Former prime minister Basdeo Panday says he is relieved by the decision of Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) Roger Gaspard to discontinue one of four corruption cases related to the Piarco International Airport.
Panday made the statement yesterday as he was interviewed by Caribbean Lifestyle Communications one day after DPP Gaspard discontinued the charges against him, his wife Oma, former government minister Carlos John, and businessman Ishwar Galbaransingh, on Monday.
Panday said: “This was a burden hanging on my shoulders and my whole personality for 18 years. Now that it is over I have to reconstitute my life.”
“I suppose this was a political prosecution. It seems that they cannot forgive me for building the finest airport in the Caribbean,” he added, in his trademark witty style.
Appearing before Magistrate Adia Mohammed in the Port-of-Spain Magistrates’ Court on Monday, DPP Gaspard announced his decision to use his constitutional discretion to take the unexpected action.
Gaspard explained that his decision was based on the low probability of his office securing convictions in the case.
He explained that several key witnesses in the case have died since the group was charged in 2006 and one main witness is now elderly and lives abroad.
He also noted that the accused had a “fair argument” that they faced “presumed, presumptive, and specific” prejudice in the case.
The case against the group was one of four, related to the airport project, that were initiated following the construction of the airport.
In the first case, commonly referred to as Piarco One, a group of government officials and businesspeople was charged with offences related to the alleged theft of $19 million.
The group included Galbaransingh, former finance minister Brian Kuei Tung; former national security minister Russell Huggins; former Nipdec chairman Edward Bayley (now deceased); Maritime General executives John Smith (now deceased), Steve Ferguson, and Barbara Gomes; Northern Construction Financial Director Amrith Maharaj; and Kuei Tung’s then companion Renee Pierre.
Some of the group and other public officials were also slapped with separate charges over an alleged broader conspiracy in another case, commonly referred to as Piarco Two.
The Piarco Three case pertained to a £25,000 bribe allegedly received by Panday and his wife and allegedly paid by John and Galbaransingh as an alleged inducement in relation to the airport project. The Piarco Four case only involves Pierre.
In 2019, a High Court Judge upheld a legal challenge over the Piarco Two case after former senior magistrate Ejenny Espinet retired with the preliminary inquiry almost complete.
The ruling meant that the preliminary inquiry into the Piarco Two case had to be restarted afresh before a new magistrate along with the Piarco Three inquiry, which was also before Espinet and left incomplete upon her retirement.
The Piarco Four case is also yet to be completed.
In June, last year, the United Kingdom-based Privy Council upheld an appeal from some of the accused in the Piarco 1 case over the decision of former chief magistrate Sherman McNicolls to commit them to stand trial for the charges.
The Privy Council ruled that McNicolls should have upheld their application for him to recuse himself from the case as he was “hopelessly compromised” based on a then-pending land deal with Clico and the involvement of former attorney general John Jeremie, SC, in helping him resolve it.
Following the outcome of the case, DPP Gaspard issued a press release in which he noted that the inquiry had to be either restarted or the accused persons had to agree that indictments against them could be filed in the High Court without going through the preliminary inquiry process.
Gaspard noted that he would only make a decision on whether it should be restarted after considering public interest factors including the age of the case, the costs incurred by the State thus far, and the need to demonstrate the State’s commitment to prosecuting alleged acts of fraud on the citizenry.
He also suggested a joint trial of all the allegations arising out of the four Piarco cases would be desirable.
In November, last year, British King’s Counsel Edward Fitzgerald wrote to Gaspard on behalf of most of the accused in the other three Piarco cases and called for a similar stay.
Fitzgerald put forward six main grounds why he and his colleagues felt that Gaspard should exercise his discretion under Section 90(3)(c) of the Constitution to take the bold move.
“Where the interests of justice and the public interest can only be met by discontinuing the Piarco proceedings, the DPP not only has the power to take that step but an obligation to do so in his role as an impartial “minister of justice”,” Fitzgerald said.
Fitzgerald’s main ground of contention was that the move was necessary to protect the moral integrity of the criminal justice system based on serious allegations of political interference in the investigation that led to the charges against his clients.
He also referred to Jeremie’s involvement in the cases including his then role as head of the Anti-Corruption Investigations Bureau (ACIB), which investigated and laid the charges in the cases.
Gaspard is yet to announce his decisions in relation to the other cases but is expected to do so when they come up for hearing later this year.