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The Tribune
Volume:115 No.218, OCTOBER 5TH, 2018
Established 1903
Weekend
THE PEOPLE’S PAPER: $1
Friday, October 5, 2018 art books design film fashio n music food entertainme nt gardening
Weekend
WEEKEND: FASHION IS A MISSION FOR LOCAL DESIGNER
FUTURE OF SPACE TRAVEL Pages 20 & 21
Future of fashion
Local designer takes on Miss ion
Catwalk
pages 8 & 9
Deadly drivers who claimed FIVE lives By NICO SCAVELLA Tribune Staff Reporter nscavella@tribunemedia.net
CLOCKWISE from top left, Christin Reckley, 26, guilty of the double traffic fatality on Marathon Road last month; Kareem Bowe, 37, guilty in a traffic fatality of Jean Lubin on June 23; Taylor Pratt, 26, guilty over the traffic fatality of Marvin Pinder last month, and Floyd Weech, 57, guilty over a traffic fatality on Robinson Road that claimed the life of Andre Sands. Photos: Terrel W Carey Sr/Tribune Staff
A FEMALE Royal Bahamas Defence Force marine must spend a week in custody before she is sentenced for hitting and killing two pedestrians with her uninsured car in the Marathon area last month, a magistrate ordered yesterday. She was one of five people charged with vehicular offences yesterday, including hit and run incidents and killing in the course of dangerous driving. Three of the accused were given fines of about $10,000 for the vehiclerelated killings. Magistrate Carolyn Vogt-Evans said 26-year-old marine Christin Reckley will receive her sentence on October 15 for killing 37-year-old Maude Augustin and 23-year-old
Stevan Devallon in the early morning hours of September 16. Prior to the order, Reckley, the RBDF’s top female recruit in 2018, pleaded guilty to one count each of killing in the course of dangerous driving and driving while not covered against third party risk insurance. According to police, Reckley, who was off-duty at the time, was heading north on Marathon Road in the area of Samana Drive shortly before 1am when she lost control of her car and struck the pair. Both Augustin and Devallon died on the scene, despite the efforts of emergency medical personnel. An autopsy report determined their deaths were the result of blunt force trauma caused by injuries to their necks, head and torsos. SEE PAGE THREE
DOCTORS PRESS ON WITH STRIKE BALLOT By KHRISNA RUSSELL Deputy Chief Reporter krussell@tribunemedia.net
DESPITE “amicable” talks with Prime Minister Dr Hubert Minnis, who agreed to address their concerns, the Consultant Physicians Staff Association will conduct a strike vote today. The prime minister confirmed to The Tribune yesterday that a meeting
was held yesterday morning where long-standing concerns of senior doctors were discussed. Dr Minnis said the meeting came to a close with the understanding that issues would be prioritised and timelines were set. However, he would not say if there was some form of agreement when it came to money related issues. SEE PAGE SIX
NYGARD LAUNCHES LAWSUIT OVER HOME SEIZURE By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net
PETER Nygard is seeking damages from the government, claiming in writs filed in the Supreme Court this week that his constitutional rights have been breached and his property, Nygard Cay, has been wrongfully seized by the country’s provost marshal. A hearing was held yesterday connected to the matter.
NYGARD CAY Mr Nygard wanted the court to impose an injunction preventing the deputy provost marshal from
seizing his property, but that became moot as his property was seized on Friday. Instead, the Supreme Court granted the Save the Bays/Coalition to Protect Clifton Bay permission to be added as a defendant in Mr Nygard’s action against the commissioner of police (the provost marshal), Tommy Sands, the deputy provost marshal, and the attorney general because of the land seizure.
Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper
SEE PAGE FIVE
A COMIC’S VIEW:
MINNIS AND HIS GUSSIEMAE POSSE
SEE PAGE EIGHT