The Barbados Today Editorial of September 26, 2019 reproduced here by request.

Several of these so-called traditional media outlets scrape stories from various social media sites without giving credit, for this reason the blogmaster reluctantly post this editorial.

For years Barbados Underground has been highlighting the ‘malbehaviour’ of lawyers and the dysfunctional justice system – see BU Lawyers in the News Section at the top of the page. In fact when we started the probing of the justice system many condemned this blogmaster as being unpatriotic. Our persistent criticism was interpreted as being negative. This blogmaster has lived to hear Chief Justice Marson Gibson and the Caribbean Court of Appear echo the same views.

Where is the moribund Barbados Bar Association (BBA)?

The name Stephen Archer might mean very little to those outside the circle of any close friends and family members he might have had. But his is a case that cries out for justice. This is yet another situation of an average Barbadian citizen being adversely affected by the type of dubious conduct that can accompany the vulnerable even to the grave.

Tomorrow morning Archer will be laid to rest in the churchyard of St Stephen’s Anglican Church just five months after publicly highlighting the tragic circumstances that befell him. He also drew attention to the representation – or lack thereof – of a well-known Barbadian attorney-at-law. Fifteen days after Archer celebrated his 30th birthday in 1997, a telephone pole fell on him occasioning him significant bodily injury.

Archer was taken to the United States to undergo treatment and physical therapy. While living in Miami, Florida, and now a paraplegic, he became homeless. His leg became infected as a result of his living circumstances and it was later amputated. He subsequently returned to Barbados and an initial hospital visit eventually turned into a four and a half-year residency at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital. After leaving the hospital the bed-ridden Archer became a resident at Cyralene Senior Citizens Nursing Home at Accommodation Road, Spooners Hill, St Michael.

The utility company fulfilled its legal obligations to Archer and according to him paid a seven-figure compensation settlement to his attorney-at-law on his behalf. However, Archer revealed to Barbados TODAY in April that he was never given a cheque with his money nor was it ever deposited on his personal account. Despite the small fortune that his unfortunate accident had brought to him, Archer explained then that he still owed the nursing home $20 000 for eight months stay at the facility. He said the lawyer was handling his finances but had not paid any money to the home. “When I came here (nursing home), the idea was to save money to help my sister and fix the house in Cave Hill, but it backfired when the lawyer reduced how much I am getting so I ended up staying here a lot longer than I expected,” Archer revealed then.

Archer’s unfortunate situation was exacerbated as a result of his sister – who had been his main helper – dying in February from cancer. His mother who had initially been his principal caregiver had died from a stroke in 2009 while they were still in the United States. His was a life with little family support. He explained the mental and physical difficulty of being reduced from an independent, active, outgoing individual to one living in solitude and confinement in a bed with the occasional allowance out of his money coming from the lawyer.

With hundreds of thousands of his dollars sitting in the bank account of his lawyer, Archer was later reduced to starting a Help Stephen Archer Facebook page and the launch of a “gofundme” account. During his stay in the nursing home his three-bedroom, one bathroom family house at Well Gap, Cave Hill, St Michael was rendered an empty shell by burglars. Despite facing such immense personal hardship, a still optimistic Archer stated in April: “I am not worried, this is Barbados. In the States, I was homeless, in a wheelchair with maggots on me, but here in Barbados a lot of people know me so hopefully, it is not going to come to that. I have nothing to lose. When you are down the only direction to go is up. So I am waiting.”

Archer’s wait is now over. His direction did not take the upward curve he desired. But there are many questions left unanswered. And who will seek to have them answered? Archer had no children. Chief among those questions: Where is his money? Does his attorney-at-law still have the substantial amount on his own personal bank account? If he does, will he make any attempt to pass it on to existing family members, irrespective of how close or far removed they might be? Why did he not hand over all of Archer’s money when he received it or have it placed on his client’s personal account? Why were payments not made to Cyralene’s Senior Citizens Nursing Home in a proper manner? Does the Barbados Bar Association have any authority – or inclination – to launch an investigation into this matter? Is there any other agency willing to pursue this case? Will this be simply another case of a Barbadian lawyer benefiting from the funds of a client?

Perhaps it is time that in matters such as these, plaintiffs have greater oversight on the actual transaction between the defendant and legal counsel where compensation is due to be paid. Why are cheques written in the name of lawyers and not the clients they represent? Developments in Barbados’ courts over the years would suggest that not writing the plaintiffs’ cheques in the names of their lawyers might be protecting many from themselves.

Of course, none of this is going to help Stephen Archer now. But perhaps some of the mourners who pay their last respects to him tomorrow will ensure they are guarded against such anguish if similar tragedy should ever befall them.

 

184 responses to “Open Letter to ALL Rh Lawyers on behalf of Stephen Archer”


  1. @ Wily

    We must keep it within the law.

  2. Sunshine Sunny Shine Avatar
    Sunshine Sunny Shine

    Kudos to you Mr Blogmaster. The RH word is not normally one of the bad words the SSS likes to use, but I consent to the sweet sound it makes in this headline towards the most despicable legal-system-set up anywhere to be found. And, what better way to describe the legal fraternity in Barbados as just a mere set up. There is no way in the world that after the countless complaints leading to the conclusion that justice in Barbados is hell-bent on fleecing the ill-informed and those most susceptible and vulnerable to its devices, that set up aptly fits it as a suitable description, if not as an appropriate nickname. But, Mr Blogmaster, I would hope that you are not just going to leave it at the RH because I think some C..Hole name and shame should be the order of the day. The decease and those in Barbados who recognise the legal fraternity for what it is, deserves to know the facts surrounding what happened to this poor man’s money, and who was the lawyer orchestrating the circumstances. The lawyer at the heart of this debacle should not in anyway be protected by the system but pressured to disclosed the circumstances surrounding the payment made to this man that ended up in the coffers of the lawyer, while the decease lays in a coffin. I would hope that you run with this story until it reaches a conclusion. This is downright disgusting and the time to say enough is enough is CH now.


  3. I have never had issues with the lawyers I have dealt with before. As with all professions, there are some bad apples. This blog gitbthe Salemite et al braying. 🤣🤣Vonda gone through and Cherain Parris up next.


  4. Ok Counsel Rests.


  5. Hants, they were there to oversee and make sure that things were done above board. Even the accountant was sent down from here. His personal assistant’s husband is a Bajan and the mother in law is a friend. For transactions such as these and others in countries where the law is based on British Common Law, no problems exist with getting permission to approach the bar. When i worked in the Courts, a group of Canadian lawyers were in the Registry on a regular basis probating a will.


  6. I do not know the man and cannot remember hearing of him before this post, but the story still leaves me with a very heavy heart.

    How can a ‘law society’ allow some of its members to prey on the weak? Almost seven lawyers per square mile and yet injustice walks unchecked throughout the land. And like a block sewage system that must find relief somewhere along the line, it spits out Vonda and Cheraine.

    Smoke and mirrors; an attempt to misdirect the public and fool us into believing that we have located and removed the block. Sacrificial lambs to lull us to sleep.

    I did not know the man, but I am as sad as if he was a family member.

    Must we make a mockery of lady justice? We are perhaps the only place in the world that boast of our education and claim that we are punching above our weight, but in the end we act like a barbaric society.

    This nonsense will not stop unless three or four Bajans are willing to “make a jail”.

    .


  7. “Smoke and mirrors; an attempt to misdirect the public and fool us into believing that we have located and removed the block. Sacrificial lambs to lull us to sleep.”

    The leaders of the pack of criminals who prey on the injured, weak, elderly, young and vulnerable and even those not yet born…are in the parliament, that is their viper’s nest where they misuse and abuse their small island power and those human rights abuses are directed squarely at their own people, as if that is what they are elected to do,…..make no mistake..

    ……there is a case with one current minister openly helping Massy rob his njured client..before long you will hear it blasted across social media….these are an extremely nasty bunch and they deserve to be showed NO MERCY…and they will get NONE.

    No need to make a jail…but one or 2 of these savage animals posing as lawyers and leaders need a damn wake up call…an example made of them like never before….things cannot continue like this.


  8. Source
    Naked Departure

    BARBADOS (Naked Departure) ERNEST WINSTON JACKMAN – DISHONEST ATTORNEY – Naked, you remember a few weeks back the story in the nation about land theft at Six Men’s. The owner claims that the gov’t is trying to steal her land. She also said that they had to fire their lawyer because he went behind their back, formed a company and tried to negotiate a deal with the gov’t. That’s him.
    The other shady case is the one involving a guy who got a multimillion $ settlement some 20 years ago from Cow Williams because a light pole fell in him making him a paraplegic. That guy was in hospital in terrible shape and could not be moved because there was no money to put him in a home. The lawyer was controling the money. The doctors recommended that the next of kin report him to the Barbados Bar Association. That story was also in the press. This is the same lawyer.
    Naked, his family owns a plantation where they used to produce milk, there’re rumours that that plantation is a thief thing too.


  9. @Hal

    “We must keep it within the law.”

    You FORGET this Magabe government invited these Gang/Drug individuals to the swearing in ceremonies, therefore they are VIEWED as LAWFUL, just stating the facts.

    If you lie down with dogs your going to get fleas. If local politicians associate with criminals then their endorsing in law activities.


  10. Problem#1

    Barbadians have short memories
    Reason why these maggots breed among themselves and increase their numbers
    This story is not new going as far back as 20 years
    The fact that this story was left unattended by media outlets also exposes the corrpution that lies within the bowels of the barbados media


  11. It does not matter now…as long as they all know that we are coming after their evil, greedy asses, the corrupt, dying Cow and the rest of the greedy Williams family, all the stinking thiefing fellow criminal minorities belonging to the Williams family, all their house negro lawyers, all the evil government ministers who are OWNED and CONTROLLED…by the Williams thieves …none will be left out.

    …..let’s see what they can do with all that delusional small island power THEY THINK THEY HAVE…

    it’s on.


  12. TheoGaz
    Stupse! Lock up none, complain. Lock of one, complain. If more lock up, complain. Y’all just out for certain names to boost personal agendas. How many lawyers are on the roll and what percentage ‘tief’ people land or money? Come let’s build a case. Ernest Jackman has appeared before the courts as the defendant how many times now? Would never hire him to sign a passport form far less a matter involving money.


  13. @enuff

    It is not a binary issue to solve. Lawyers populate in every corner how er do business on the island. We have to Rh fix it.


  14. “Would never hire him to sign a passport form far less a matter involving money.”

    So why do yall and the covetous Willams family hire him to do all your DIRTY WORK…..behind the scenes…does he still work out of the same building as Commissiong on Crumpton Street.


  15. Cat got ya tongue????


  16. How can a lawyer with such an alleged reputation operate from Commissong’s chambers?


  17. We must complain until a poor uneducated barefoot Barbadian can walk into our courts and walk out with same justice as the rich and powerful. We must complain until every man/woman who has suffered and was award ‘damages’ recieve those awards.

    To throw a bone or two into a hungry and abused crowd will not diminish the quest and clamor for justice. This is not about one or two or even three lawyers sacrificial lands, but it is about holding every lawyer to a standard that is higher than abusing their clients. This is about lawyers stopping lawyers from accumulating wealth at the expense of their clients

    Are the magistrates and judges who awards sums of money are a part of this ring of thieves?

    I am quite certain that these magistrate and judges hear and are aware of the theft of client monies and but yet they allow these same lawyers to come to the court (again) and have a repeat performance of their past behavior, How can you give these lawyers a third and fourth bit of the apple without commenting on the previous bites? One must wonder if these magistrates and judges are not a part of the robbery. Are they receiving kickbacks?

    These magistrate and judges must know that “Not only must Justice be done; it must also be seen to be done.”

    My friends, I am telling you that if you are successful in litigation and at the end of it, the awards were not distributed to you, then justice was not done. It is a mockery of justice, a charade, a farce, a nickel and dime show for the audience.

    Don’t just blame the lawyer, blame the silent co-conspirators – magistrate and judges.


  18. Damn typos….
    awarded, lambs, etc,


  19. Yes, let us expand the circle of responsibility.
    Let us put our judges, magistrates and lawyers under the microscope.
    When complaining of theft theft of your money also mention the judge/magistrate who handle the case.
    If we read a few stories and compile a little chart in our minds like this one
    Judge/ Award
    Magistrate Lawyer Distributed
    Absalom Dennis no
    Absalom Dennis no
    Absalom Dennis no
    TheOGazerts Dennis yes

    Then you would know that Absalom and Dennis is not a good combination and to seek a change of venue (if possible)


  20. A blessed and wonderful morning to all of Barbados.


  21. @ Commander Theophillus Gazerts

    Your post of incontrovertible reason brings this matter into the headlights of the Bajan “bus”

    You said and I quote

    “To throw a bone or two into a hungry and abused crowd will not diminish the quest and clamor for justice. This is not about one or two or even three lawyers sacrificial lands, but it is about holding every lawyer to a standard that is higher than abusing their clients.

    This is about lawyers stopping lawyers from accumulating wealth at the expense of their clients…”

    The ONLY WAY THAT SUCH A CLEANUP CAN BE ACCOMPLISHED IS BY “Compiling a Chart”

    You said and I quote

    “…If we read a few stories and compile a little chart in our minds like this one
    Judge/ Award
    Magistrate Lawyer Distributed
    Absalom Dennis no
    Absalom Dennis no
    Absalom Dennis no
    TheOGazerts Dennis yes…”

    Do you remember this post?

    https://barbadosunderground.net/2019/04/15/file-complaints-against-lawyers-here/

    So, Commander, in light of the existence of such, do you not think that all the furore and the posting of this article BY THE BU BORG, IS JUST LIP SERVICE?

    The thing about this ongoing travesty IS THAT IT IS HAPPENING EVERY BADWORD DAY IN BARBADOS Commander

    But the majority of the cases are stifled!

    De ole man rejoiced when Vonda Pile got locked up BECAUSE SHE SELF, WHEN APPROACHED TO DEAL WITH A SIMILAR MATTER, not only refused to take the matter, but shared the details with the offending matter with the offender.

    May she rot in Dodds!

    Willy C suggests that it is time for a more “interractive” citizen reaction!

    And, given the endemic state of this crime of teifing client monies, one can see the wisdom in that advice.

    If 4 lawyers were to be subjected to this interactive sensitisation THAT RH WICKEDNESS BY THE LEGAL FRATERNITY would end overnight!


  22. @ the Honourable Blogmaster (on duty)

    Your assistance please with an item here thank you


  23. Read how these maggots protect their own and society forgives them by rewarding them with jobs in officialdom

    Press
    Crooked Barbados Lawyers: Only One Arrested, Many Others Allowed To Walk Free… Why?
    BFP
    11 years ago
    Barbadians have short memories

    Why Was This Crooked Barbados Lawyer Charged? What Makes Ernest Jackman So Special?
    Why Was This Crooked Barbados Lawyer Charged? What Makes Ernest Jackman So Special?

    Folks were recently surprised to read in the Nation News that a crooked Barbados lawyer had actually been criminally charged with stealing from clients. Usually the Barbados Bar Association does everything it can to “handle” such situations internally. By processing complaints of theft through the so-called disciplinary committee, the lawyers make sure that their own kind don’t get hurt too badly.

    As with politicians, Barbados lawyers have something like a gentleman’s agreement between themselves that it is best for the profession if misdeeds are covered up. So the Barbados Bar Association talks alot about integrity and accountability – but they don’t really want to see any of their good ‘ol boys network behind bars.

    Like politicians, lawyers also know that it is dangerous to put others in jail who may have as much on you and you do on them!

    So we were all surprised to see Attorney-at-Law Ernest Winston Jackman charged criminally with stealing a million dollars from a couple of clients. Especially after crooked lawyers like Mortimer Clarke, Ezra Alleyne and so many others were allowed to get away with the same behaviour.

    Barbados Legal Profession In Damage Control Mode – But They Just Don’t Get It!

    A few days ago, Wilfred Abrahams, president of the Barbados Bar Association, was lamenting in the Nation News that there are a few “bad apples” in every profession and that the public had it all wrong in their perception of lawyers. He then went on to speak about the disbarment of Barbados attorney Mortimer Clarke who had failed to repay money that he stole from a client – saying…

    The Bar Association president further stressed that Clarke was afforded every opportunity by the Court of Appeal to repay the money he had misappropriated.

    “The court took a position with Mr Clarke that it was there to uphold the law; that it is there to protect clients and it is there to protect the reputation of attorneys generally,”…

    “And in Mr Clarke’s particular case, the court gave him a chance. It did suspend him but it gave him a chance to pay the funds back and he didn’t. What the court is showing now, is that it is not prepared to tolerate the nonsense anymore; the court is going to hold the attorneys to a high standard and I see nothing wrong with that,” (Barbados Bar Association president Wilfred Abrahams in the Nation News link here)

    High Standard? What a Lie! What a Joke!

    Mr. Abrahams’ statement illustrates perfectly why citizens and foreigners alike do not trust the Barbados legal profession. Every honest lawyer in Barbados should read the entire interview and cringe at the damage that Abrahams did to the legal profession.

    Wilfred Abrahams, president of the Barbados Bar Association, is so divorced from reality that he is nothing but a liability to honest Bajan lawyers.
    You see, Mortimer Clarke was NOT held to a high standard. That Mr. Abrahams thinks that justice has been done is a disgrace.

    Let’s review the facts of the case, shall we?

    In 1999, TEN YEARS AGO, Barbados lawyer Mortimer Clarke stole $150,000 in funds from a real estate transaction where he collected the money but didn’t pass it on to his client. The client complained but the police were not called in by the Barbados Bar Association – and it took almost a decade of begging, heartache and stress by the victim to get Clarke to pay back most of the stolen money in bits here and there.

    So what did the Disciplinary Committee of the Barbados Bar Association think was an appropriate penalty for Mortimer Clarke for stealing $150,000 of a client’s money?

    Disbarment? Jail?

    Nope… a “reprimand” was the penalty assessed. That’s all, folks


  24. Enuff

    You only seeking to out a fire before it threatens your BLP political house.

    This writer will wager that all lawyers in bulbadhus, including your Mia Amour Mugabe, have committed, and will continue to committ, money and other crimes against Barbadians routinely.

    The only difference is that a few like Jackman are caught, that’s all. All are criminals especially the lawyer-politicians


  25. How can a lawyer with such a reputation, deserved or not, operate from Commissong’s chambers?


  26. @ Pachamama the Sojourner

    Do you see this JOTFILE Lawyer Denouement platform dat de ole man is recommending?

    And you see the Electronic Platform dat de ole man been pushing for months now?

    Everything takes time and I take heart in His Word which says

    “… So shall My word be that goes forth from My mouth; It shall not return to Me void, But it shall accomplish what I please, And it shall prosper in the thing for which I sent it…”

    These wicked lawyers will continue their wicked actions and “DIPPINGS into client funds” for just a little longer BUT THEN WILL COME A RECKONING…


  27. @ Mr Hal Austin

    Hal, what makes you feel that Come Sing a Song is so much better?

    What make you feel that he, when he looks at his DNA and his cousin, IS ANY BETTER Hal?

    “The apple cannot fall far from a tree UNLESS IT IS UP A HILL!”


  28. @Visionary.
    I think we need to focus on more than the 1100 hundred heads (lawyers) of the hydra. One head was chopped off but at least a dozen heads graduated from UWI this year and dozens more will graduate in the coming years. Chopping off one, two, three or four heads only wounds the beast.

    If a female wanted a counterfeit Gucci, she would try to obtain one that is almost an exact replica of a real Gucci handbag. So too must our counterfeit legal officer be protective of their good names as they must perpetuate the sham system.
    Let’s get bold and question that good names of all who dispense justice,

    In addition to the lawyers, we need to place the spotlight on those who dispense “junk justice”; on those who will award damages knowing the client will not see a penny of the money. We need to place the spotlight on judges/magistrates as they will be more sensitive to attacks on their character.

    We cannot continue to give them a free pass as they may be silent partners in this counterfeit system.


  29. Let’s review the facts of the case, shall we?

    In 1999, TEN YEARS AGO, Barbados lawyer Mortimer Clarke stole $150,000 in funds from a real estate transaction where he collected the money but didn’t pass it on to his client. The client complained but the police were not called in by the Barbados Bar Association – and it took almost a decade of begging, heartache and stress by the victim to get Clarke to pay back most of the stolen money in bits here and there.

    So what did the Disciplinary Committee of the Barbados Bar Association think was an appropriate penalty for Mortimer Clarke for stealing $150,000 of a client’s money?

    Disbarment? Jail?

    Nope… a “reprimand” was the penalty assessed. That’s all, folks
    vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv

    THIS TELLS YOU ALL YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT THE BARBADOS BAR ASSOCIATION.

    IT IS A MAFIA AND ALL INVOLVED OVER THE YEARS THE SCUM OF BARBADOS.

    SEARCHING FOR A HONEST LAWYER IN BARBADOS UNFORTUNATELY IS LIKE LOOKING FOR A NEEDLE IN A HAYSTACK.


  30. Lowlife lawyers and governemnt ministers in Barbados should ask Mia to read a copy of what Harris signed and distribute copies to those who rob disabled people of compensation, properites and bank accounts IN BARBADOS..

    “The Federation of St. Kitts and Nevis on Friday signed and acceded to the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities at the United Nations Headquarters in New York.

    Prime Minister Dr. Timothy Harris signed the Convention at 3:30pm on Friday, following his presentation at the UN General Assembly, where he said, “In moving forward, we must help the vulnerable members of our societies…” The Prime Minister of St. Kitts and Nevis added: “That was the vision of the United Nations that invited all nations small and large to become involved.”


  31. “Enuff

    You only seeking to out a fire before it threatens your BLP political house.”

    House burnt right down to the ground already…no one has time to play anymore games with these thieves and criminals, let them bring it on.


  32. The “Saturday Nation” has an article about Archer’s funeral. No where in the article is mention made of the sleaze-bag lawyer . This same paper years ago reported on the dastardly actions of the lawyer concerning Archer’s money. It is not really strange when one thinks about it (non-reporting of news). The local media seem to be in cahoots with perpetrators of wrong doings all the time.


  33. The local media in Barbados is pure undiluted shit, they never even reported that Caricom had decriminalized marijuana, they colluded with the wicked government in that cover up also…..so that the majority population would never know.

    the name of that KNOWN thief for a lawyer should have been in the very first article when the insurance company said they paid the man’s compensation over to him years before….instead, everyone just went mute and waited for that man to die….they should all pay for that crime..

    as i call them all the time governmentPIMPnewspapers…not fit for purpose..


  34. @ Robert Lucas

    Not necessarily. Years ago I did a weekly column for the Nation and one column, I think it was my last, the in-house lawyer queried it about libel. S/he was of course talking nonsense. The FT has about seven staff lawyers that do nothing but media law.
    Someone told me an Ezra Alleyne was the Nation’s libel lawyer, but the Ezra I remember taught law at Westminster College in the late 1960s and was very bright. Is it the same person?. The problem may be the quality of the reporting.

  35. fortyacresandamule Avatar
    fortyacresandamule

    These lawyers need a final solution moment. They should suffer the same fate like what Gerry Rawlings of Ghana did to the corrupters when he came into office. Nothingless than a firing squad approach would suffice. I am not a violent person, however, but it is injustice like this that needs a radical solution. Fcuk ( pardon the vulgarity) all that BS about rule of law and due process.

    The law is an ass most of the time. Catchy phrases like (due process or rule of law ) is the what they uttered to hide behind a corrupt system.


  36. Every time a lawyer is accused or arrested for stealing from a client, the discussion on the blogs last a week and then we wait till the next time it happens.

    Given that the Prime Minister is a lawyer can we get someone to ask her to come up with a way to stop the abuse of some clients by some lawyers in Barbados.

    She can use her considerable power and influence to solve the problem.

    Her legacy could include protecting clients from abuse by some lawyers.


  37. Great points, Mr Hants.

    I think we need to also focus on other officers of the law.

    It is quite possible that solutions already exist to remedy this problem. We just need to find where the ‘on’ button is.


  38. De ole man wonders how many of you believe in “Divine Confirmation”?

    Webster’s describes “divine” as “inspired by a Supreme Being or Deity,” and the noun “confirmation” as “a corroborative statement or piece of evidence.”

    So the concept being something Divinely Inspired.

    Atheists have no such inspiration and mostly believe in random things.

    De ole man however has been impacted by the first and will rarely defer to the second.

    By here is a bit of randomness for us to consider as we dialogue about people taking justice into their own hands.

    In this case it’s ironic that the party who had appointed himself as an assassin, a Mr. Janot, was a prosecutor and his intended victim a judge.

    “…Mr Janot – in an interview published by the O Estado de Sao Paulo newspaper – said that in May 2017 he entered the federal Supreme Court building in Brasilia to kill a judge who had allegedly smeared his daughter with an untrue allegation.

    “It wasn’t going to be a threat, it was going to be an assassination.

    I was going to kill him and afterwards kill myself,” said Mr Janot…”

    The full article can be found here

    https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-49865779

    For de ole man, this article is a wake up call to announce that, it’s just a matter of time before citizen justice IS GOING TO REACH OUT AND TOUCH a few of these lawyers.

    THEN they going try to rectify the problems BUT IT GOING BE TOO LATE

  39. fortyacresandamule Avatar
    fortyacresandamule

    Criminality and corruption thrive very well in so-called democratic third world countries. The western jurisprudence concepts of: innocent until proven guilty, rule of law, and due process are regularly abused and frustrated through the same justice system by the corrupt and the criminals in high places.The problem is even furthered magnify when you live on a 2×4 rock where fraternal connections and incestous dealings are common place. Therefore the reason why Dodds is 100% filled with the poor, weak, black and powerless among the population.


  40. @fortyacresandamule

    A good comment. Implementing a well functioning Integrity Commission for the reason you stated illustrates it.


  41. What does this mean Honourable Blogmaster?

    “…A good comment.

    Implementing a well functioning Integrity Commission for the reason you stated illustrates it…”

    Help me here!

    Illustrates what?

    What has been, is, or will be implemented?

    You genuinely confuse me Honourable Blogmaster

    Here is one of your comments in 2008 copied from your archives.

    “…David September 20, 2008 11:22 PM

    @Anonymous

    You are entitled to think we are a rag. It says alot about you that you are logged on to BU 24/7. We are prepared to rock the boat on this one like we did Roy Morris and Dale Miller. If we were to publish all the dirt we have based on our sources you would have to describe us as lower than a rag but it would expose a very dark side of Barbados. It makes us sick to know some of what we know. We should live and let live, right?

    To those of you threatening BU because we are rocking the boat a little we are prepared to deal with what comes. We know that when we look behind-us we will see no one, but when the dust is settled our conscience will be clear.

    The problem as we see it as that each Barbadian is responsibly for building Barbados but we have become very good at ignoring the ills that are affecting little Barbados.

    When will we do something? When it goes past the point of no return? It is fine to cuss politicians and talk about corruption but when we turn the spotlight on others the hypocrites get offended?

    So what will we do when somebody dies? Yes we know the answer, say sorry!…”

    Observe your quality of narrative!

    Flow of thoughts and words, you understand how a reader like me who has seen you at your best, prosecuting these same matters feels like when I see this shadow?

    People back then used to joust mightily with your intellect and resilience.

    Now we got to tread carefully that we dont say anything bad about your golden boys and superlative leader!

  42. SirSimpleSimonPresidentForLife Avatar
    SirSimpleSimonPresidentForLife

    @Hal AustinSeptember 28, 2019 4:05 PM “Someone told me an Ezra Alleyne was the Nation’s libel lawyer, but the Ezra I remember taught law at Westminster College in the late 1960s and was very bright. Is it the same person?. The problem may be the quality of the reporting.”

    None of us are the same as we were in the late 1960’s

  43. SirSimpleSimonPresidentForLife Avatar
    SirSimpleSimonPresidentForLife

    @DavidSeptember 28, 2019 8:33 PM “A good comment. Implementing a well functioning Integrity Commission.”

    We don’t need an Integrity Commission.

    We need integrity. (full stop)

    integrity in our private lives.

    And integrity in our public lives.

    We can write as many laws as we want, we can set up as many legal commissions as we want.

    If integrity is not learned in childhood, in the home, in the school, and in the church, then we are lost.

    I am wondering who would write the rules, and staff this integrity Commission, the same lawyers whom we now say lack integrity.

    Would that not be like putting the wolves to watch the sheep?


  44. There is a reason we have to regulate and enforce. The ideal is not always possible when human beings are involved.

    Carry on.

  45. SirSimpleSimonPresidentForLife Avatar
    SirSimpleSimonPresidentForLife

    I am probably the only one on this blog who met Stephen long before his accident, and also after his accident, but before he received his settlement, because he told me then that the company subsequently found liable was disputing the quantum of the settlement. Then he kinda disappeared on me. It is only now after his death that I heard about the settlement, and that he seemed to have spent a considerable amount of time in rehabilitation in the United States. Since it appears that he was not a United States citizen, and perhaps not a green card holder either, I am wondering how much of his settlement was paid to the rehabilitation center(s) in the United States. The United States has a well deserved reputation for cutting edge medical services, and an equally well deserved reputation for horrendously expensive medical care.

    One of our questions should be “how much does it cost a foreigner to pay for prolonged medical care in the United States?” Before the Affordable Care Act (Obama Care) were not medical expenses the leading cause of personal bankruptcies in the Unite States? The United tates has nothing like Britain’s National Health Service, noting like the publicly funded health care systems in the Canadian provinces, and even if it did, those systems, the NHS and the Cabnadian health care systems are not “freely” open to foreigners.

    More than three decades ago one of my Bajan relatives was briefly (6 days) hospitalized in one of the best hospitals in the great white north. Cutting edge, one-of-a-kind surgeries is one of their specialties The room fee back then was $1,000 great white north dollars per day, in addition there would have been the fee for the surgical team which successfully performed the highly complex, highly individualized surgery. Fortunately a colleague of mine who was married to an eminent physician persuaded her husband to call in some favours from some of the many doctors whom he had taught at medical school, so the doctors waived their fees…otherwise my relative would surely have died.

    I don’t know the lawyer whose name has been mentioned. No lawyers nor politicians in my family either.


  46. @ Commander Theophillus Gazerts

    I had mentioned 3 points earlier and since my first point was so long I said that I would come back to the other 2 points.

    You asked about the “on switch” that was going to serve all 1100 lawyers some of who are CROOKS.

    To answer you de ole man going go to Forbes for my response cause I is a black man so what I say dont get the genuflection that a white man gets.

    “…The 411: How Online Reputation Management Works

    Since the first big site, Reputation.com, launched in 2006, the business of online reputation management has grown exponentially.

    Reputation.com, which offers a “Reputation Defender” product that starts at $250 per month, now has 1.6 million customers in over 100 countries alone…”

    I dont think you might remember when do ole man invited the Honourable Blogmaster to create an Online Ombudsman!

    But the concept is very simply.

    If your friend is sick and you suspect cancer, are you going send them to a quack doctor or the best you know?

    And is that person the best there is?

    And how will your friend know?

    You feeling me?

    I proposed that the JOTFILE CONCEPT I FLOATED WOTH THE HONOURABLE BLOGMASTER was to provide such reputation ratings for lawyers!

    If I is a lawyer and I teif you money den, when de next body check up pun my ass, den gone see my teif history!

    SHAME AND BLAME VIRTUALLY!!

    It is not rocket science but we can expect that in Barbados it will tek 50byears more to implement


  47. @ the Honourable Blogmaster your assistance please with an item here for all thank you

    ( I was wondering how long before my post were stopped heheheheh


  48. @ David September 28, 2019 10:42 PM

    We shall test your hypothesis when we see which piece of legislation is sent ‘first’ to the GG for promulgation and implementation with its own Authority or czar in place.

    Would it be the revised version of the long dead Tom Adams administration now called the powdered-up incarnation of a toothless tiger promised by the current peddler of BLP false promises and disappointment?

    Or would it be the Medicinal Marijuana Bill whose Cinderella-like money-making opportunities for a few greedy bastards are being sold to the unsuspecting public as way beyond the herbal healing imagination of the local Rasta community?


  49. @Miller

    It is easy to be destructively critical. Until men and women of integrity from the pool of citizens stand up to serve read public service, it will be a case of musical chairs.


  50. Simple Simon,

    A good attorney would have ensured that his settlement covered his full medical expenses, future care and assistance, pain and suffering, loss of amenities and loss of earnings until retirement age. Medical bills in a case as undisputed as his would have been paid before final settlement was reached. And so there should have been plenty left after his medical expenses considering the serious nature of his injuries.

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