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The People’s Paper
Volume: 112 No.106
Biggest And Best! TUESDAY, MAY 10, 2016
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CURLYFEST 2016
HAWKSBILL DEAL EXTENDED SEE BUSINESS
SEE WOMAN SECTION
$47m lost at Road Traffic
Auditor General warns of a ‘severe lack of order’ at department By KHRISNA VIRGIL Tribune Staff Reporter kvirgil@tribunemedia.net
THE auditor general has warned of a severe lack of order and control surrounding safeguarding the assets and collection of revenue at the Road Traffic Department, while revealing an estimated $47m in losses from vehicle license revenue resulting from employees and motorists “circumventing rules and regulations”. At a minimum, it is believed that there is an under recording of vehicle licence revenue of $10m due to management not having control over the licensing inventory. In the audit of the department for the period July 1, 2012, to June 30, 2015, Auditor General Terrance Bastian said the department could not attest that correct revenue is being reported at the end of each fiscal year. In probing operations of the department, Mr Bastian further highlighted several
other instances of apparent fraud and “collusion” involving inspectors, writers and cashiers as they carried out daily tasks. The revelations were unearthed in an audit report that was tabled yesterday in the House of Assembly. It focused on vehicle licence revenue, licence plate revenue and payroll processing. “We observed through inquiries of management that the Road Traffic Department (RTD) did not maintain a register containing the registered number of all licensed motor vehicles,” the report said. “Based on the requirements outlined in Section 5 of the (Road Traffic) Act, the RTD should be maintaining a register of the name and address of all registered owners, insured persons and insurers of licensees. We further noted that a listing of all active and inactive plates could not be produced for audit inspection.” SEE PAGE THREE
IZMIRLIAN: NO SENSE IN BAHA MAR BID
SARKIS Izmirlian last night declined to enter the formal Baha Mar sales process, and accused the $3.5bn project’s receivers of playing ‘rope a dope’ with him. Baha Mar’s original developer, in a letter issued to the Deloitte & Touche re-
ceviership team just as the deadline to submit bids to acquire the project expired, said it “makes no sense” for him to enter the process. Mr Izmirlian called the process “opaque” and “surreptitious”. SEE BUSINESS SECTION
FIVE HELD OVER CLAIM OF SEX ASSAULT ON TEENAGER By SANCHESKA BROWN Tribune Staff Reporter sbrown@tribunemedia.net FOUR boys and a girl are in police custody in connection with the alleged sexual assault of a 19-year-old girl. Assistance Commissioner of Police Stephen Dean said a “full scale” investigation was launched after a video of the alleged assault was posted on social media on Sunday. SEE PAGE EIGHT
BODY OF MAN IS FOUND STUFFED INSIDE SUITCASE
POLICE officers at the scene off Soldier Road yesterday where a man’s body was found in a suitcase. Photo: Tim Clarke/Tribune Staff BY SANCHESKA BROWN Tribune Staff Reporter sbrown@tribunemedia.net THE partially decomposed body of a man was found stuffed in a suitcase in an abandoned building off Soldier Road early yesterday morning. This latest homicide brought the country’s murder count to 47 for the year, according to The Tribune’s records.
Officer-in-Charge of the Central Detective Unit Chief Superintendent Clayton Fernander said officers received an anonymous tip shortly after 10am that led them to the scene. “As a result of information officers went to Red Sea Road off Soldier Road and Sumner Street. When officers arrived they checked the twostory abandoned building and on the first floor they
discovered the lifeless body of a man in his early 30s, in a large suitcase with multiple injuries to his body,” Chief Supt Fernander said. “At this point we do not know the cause of death. We believe that the body was there for about 24 hours. Emergency Services personnel were called to the scene and confirmed the man was dead. What we are working with is the little
information that we got. We have no motive, no cause of death and no identity at this time.” Chief Supt Fernander declined to comment on whether the victim was stabbed or shot. The body was found four days after a man was shot in the chest during an argument on Quarry Mission Road. SEE PAGE EIGHT
NOTTAGE: VOTE HURT BY ‘BPL ALREADY BRINGING SAME-SEX MARRIAGE TALK LOWER ELECTRIC COST’
By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net
WITH momentum ahead of the June 7 constitutional referendum appearing to be with the “no” campaign, National Security Minister Dr Bernard Nottage said yesterday that he believes talk of same-sex marriage will negatively impact the vote on amendments to the
Constitution. “It will impact the vote negatively because the question and amendments have nothing to do with that,” he told reporters during an interview following a House of Assembly session yesterday. “The fact that these matters are being brought up now is a bit mischievous
SEE PAGE FIVE
By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net
DEPUTY Prime Minister Philip “Brave” Davis credited PowerSecure yesterday for reductions in local electricity prices, saying “dramatic” improvements are already being reaped in the country. Mr Davis was asked if Bahamas Power & Light
Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper
(BPL), formerly the Bahamas Electricity Corporation, has given the government its long-awaited business plan. He said yes, but it is unclear whether the plan will be released to the public. “(Electricity services) has already dramatically improved,” he said. “Check your bill. Compare it to SEE PAGE EIGHT