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Volume: 121 No.38, January 17, 2024
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FAMILY IS LEFT TO SLEEP ON GROUND Mom and six kids left homeless as demolitions resume By LEANDRA ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter lrolle@tribunemedia.net ROSELYN and her six children slept outside on the ground on Monday after their home was demolished in the unregulated All Saints Way community. She told The Tribune her family had nowhere to go. “The situation is stressful,” she said sitting on a bucket near someone else’s home, combing her daughter’s hair as a foul
A TRACTOR knocks down a structure in the shanty town known as All Saints Way yesterday. Photo: Moise Amisial
SEE PAGE TWO
TOURISM CHIEF CALLS SHARK BITE Govt releases crime plan, FNM ‘unfortunate’, atlantis silent dismisses it as a ‘glossy brochure’ ATLANTIS representatives did not respond to questions before press time yesterday after a tenyear-old American boy was bitten by a shark at the resort. Tourism Director Latia
Duncombe said the incident was “unfortunate”, but further details were not available. Police said the ten-yearold Maryland boy was SEE PAGE FOUR
By JADE RUSSELL Tribune Staff Reporter jrussell@tribunemedia.net THE Davis administration said it would increase pay and benefits to legal officers to attract and retain top talent and hire more
prosecutors to manage the demands of the justice system –– two of many steps it hopes will help reduce crime after 2024 began with eleven murders in two weeks. However, Free National Movement chairman Dr
Duane Sands dismissed the administration’s muchtouted crime plan, released yesterday, as a “glossy brochure” with vague details and recycled information. The administration SEE PAGE FIVE
FTX’s Bahamian liquidators are asserting the settlement with their US adversary “represents the best deal” possible given that lengthy legal battles would slash creditor recoveries “possibly to extinction”. Brian Simms KC, the
BRIAN SIMMS KC Lennox Paton senior
By LEANDRA ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter lrolle@tribunemedia.net
partner, in a January 12, 2024, affidavit filed with the Supreme Court alleged it is “extremely unlikely that more favourable terms could be achieved” with John Ray given that the Bahamian liquidation is in a “much weaker financial position” than their Chapter 11 counterpart.
A FENTANYL overdose killed a 23-year-old Abaco man in Grand Bahama earlier this year, the latest known death from the drug in The Bahamas. Robin Jeantil, also known as “Tubby” from Hope Town, was found unresponsive at a nightclub in Grand Bahama on January 7 after he reportedly ingested an unknown pill. Police said he was taken to the Rand Memorial
FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS
SEE PAGE SEVEN
ftX settlement ‘represents the best deal’ By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
abaco man’s death was by fentanyl, say police
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