Millar told the court that in August 2015, she attended a meeting with former chief executive officer (CEO) of ICBL Ingrid Innes and former senior vice-president with responsibility for business development and marketing Alex Tasker.
Following that meeting, she said Innes instructed her to make “an urgent payment” of a referral bonus to Inniss.
She said she was uncomfortable with the request made by Innes as he was “politically exposed” and she enquired if she Innes had cleared such a transaction with the company’s chairman John Wight, to which Innes responded, “It’s fine”.
Donville Inniss GUILTY as Charged

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724 responses to “Donville Inniss GUILTY as Charged”
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@Hal
given the archaic nature of Bim’s laws i would be surprised if there are such animals as malfeasance in public office or abuse of public office in Bim. the Prevention of Corruption Act 1929 is the closest you will get as far as i can gather
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@ Greene
But we are world class, we punch above our weight.
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Mariposa you got to be joking .Why would i be nervous? I am not related to any of them b or d therefore i am fine with any outcome unlike you who are sad because of Mr Inniss conviction.As for Skinner on what basis was Mr Inniss a rising star probably in your head certainly not on performance in my view maybe in talk.
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@ David,
that is a v interesting comment. uuumm
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@ Hal Austin January 18, 2020 1:34 PM
Dear Hal,
My answer is not quite politically correct, but it gets to the point. Always remember that Barbados is still a big plantation!
“They did not because they have no confidence in the Barbados authorities.” The Americans know full well that the blue partisans have settled like parasites in the Barbadian judicial system, who in case of doubt do everything to prevent prosecution.
“Will Donville be formally charged in Barbados?” Of course not. Remember that in Barbados the black masses are oppressed and controlled by criminal law. Criminal law is not for the white elite and their black domestic servants.It is quite possible that they will soon make him a senator and that he will be highly honoured. At the latest the next DLP government will completely rehabilitate Inniss. Please remember that many men in Barbados admire Inniss for certain websites and jerk off with them every day.
“Will any of the individuals involved, including Donville, be banned from holding office in any Barbados company?” Same answer.
“Where is Freundel?” My guess is that Freundel is kissing the ass of his white masters in Canada. As you know, many local politicians admire whites for their lifestyle and want to be like them. There’s even a name for it, named after cookies … 😉
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@Prodigal Son January 18, 2020 12:24 AM “Donville was the brightest of dem and ended up in trouble.
A Silly Response: If Donville was the brightest of dem, then I real, real sorry for us, because them less bright ones are still around, still interested in seekig political office so that they can rule over us and perchance pick our pockets. Your words scare me, truly they do.
@Prodigal Son January 18, 2020 12:24 AM “I do feel sorry for him as his sister is a close friend of one of my relatives and she is a good lady.”
Nobody on this blog nor elsewhere has accused Donville’s sister of anything. Take note that there are hundreds of men at Dodds [and at prisons in every single contry of the world] whose sisters [and mothers, wives and daughters] are decent women. We are not responsible for the sins of our brothers, sons, or husbands; although idiotic Ewart thinks that we are responsible for the prostate cancers of our menfolk.
But we will not take responsible for male cancers either…every man gotta man-up and manage his own doggie and his own balls.
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What is the threshold in Barbados that would deem it compulsory for either a corrupt businessman or a politician to face a jail sentence?
And please tell me what is the threshold for Bajans that would motivate them to agitate for a change in our political system?
I am unaware of our great leader passing comment on Inniss’ conviction. However, I saw a video clip of her making a rambling speech which contained a large number of muslims.
Yes, Barbados really is a failed state.
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@Greene
The 1929 Prevention of Corruption Act provides for prison sentences of not less than three years nor more than seven years for Donville as well as for the two local ICBL executives.Note that the Act makes prison mandatory in cases of corruption involving government contracts.
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@Tron January 18, 2020 4:30 PM. “Please remember that many men in Barbados admire Inniss for certain websites and jerk off with them every day.”
Can’t be much of a man if you can’t find a woman to have VOLUNTARY sex with you.
Just sayin’
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@ Greene January 18, 2020 2:47 PM
“most tips from crime stoppers is info or intelligence which the police develop and action to get evidence.
where it is direct evidence police may try to get statements from the tipster and or some other persons. police operate on statements. withoit them how would they present files to the prosecutor.
tips from crime stoppers dont take away from nothing i have said earlier.”
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++Yes it does!
For it goes contrary to your earlier stated support of the police legal capacity to “develop and action to get evidence” only when there is a’ known’ complainant except when an act of law breaking is observed by members of the Force like smoking marijuana in public?
How would the police “develop and action to get evidence” if there is no known complainant?
Who will be ‘willing’ to provide evidence either orally or in a signed statement or appear in a court of law?
The perpetrator of the same reported/suspected crime?
The tipsters using Crimestoppers are anonymous grassers who are assigned a number which they can possibly use to collect the grassing money.
How then can the police get statements from them if they cannot get in contact with the tipsters who have exploited the Crimestoppers hotline?
What about the videos or statements made on social media sites? Who are the complainants in these cases? The public?
Isn’t BU the ultimate source of tips for Crime stopping and proactive policing?
BTW, how do you know that the ICBL HQ management did not give the local police an ‘evidentiary’ package equivalent to what the FBI received but it was put away in file 13 like a very very politically hot potato?
Ms Millar should have used the Crimestoppers hotline in the Bajan scenario. And see how far she would have gotten.
Don’t you think Adonijah wrote his song “Two Barbadoes” because of only the way the small fellas on the block are treated for ‘handling’ dope but not when they are involved in white-collar organized crime?
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@Tron January 17, 2020 1:30 PM “If they enter Barbados, it will no longer be a case for the civil courts. They must be arrested immediately at the airport at passport control and sentenced to 20 years penal labour for treason.”
So what is you plan to get 20 years of hard labor out of a couple of elderly ladies?
If you have discovered the fount of eternal youth, please post the recipe here.
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“Ms Millar should have used the Crimestoppers hotline in the Bajan scenario. And see how far she would have gotten.”
She made the best move..
Just this week we saw the AG in parliament LIVE claiming people came forward to tell them about corruption, in the same breath he claimed these same people were afraid to talk or give evidence, fear for family’s lives and other fears, yet the same day Donville got convicted, out jumps the same AG telling the same FRIGHTENED PEOPLE to come forward and give evidence of corruption and how they were prepared to talk before ….
so since Dale Whistleblower can’t seem to keep his story straight, now i am left to wonder if all of that was a very subtle THREAT to these same very frightened people.
anyhow…all their evil corrupt actions are out there for the world to watch, they cannot now roll it back in ….TOO LATE.
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@robert lucas January 17, 2020 1:51 PM “Silly Woman,There is no need to rub salt into Donville’s wounds.”
Not rubbing salt Robert. I was not the one who VOLUNTARILY applied for a U.S. green card, the U.S. does not just give out green cards you know, you actually have to fill out a ton of paperwork and wait months or years to get one. I did not compel Donville to apply for a green card.. I wonder if his constituents even know that he had a green card? As a Barbados tax payer I certainly did not know. Formally a green card means that the applicant intends to RESIDE PERMANENTLY in the USA, which is all fine and good, but why was Donville still seeking to be elected to Barbados’ parliament when he was planning to live permanently in the USA?
Or are Bajan taxpayers only good for paying taxes and the salaries and pensions and perks of the political class who by their actions show that they choose NOT to dwell among us.
Are Bajan taxpayers then only the sore nipples on which the political class sucks and when the milk dries up [we kick their sorry asses out of Parliament] they take off for foreign lands?
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@ Miller January 17, 2020 5:07 PM “Being a permanent resident he ought to declare to the IRS all incomes received in the USA (for sure). Did the Don declare that $36 grand in the tax years they were received into his account?”
I am sure that the IRS is following this case most carefully. Probably got about 6 officers assigned to it.
I trust that BRA is also doing the same. I would love to see his Barbados tax returns wouldn’t you?
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BRA can’t get Tammi to work properly.
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Mariposa January 18, 2020 7:08 AM “However there is always roads which he can travel for redemption of his souls which can shed light on what occurs in the underbelly of politics in barbados by writing a tell all book.”
All of the political/economic class needs to find Jesus. Perhaps some will find him in prison. You would be amazed at the number of people who claim to have found Jesus while imprisoned. It seems that Jesus has a real-real fondness for bad boys [and bad girls].
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@Hal Austin January 18, 2020 7:58 AM “most important of which is the long-reach of US law.”
I don’t know that the arms of U.S. law enforces are that long.
The U.S. did not fetch Donville from Barbados. He places himself directly into the sharks mouth by travelling to Florida. As a son of a fisherman, raised in a fishing community he ought to have know better. You frequently talk about learning by rote, did his schooling at HC make him forget what any St. Philip fisherman would understand? Nobody compelled Donville to travel t the USA.
Nobody compelled him to apply for and accept a USA green card. If he had the green card before being elected, or if he got it afterwards, you know don’t you that green cards can be surrendered at anytime. A friend of mine a laborer surrendered his. Once his closest relative in the USA died he said he had no need to go there and no need of a green card so he turned it in.
Donville CHOSE to swim with sharks and discovered that he was a sprat. A son of a fisherman should not have been so caught.
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” I wonder if his constituents even know that he had a green card? As a Barbados tax payer I certainly did not know. Formally a green card means that the applicant intends to RESIDE PERMANENTLY in the USA, which is all fine and good, but why was Donville still seeking to be elected to Barbados’ parliament when he was planning to live permanently in the USA?”
Some years ago on this very blog we asked Donville if he was a dual citizen and he or someone came on BU and said no. He should have checked himself from back then.
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When people like myself mention certain things on BU they too love to cuss and carry on, calling me witch and bitch and demon.
the person who claimed to be Donville said at the time… to move on from that discussion… or words to that effect.
Blogmaster can confirm from his archives, since it was years ago..
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@WURA-WAR-on-U January 18, 2020 7:20 PM ”Some years ago on this very blog we asked Donville if he was a dual citizen and he or someone came on BU and said no. He should have checked himself from back then.”
It appears that truthfully Donville is not a dual citizen. Holding a green card is not the same as being a citizen. If Donville was a U.S. citizen after serving his sentence, whatever that turns out to be the U.S. would have to keep him permanently, but since he is ONLY a permanent resident, once his sentencing is completed, the U.S. authorities will almost certainly revoke his green card and forbid him from entering the U.S. for a period of at least 10 years. How do I know this. I have a neighbor who is a deportee [nice person believe it or not] who wants to go back but still has several more years of waiting before an application to return can even be submitted. Another acquaintance manslaughtered his wife more than 40 years ago, served his sentence, has not re-offended, but is on parole for life so cannot travel outside of the country of his birth.
In addition once one has a criminal conviction it is damn hard to migrate to anyplace else, in fact it is hard to travel at all [unless one lies] because most countries are reluctant to grant even tourists visas to criminals.
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Miller,
i thought better of you man. in drug cases the police are the complainant so to speak especially if they saw or suspected drugs use or dealing going on. there is in criminal law phrases called found committing and having reason to suspect (what americans call probable cause) that give police the right to arrest someone in such circumstances
most if not all drug offences need no civilian complainant to be brought before the court because of this. police develop tips and intelligence by doing surveillance or other actions to form their suspicion before pouncing on the drug suspect.
and suspicion is formed from facts, information or circumstances if i remember my criminal law correctly.
in a case involving assault a police can arrest too if he saw the assault but ultimately he would have to rely on the statement of the victim for a successful prosecution. for instance suppose the victim says he wants no police action or does not give a statement. some thing with theft etc.
this is not the case with corruption/bribery. police may get a tip that a politician is corrupt and got money from x person for doing a favour, whatever. based on that do you think the police can go and arrest the politician or x person? what does the police have to rely on? can the police get a search warrant or a production order just on a tip? most such evidence to do with that sort of crime is secreted away and it is quite difficult for obvious reasons to get the parties involved to give primary first hand information. surveillance hardly work in such instances
and yes i dont whether ICBL delivered the package to the police but you seem to know, correct?
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@ Greene January 18, 2020 8:33 PM
“this is not the case with corruption/bribery. police may get a tip that a politician is corrupt and got money from x person for doing a favour, whatever. based on that do you think the police can go and arrest the politician or x person? what does the police have to rely on?”
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++How about an arrest warrant or extradition order for Ms Millar? Or don’t you consider her to be a ‘reliable’ witness to the unlawful act covered under Cap.29?
You shall soon see if your ‘legal’ argument can hold water in your sieve of tautological gymnastics when the other parties to the M/L act are forced to explain themselves.
Your learned friend, G. Mayers.
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Does America recognize dual citizenship?
Just asking. -
@Greene January 18, 2020 8:33 PM “what does the police have to rely on?”
Some people, not me of course say Baygon and a plastic bag.
Some people not me say that the Americans think that waterboarding might work.
But maybe those things only work on people without access to hot shot lawyers?
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@William Skinner January 18, 2020 9:20 PM “Does America recognize dual citizenship?”
It depends on what you mean by recognise.
If my spouse and I are dual American/Bajan citizens and a child is born to us in Barbados, the fact is that the child is a dual citizen whether America “recognises” it or not. it is just a fact.
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Does America recognize dual citizenship?
Just asking.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxYES, JUST CAN’T BECOME US PRESIDENT IF BORN OUTSIDE USA.
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If my spouse and I are dual American/Bajan citizens and a child is born to us in Barbados, the fact is that the child is a dual citizen whether America “recognises” it or not. it is just a fact.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxTHIS IS NOT CORRECT.
THE CHILD ONLY BECOMES A US CITIZEN ONCE THE PARENT(S) FILES PAPERWORK WITH THE US EMBASSY UNDER CHILD BORN ABROAD TO A US CITIZEN.
IF THE PARENT(S) DO NOT FILE FOR THAT CHILD BEFORE THE CHILD BECOMES 18.
THE 18 YEAR OLD OR ABOVE MUST FILE ON THEIR OWN WITH DNA RESULTS OF BOTH CHILD AND PARENT(S) BEING US CITIZEN(S) ALONG WITH OTHER PAPERWORK THROUGH US EMBASSY.
THEY CAN BE REFUSED.
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@ Baje January 18, 2020 10:24 PM
It seems you are rather well versed in the immigration laws of the USA.
Do you know as much about the tax laws?If you do, could you do BU a favour and tell us if a person holding permanent resident status like the Don should have been declaring to the IRS his or her income(s) earned in Barbados including the US$ 36 grand obtained while moonlighting as a minister of the Crown.
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f you do, could you do BU a favour and tell us if a person holding permanent resident status like the Don should have been declaring to the IRS his or her income(s) earned in Barbados including the US$ 36 grand obtained while moonlighting as a minister of the Crown.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxALL ADULT RESIDENTS WHETHER US CITIZEN OR NOT ARE LEGALLY REQUIRED TO FILE ANNUALLY WITH IRS EVEN IF $O EARNED,
THEY DONT NEED TO HAVE SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBER(SSN) HOWEVER WOULD NEED A Taxpayer Identification Numbers (TIN).
YES DONVILLE INNISS WOULD HAVE BEEN REQUIRED TO FILE IN 2015/2016 SINCE FLORIDA RESIDENCY WITH THE IRS AMOUNTS EARNED ESPECIALLY SINCE THE 2 AMOUNTS WERE TRANSFERRED TO HIS US BANK ACCOUNT SO BANKING PAPER TRAIL.
IF DIDNT FILE WITH IRS WOULD BE SEEN AS TAX EVASION ESPECIALLY NOW HE HAS BEEN CONVICTED AND PUBLIC RECORD.
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@ Baje January 18, 2020 10:24 PM “THEY CAN BE REFUSED.”
Under what conditions would a refusal take place?
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This is what dumbass, corrupt ministers/politicians/lawyers cause, senor loco now thinks it’s unfair that US cannot benefit from paying bribes to corrupt officials in corrupt countries overseas and according to Bloomberg wants to change that law that prevents it……..another problem has been created…hope they are not salivating because guess who will be going to prison still anyway if senor loco succeeds, he only thinks he is missing out on something…steupppss..
“President Donald Trump’s administration is weighing whether to seek changes to a 1977 law that makes it illegal for U.S. companies to bribe foreign officials.
“We are looking at it,” White House Economic Adviser Larry Kudlow said at the White House on Friday, in response to a reporter’s question about the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
“I would just say: We are aware of it, we are looking at it, and we’ve heard complaints from some of our companies,” Kudlow said. “I don’t want to say anything definitive policy-wise, but we are looking at it.”
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Miller
Greene, in his general contributions to this issue and responses to you, is correct.
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@ Artax January 19, 2020 8:01 AM
How can it be “correct” when it has not been tested in a local court of law or at the CCJ?
It is his perspective not a ruling (precedent) to which he can allude.
As Hal Austin ‘wisely’ pointed out there are other pieces of legislation other than the M/L loopholes which can provide the law enforcement agencies with sufficient grounds to institute investigations rather than waiting on ‘specific’ complainant.
This matter is of major public concern and has serious ramifications for the integrity and reputation of the State which the enforcement of its laws is vital for its ‘democratic’ existence.
What do you think should be done at this stage to bring local justice to bear on this embarrassingly shameful scandal and ‘blackened’ stain on the reputation of a country who likes to boast about it being a ‘educated’ nation of laws and its high international ratings on the corruption index?
A commission of Inquiry like the Duffus or St. Joseph Hospital or even the Alexandra School?
As in the case of the ‘Crimestoppers’ situation, the law enforcement agencies have received all the “TIPS” they need to initiate a serious investigation.
A precedent has been set in the USA now get on with the job of Justice in Bim.
The refusal to act on these perceived breaches of the Laws of Barbados would only add fuel to the fire of derision about Barbados being a “Failed State” and a fully-fledged banana republic.
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Miller,
you are a hard headed fellow.
of course the police can go to ICBL and ask questions. of course they can go to BIDC and ask questions.
PACE and i suspect, the Judges Rules, under which i believe the Bim Police still operate, states that when police are making inquiries into an alleged offence they can speak to any person from whom they think useful info can be obtained or something along those lines. usually before seeking such info, the police have an idea where to go and to whom to talk, because someone has complained to them.
in the case, they dont have a complainant or a complainant in the conventional sense. but lets assume they take up the AG on his directive to investigate or a crime stopper tip and go to BIDC. suppose they speak to the CEO or general manager and that person doesnt answer any questions or says he would have to get directions from his board and the same goes for BIDC. what is the police to do next?
you can well say that persons from those two organisations may well talk to police and give up all the info and all the police have to do is approach them. that is possible but highly unlikely. why wait for police to come to them? why not go to the police especially after the matter has been ventilated and after the AG has given his directive publicly.
to get the ball rolling so to speak the AG could direct the Board of BIDC to complain as i have outlined on numerous occasions or ICBL could do the same on its own accord.
the question is why has neither been done given the public nature of the matter?
and this is not a legal question. it is a matter of police procedure- how an investigation is initiated.
if an employee steals from an institution and it is made public should the police investigate when the institution never complained? if someone steals from BRA and BRA does not report it or complain to the police and it is later made public should the police go to BRA and investigate? isnt that an indication that they dont want the matter investigated? so if neither ICBL nor the BIDC doesnt not complain what does that tell you?
this is the last post i will make about this. it is exhaustipating (combo of exhausting and constipated) meaning i am too tired to give a shite, trying to explain something so simple
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@ Greene
Laxatives are good.
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How are you Hal? faring well, i hope. are you going over for the gathering?
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@ Greene
I am not gatherin, Have you noticed that Gatherin’ is all about picking, wukking up in beautiful Barbados and bringing ideas and investments The president obviously thinks we are stupid.
Invest in what? Who will manage these investments? The same people who mismanage the NIS? If I need investment advice do you think I will jump on a plane and visit Barbados for that advice?
In a country depending on tourism and the hospitality industry and the people are so rude; they all try to rip us off. Have you experienced the old trick: pricing in dollars and when you go to pay, they add US dollars. Barbados is not only a failed state, it is the heart of gangster capitalism. Just watch the lawless ZR vans on the streets. Have you noticed the Coastguard guys walking through Broad Street with their side guns?
Hope you are yours are doing well. -
@ Hal
thanks for asking. yes, me and mine are doing OK. i gather (chuckling) that you are not conned by the GATHERING.
you must admit nonetheless that on the face of it it seems a good gesture to align overseas bajans who have some spare dosh with investment potentialities in the homeland. and the President as you call her does have a sweet mouth.
i have already committed to building a retirement house so i cant pull back now. it is all in for me. i am v concerned about the violence tho and the lack of will power to solve.
the President MAM is v good at waxing eloquently about everything under the sun except crime.
how would you approach the high murder rate in Bim
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@ Greene
Be careful with your money. A friend of mine just had a local guy in to repair her guttering; when it continued to leak and she called him back, all he said was he wanted some of her English pounds. They are heartless rip-off artists. By the way, I have nothing to invest; I go to the foodbank.
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@Greene,
Burgler bars on windows and doors. Security system. Motion detecting lights at night. @ German Shepards and a pit bull.
Piece might suggest a piece but not me. Nobody will be able to accuse me of suggesting something that would get you in trouble.lol
Enjoy your retirement in Barbados. Wish I could do the same but my Canadian pension is not enough to support me in Barbados.
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@ Hal
i am starting a maintenance company to do repairs for my fellow retirees from Blighty. i have a good group of men and i dont do the rip off thing. but some of us could be tightfisted with the pounds but no fear i know how to deal with my own.
get her to contact me in the future.
@ Hants
thanks and done. no burglar bars tho. but 3 bull mastiffs
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@Greene
Barbados is not as bad as the other places if you are able to keep your wits about you.
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@ David
true but something must be done. dont know how your wits can save you from a stray bullet.
the Govt is v silent on the issue except a few mutterings from Marshall every now and then.
i cant turn back now so i am hoping we get this matter in hand.
why it is that crime seems to escalate under the BLP?
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@Greene
A stray bullet can hit you anywhere even in the great US or Canada. Agree something must be done to restore Barbados to the old standard, that said the blogmaster will take living here over the cold ass place you reside. As discussed on the blog many times we are witnessing a dysfunctional social landscape that started many a year ago. The blogmaster suspects what is happening now will become the new norm here and elsewhere.
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(Quote):
in the case, they dont have a complainant or a complainant in the conventional sense. but lets assume they take up the AG on his directive to investigate or a crime stopper tip and go to BIDC. suppose they speak to the CEO or general manager and that person doesnt answer any questions or says he would have to get directions from his board and the same goes for BIDC. what is the police to do next? (Unquote),
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++Let them take your hypothetical scenario to a stage of implementation and see what happens.
Nothing beats a ‘trial’ but a failure (to act).
Now that the FBI is on the ‘case’ you will soon see if the other alleged collaborators will continue to evade Justice by this obvious case of inertia in the fast becoming dystopian state called “Badbados”.
Time is certainly longer than twine. And if local Mohammedans (law enforcers) don’t go to the mountain of justice then the mountain will have to send the FBI to instruct them accordingly.
The Don must not go down alone in this case of one-sided justice.Then you guys want to ask why Barbados is blacklisted in certain quarters.
The same way the country was forced to clean up its act with its offshore financial business dealings so to it will be forced to clean up its act regarding white collar criminals (like the thieving lawyers who have a massively bad reputation not only among the locals but among the Bajan communities overseas).
“Hard ears wunna wunt hear, hard ears wunna gine feel!”
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I am very disappointed with the pittance your minister tried to launder …..it is obvious he wasn’t qualified for the job
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Miller
I won’t go as far as “saying” you are a “hard-headed”, but It’s obviously clear you’re missing the points Greene has been making.
This doesn’t have anything to do with being “tested in a local court of law or at the CCJ” and I’m at a loss as to why you would make such a comment.
However, Greene has been painstakingly trying to explain standard police procedures and how the law applies in certain cases. Perhaps you’re allowing emotion to guide you on this matter.
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NEVER thought i would see the day when Lawson and I agreed. A pittance! I thought other amounts would have been forthcoming.
A loose woman my grandmother told me about used to say, “If I’m going to hell at least I’m going in my shoes and stockings!”
That was in the day when people were mostly barefooted and shoes were a very big deal. She wasn’t selling her soul for a pittance!
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@ Greene
I shall. Good luck with your new maintenance group. When it comes to Barbados, there is an optimism bias, and a pessimism bias. Plse put me down for pessimism.
By the way, don’t let those reckless, speeding drivers kill you. And remember, Barbadians are the best drivers in the world, especially when they see a car with an H registration.. -
“I am very disappointed with the pittance your minister tried to launder …..it is obvious he wasn’t qualified for the job.”
1 + 6 pittances = 7 pittances..
suppose, just suppose he collected that many x 36,000 US per year between 2015-16 and not from ICBL only..
who would know the difference, can’t tell now, that is only what he was caught with.






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