?Confusion surrounds the authenticity of undeclared Cayman Island bank accounts alleged to be in the names of a former government minister and his wife. Is it a hoax, or is it not? That's the million- dollar question. An early draft of the speech which was to be delivered by Attorney General John Jeremie in Parliament on Friday was e-mailed to a senior Guardian reporter by the office of the Attorney General, shortly after 4 pm. According to the early draft, reports of the offshore bank accounts were "a total fabrication and a hoax." The draft had stated: "The ACIB (Anti-Corruption Investigations Bureau) has fully investigated these reports and has determined that they were a total fabrication and a hoax, calculated to create confusion in the national community." The AG, however, did not make any such statement in the Lower House that day.
Jeremie, who spoke in the Parliament around 3 pm and completed his contribution in less than ten minutes, did not refer to the issue of the alleged offshore accounts in his speech. According to the established protocol, all statements by ministers to Parliament are drafted by the respective communications departments under directives. Statements to be delivered by ministers in Parliament go through a process which involves vetting by Cabinet or the Parliamentary Statements Committee. The Prime Minister, as the chairman of the Cabinet, has the final say over what gets said in Parliament. None of the usual Government sources could say why Jeremie left out the reference to the overseas bank accounts being a hoax. A spokesman denied knowledge of any prepared statement sent from the AG's Department. No one could explain how or why the statement was sent to the Guardian.
?Jeremie: No definitive info on account
?The office of the Attorney General said yesterday Jeremie made no mention of the Cayman accounts being a hoax in his statement to Parliament. He was responding to a front page report in the T&T Guardian yesterday. The release from the Attorney General stated: "The fact is despite strenuous attempts through official channels to investigate the veracity of reports of Cayman Islands accounts, the Ministry of the Attorney General is still not yet in receipt of any definitive, official information required to make a statement on the issue." Jeremie said the Guardian report, which "purports to be a record of his statement to the House of Representatives" on Friday, was erroneous. The release said: "The Hansard records would show that at no time did the Attorney General utter the words attributed to him in relation to an alleged account in the Cayman Islands." The Attorney General's statement said that he did not make any such statement during the teatime interview with journalists either, "as the issue never arose."
?Bank: No accounts exist
?A senior official from the Cayman Islands bank said last week that the bank "has no association with or previous knowledge of the former minister you described in your article" on March 13. Cayman Islands is an offshore banking jurisdiction which has strict customer confidentiality laws.