ICBL?

    Looks like not the USA!!


  7. To me it is kind of obvious we need to first enforce existing laws.

    Do we really need a new law to deal with Donville and ICBL and its executives?


  8. The US simply enforced its existing laws and poor old Donville, looking to invest his money honestly, got snared!!

    Barbados is really a lawless jurisdiction with a plethora of laws that are not enforced.


  9. Barbados is really a lawless jurisdiction with a plethora of laws that are not enforced.(Quote)

    If the rule of law has failed, does this mean that Barbados is a failed state?


  10. What is wrong with politicians making money from honest investments?(Quote)

    People think I am being harsh when I call this level of ignorance disgraceful. Just read the above again and think about it.


  11. If we are serious about corruption, prosecute Donville and his accomplices to the fullest extent of the existing laws.

    Use this case to se what we need to improve existing laws that will have the desired result.


  12. Unless the trustee dissolved that particular investment unknown to him then he is benefiting significantly….are you sure that clause you highlighted was a drafting error or more loudly echoes the sense that not only is legislating morality a fool’s gold but that this is cynically establishing legal ways to earn the gold derived from public conflicts of interest or corruption.

    @ DPD, I guess that this is where the law parts with the reality of venal man. In truth the law will pretend that the beneficiary person in public life no longer retains any interest whatsoever in the assets of the trust fund. As you have correctly pointed out though, the prospect of increasing the fund may be too tempting for some.

    To be consistent with trust law, the draft must be regarded as being in error. Your deduction is a fascinating one, however…

  13. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    David Mr Blogmaster re your 9:36 AM , there is no condemnation of any politician or public official earning money from their legal investments…and I certainly am not saying anything of the sort.

    But let’s follow on with the hypothetical Sam Lord’s example. What is a perfectly legal investment as a private citizen in such a rebuilding venture can automatically become illicit if that private citizen becomes appointed as Min of Economic Affairs or Dir of Finance or other senior govt position.

    If a sovereign wealth fund – again let’s hypothesize from China – becomes a potential key investor working with the Bdos govt on that project can you argue practically that said former private citizen would be really just earning money from their honest investments if ‘ownership’ was retained or his investment passed over to some strangely labelled blind trust!

    Let’s now step from hypothesis to reality: In the US the blind trust and financial regulatory process is supposedly well regulated yet there are stories like Commerce (Minister) Secretary Ross…. a billionaire private citizen who on appointment in his public govt role was apparently unable to properly divest his many holdings…

    Was it appropriate that for most of 2017 he still maintained investments in …
    **Chinese state-owned enterprises
    **A shipping company tied to Russian oligarchs
    **A Cypriot bank that’s involved in Robert Mueller’s investigation
    **An auto parts company with a direct stake in Commerce’s trade policy decisions

    And even now as he has formally transferred to trusts the assets have simply been passed off to one of his family trust…. thus are the conflicts of interests still not present if ownership is still his!

    In a Bajan context that woukd be even more difficult to handle….so I am not purporting any deliberate malfeasance to anyone just merely opining that this Bill implementation is not as simple as they may have us believe. The Dean has clearly highlighted that very, very well these last few weeks.

  14. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    @Dean Jeff….🤣….for a man of your understated but impactful nature I find the suggestion that my remark is “fascinating” exceedingly funny.

    Indeed, governments often fascinate us with their brazen acts…as the man could have said: fooling some of the people all the time and fooling all the people some of the time.

    Anyhow, this stuff over my pay grade.

    Thanks for helping me better understand the bill.

    I gone.


  15. @Dee Word

    The question is motivated by Guy Mayers’ contribution to the Joint Select Committee of the Integrity in Public life draft Bill.

    The focus of the Bill needs to be on identifying conflicts of interest should they arise.

    Barbados is a small country operating in a close investment market wrapped in incestuous realities :-).

    The T&T integrity commission should be a learning for Barbados with all of its challenges so far.


  16. September 23, 2018 9:36 AM

    @Dee Word

    What is wrong with politicians making money from honest investments?@@@

    Stop drinking the koolaid, None of them is Honest and its call inside trading, another crime,

    What wrong on Barbados that they are not to make deals for self but the deals must be made in the best interest for the people, the people have no money to invest in the crime the Ministers and lawyer investing. Its also Wrong they have the 15 Billion missing and the 21 years of VAT what more they need , Let the people get some so they need ..

    Go Take an Ethics Class and Rule of Law, , take the Bajan Lawyers with you! Dont forget to take Jeff


  17. Thank you Bajanfreeparty. The man is a fool.


  18. Hal Austin September 23, 2018 12:26 PM

    Thank you Bajanfreeparty. The man is a fool.

    HAL SOMETIMES IT IS NOT NICE TO CALL A MAN BY HIS NAME!


  19. Let me see if I have this right.

    As a “so-called begin point” I state that I have say 1500 bitcoin at the newly launched and Government backed Bittcoin company of Rawdone.

    This so called Integrity Commission is asked by the Governor General to investigate my claim and Rawdone confirms whatever amount of bitcoin I think of submitting to the Commission.

    Five years later or 3 or 2 or whatever time the statute of limitations runs out wunna investigating me again and I say I now have 20,000 bittcoin and upon contacting Rawdone he confirms this amount.

    So leh de ole man see effin I got this correct

    Wunna mean to tell me that Mia tell wunna dat every one of her Ministers has give her a sealed envelope right and up to now wunna nor not a next fellow knows what is in that envelope.

    But de ole man supposed to believe that this 1933 concoction going sort out all these matters by adding all these layers of deception to the mix?

    But what else can we expect from these sea cows goat’s milk?

    Deeper and deeper we go into this mess and where we stop nobody knows…

  20. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    @ The Honourable Blogmaster, your assistance please with an item item here thank you.

  21. millertheanunnaki Avatar

    @ John September 23, 2018 10:41 AM
    “If we are serious about corruption, prosecute Donville and his accomplices to the fullest extent of the existing laws.
    Use this case to se what we need to improve existing laws that will have the desired result.”
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Now who would you recommend to bell the cat?
    Who is prepared to make that first complaint to the CoP?

    Do you as a taxpayer have any standing in the matter or are you expecting the likes of Bush Tea and WARU to put their garrulous electronic mouths where their BU key strokes ‘lie’?

    But don’t expect any backing from Maripoka or T. Inniss in any undertaking for justice against Dumbville Inniss and his crooked colleagues.


  22. @Miller

    Let us wait for some details promised later this week to see what we can piece together.


  23. Who is investigating those offering and paying bribes or those ignoring Town planning law ?

    The rich motherfuh will get a free pass as usual.

    I learned the word motherfuh while watching a plenipotentiary video.


  24. Why later this week Honourable Blogmaster?


  25. @piece
    It is always good to see the leader of the ‘tin-foil’ brigade on duty.
    That phrase always gives me a laugh


  26. Just parroting what Senator Adams promised this morning.


  27. @ John September 23, 2018 10:41 AM
    “If we are serious about corruption, prosecute Donville and his accomplices to the fullest extent of the existing laws.
    Use this case to se what we need to improve existing laws that will have the desired result.”
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    Now who would you recommend to bell the cat?
    Who is prepared to make that first complaint to the CoP?

    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    How did the US authorities know to go after Donville?


  28. Who complained to them?

    A crime was committed and they investigated and prosecuted the perp.

    He may or may not get off but he is being prosecuted.

    If there is a murder who files the first complaint to the police so they can investigate and prosecute the murderer?


  29. China has a way of dealing with corruption especially by those in authority.I don’t suppose it can be done here.The place too small.Too much incest.The last place that tried it was Grenada and it was ugly.In the end the Coards got away.Too much damn incest.Too much indiscipline in this place.It manifests itself wherever and whenever a politician is given authority.Abuse by politicians is the bane of this little country that saw the likes of Grantley Adams,Errol Barrow and Bree make large footprints…The Unbribables….ask Evelyn Greaves if the heavy roller was bribable.Ask Evelyn Greaves what he knew of Kings Beach Hotel…


  30. You John the Quaker want banning!!!

    Imagine that you would seditiously suggest that a criminal, like pornville, either in Barbados or off island, should be investigated and even worse, prosecuted by the vigilant Royal Baygon sorry Barbados Police Force.

    What is wrong with you people though ?

    I would that your religious prosecution of these “things evil” could extend to all wrong doers including de Herbert feller.

    Speaking of whom, has the mastermind of the Drug Hall Prescott been able to secure bail as yet?

    Just goes to show you that the man who owns? the vessel got released and the crew hand that he employed WITH HIS DRUG ANTECEDENTS get lock up.


  31. @ pieceuhderockyeahright

    Why are those supposedly paying bribes not investigated ?

    If Donville is not the only DLP who is allegedly corrupt have all the others been given an “amnesty” for confessing their sins in private to the PM ?


  32. Let us examine why people run for office, or seek government jobs in the first place! If we have enforceable ethics, integrity, and nepotism rules/laws we eliminate an element that has seeped into the government far to long. Those same rules/laws should apply to in the private sector as well. Each one the politician, briber, or those accused of nepotism should suffer the same consequences. An independent public commission without remuneration should enforce those rules/laws with dire consequences for those accused, and found guilty. They the commission would also be subject to removable.


  33. Agree with a lot of your comment. Our system although a parody of the Westminster system to quote Senator Caswell- a tenet is wanting the serve in public office. That original position has transformed to doing an 8 to 5 job. From being selfless to selfish.


  34. @ racehrse
    Bushie has long suggested a National Supervisory Committee (and even proposed an IDEAL chairman) to manage the ethical, legal and moral affairs of the country. ANYTHING ELSE is guaranteed to end in tears in the place.
    Too many nasty, selfish, stupid, mendicant, yardfowls ….and lawyers bout de damn place…

    Biggest joke of all… is that we ALREADY have an EXCELLENT model that works … IN BARBADOS – and has done so for for at least fifty years now…. with the same brass bowls…

    The Credit Unions.

    Here, we have the VERY SAME set of brass bowls (in many cases the very same shiite politicians) who get involved – but note how long the crooks and idiots last in the Credit Union……and note the SUCCESS of the credit unions …versus the downgrades, disgrace and embarrassment of the unregulated shiitehounds in politics.
    WHY?
    The Committee has ABSOLUTE POWER to review EVERY SHIITE in the Credit Union …. AND TO TAKE EFFECTIVE ACTION TO ADDRESS ANY SEWAGE……and they generally do so quietly, early, and effectively.

    Instead we have a shiite ‘senate’ that is appointed by the VERY SAME crooks it is supposed to oversee, who just talks shiite after shiite …and which has made approximately ZERO difference since its formation….

    Who does the same shiite over and over and over …. and expects different results…?
    Block-headed, black, bombastic,bare-faced, Bajan, Brass Bowls ..that’s who.


  35. I am looking up the word serve.

    “…noun – plural To make a pass at something. Serve the ball or nake that serve.

    verb – to have sex with; “give it up”. Usually used for a girl having sex with a guy and not vice-versa.

    Or

    to lose something and become offended as in “You just got served sucka!

    In which of the above contexts do you use this word Honourable Blogmaster?

    Did these politicians make a pass a5 the electorate and then had “sex” with us and have now served us suckers?


  36. I would that your religious prosecution of these “things evil” could extend to all wrong doers including de Herbert feller.

    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Why would you suggest religious persecution of Herbert when he is already being criminally prosecuted by the RBPF?

    … why not extend the same courtesy to Donville on whom the goods are all collected by the US authorities.


  37. Did someone have to file a complaint against Herbert or are the RBPF acting on their own initiative?


  38. Haha @ BushTea

    “Who does the same shiite over and over and over …. and expects different results…?
    Block-headed, black, bombastic,bare-faced, Bajan, Brass Bowls ..that’s who.”
    +++++++++++++
    That’s a lot of B’s there boss.
    So it is now BBBBBBB. B to the 7th power, B^7!

  39. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @ Jeff,
    Charges of corruption have not yet been filed against Donville Inniss or the three former ICBL executives for the bribery that is alleged to have taken place. Under the the Prevention of Corruption Act of 1929 proceedings must be instituted within six months of discovery of the offence by the prosecutor. News of Donville Inniss’s arrest was published on Monday, August 6, 2018… therefore the DPP has until Wednesday February 5, 2019 to institute proceedings against these individuals.

    However, the impending Integrity in Public Life legislation will presumably supercede the Prevention of Corruption Act of 1929 act so that old act will be repealed upon passage of the new legislation. This will make it impossible to press any charges at all in this flagrant corruption case, because the accused cannot be charged under legislation that did not exist at the time of the offence, nor under legislation that has been repealed.

    If this case is not prosecuted in Barbados it will reinforce the perception that the political class, both BLP and DLP, consider themselves to be above the law.

  40. millertheanunnaki Avatar

    @ John September 24, 2018 8:32 AM

    John no one on BU is arguing against your suggestion that investigations ought to be undertaken to support any prosecution at the local end of the alleged bribery with the primary purpose of seizing local property as a first step towards ‘reinstating’ the financially raped Bajan taxpayers.

    What is being pointed out to you is what was said (by the authorities) as justification for not initiating such a process you are rightly asking for.

    You are pointing your index finger in the wrong direction.

    Why not point the other finger(s) at the Guv of the CB and ask what has become of the $5 million of Greenverbs’ lucre deposited in the vault under the careful watch of De liar electric micey Worthless?

    Did Greenverbs further launder it into the now worthless government paper or is it still there lying idle like the CLICO agricultural lands in St. John while forex is burnt to import chemically-preserved vegetables and other ‘ground’ foods?

  41. millertheanunnaki Avatar

    @ peterlawrencethompson September 24, 2018 9:13 AM

    Perspicacity par excellence!

    You have read the tea leaves and smell the dirty plan of the local escape for a rat who is still considered a senior member of the corrupt political class.

    The Don has a lot of secret-holding credits in some Queen-pin’s payback book.


  42. This will make it impossible to press any charges at all in this flagrant corruption case, because the accused cannot be charged under legislation that did not exist at the time of the offence, nor under legislation that has been repealed.
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    Perhaps this is why this legislation is being pushed now…

    Once the precedent of investigating this kinda shiite is set, there are MANY CRABS that will have to be looking for holes…
    Prevention may be the best medicine from a crab’s perspective….

    Wunna people STILL do not grasp the EXTENT of shiite being let loose in Barbados daily by these crabs …(and not only in Graeme Hall)
    We have not learned ANYTHING from the Speaker-of-the-House episode –
    Where Friends AND foes came together to squash that potential precedent…..
    THINK….. (or at least try to….)


  43. Ah BT

    You have figgered it out!!

    It isn’t because Bajans are cynical and font “put up or shut up” it’s just that the goal posts are being moved by people who are being paid to uphold law and order!!

    Our Quaker past makes us tolerant … but remember, Quakers are not pacifists … as some mistakenly believe!!


  44. As one astute commenter on my columns has pointed out, this fine may be even less onerous comparatively than the much ridiculed fine of $2 500 was in 1929 under the Prevention of Corruption Act. It clearly needs to be more dissuasive.

    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    How many people have actually been prosecuted under the 1929 act over the past century?

    Is it zero, one, two … a hundred?

    We have people on here who can translate $2,400.00 in 1929 to a number that reflects whatever, inflation, compound interest … what ever.

    What would be wrong with doing that exercise and simply amending the current act to reflect today’s reality?

    We wouldn’t need Dale Marshall and Caswell Franklin and a whole slew of “brains” exercising their “intellect” to come up with a brand new act.

    So, in today’s dollars, what is $2,400 worth?

    Answer as per internet …. compounded at 10% interest ….. $10,538,226.67

    …. and then there is inflation!!!

    Suppose we were just to amend $$ penalty in the 1929 act to $5 million?

    Would that be dissuasive?

    If it isn’t then we could add inflation and get a nice dissuasive number.

    We would need to engage a whole army of drafts men and women to come up with a draft which Jeff can point out so easily does not comprehend “blind trusts”.


  45. Is the1929 fine really as ridiculous as it appears?

    Well, no, all it is, is a 1929 fine.

    What is ridiculous is that there was no effort to keep it current!!


  46. … and who does that reflect badly upon?

    Why do we have so many lawyers in parliament.

    Why do we need 30 representatives?

    What have they been doing?


  47. “So, in today’s dollars, what is $2,400 worth?

    Answer as per internet …. compounded at 10% interest ….. $10,538,226.67

    …. and then there is inflation!!!

    Suppose we were just to amend $$ penalty in the 1929 act to $5 million?

    Would that be dissuasive?

    If it isn’t then we could add inflation and get a nice dissuasive number.”

    Works for ME.


  48. Some good news at last…

    “By: FOX4News.com Staff
    POSTED: SEP 24 2018 11:02AM CDT

    VIDEO POSTED: SEP 24 2018 12:11PM CDT

    UPDATED: SEP 24 2018 01:29PM CDT

    DALLAS – Dallas Police Chief Renee Hall officially fired Amber Guyger on Monday for the fatal shooting of a man in his own apartment.

    In a statement, the Dallas Police Department said Guyger was terminated during a hearing with the chief Monday morning. An internal affairs investigation found she “engaged in adverse conduct when she was arrested for manslaughter” and she was fired due to her “actions” the night of the fatal shooting.”

  49. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    Is wunna bright boys telling me that if I or de grandson or all of these heads of state entities like Hamilton and Timothy have been teifing and tekking wunna money when de year come dat when dis law change dat all my teifing get rub off de books??

    Does dat work for drug shipments and ammmm killings too??

  50. Talking Loud Saying Nothing Avatar
    Talking Loud Saying Nothing

    “Outrage at corruption, rights abuses tipped Maldives election

    Abdulla Yameen joins list of global leaders ousted in 2018 amid public anger over corruption and crackdowns on dissent.”

    https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2018/09/outrage-corruption-rights-abuses-tipped-maldives-election-180925194132476.html

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