10192018 NEWS

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The Tribune

Volume:115 No.227, OCTOBER 19TH, 2018

Established 1903

Weekend

THE PEOPLE’S PAPER: $1

WEEKEND: STANDING IN THE SHOES OF A NATIONAL HERO

Political pressure to hand out contracts?

...Not on my watch

By KHRISNA RUSSELL Deputy Chief Reporter krussell@tribunemedia.net FORMER Prime Minister Perry Christie said it is “astonishing” that an audit tabled in the House of Assembly asserts that political pressure from an elected official in his administration resulted in a web shop boss receiving a large contract from the Ministry of Finance. SEE PAGE FIVE

CIVIL SERVANTS SHREDDED US SAILOR’S MURDERERS DOCUMENTS TO HIDE FRAUD LOSE FIGHT TO GO FREE By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net

SHREDDING documents to cover up fraudulent activities was “a matter of routine” at the Department of Social Services, the Auditor General has revealed. The government’s chief financial watchdog warned that “impaired internal controls” and “a severe breakdown” in management oversight had exposed Bahamian taxpayers to the potential loss of millions of dollars from graft

and corruption. The report suggested that the Department’s weaknesses and failings were also undermining its mission to assist low income and poor Bahamians. The Auditor General’s office said the instructions to destroy key accounting documents had come from a “senior accounts staff member” “with the knowledge” of their supervisor. Suggesting that this breached the Public Service Act’s record retention requirements, the report said: “These acts perpetrated by accounting staff

members reveal that there are obvious weak internal controls over the custody of accounting records within the accounts department and a severe lack of accountability around the same.” Describing the document shredding as “not tolerable”, the Auditor General’s report said the loss of accounting records “could undermine the integrity” of the accounts department and “increase the risk of fraud and corruption” to the organisation as a whole. FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS

By NICO SCAVELLA Tribune Staff Reporter nscavella@tribunemedia.net

THE three men convicted of murdering American sailor Kyle Bruner during his attempt to prevent a robbery of two female tourists five years ago will remain behind bars, the Court of Appeal has ruled. Former appellate president Dame Anita Allen, and Justices Jon Isaacs and Stella Crane-Scott said the appeals by Craig Johnson, Anton Bastian and Marcellus Williams

were “all without merit”, thus warranting them being dismissed. Simultaneously, the appellate tribunal dismissed the Crown’s appeal against the sentences of the three men, which range from 40-45 years, charging that like that of the convicts, the Crown’s appeal does not have any merit. Bruner was fatally shot in May 2013. According to the ruling, around 3am on May 12, 2013, Bruner and his coworker Sean Cannif went to the Hammerheads Bar on Bay Street. While there

they met two women, Hayley Sayer and Jane Robinson, along with Ben Myers. They all left Hammerheads Bar in two cars and went to Double D’s to get some food. Meanwhile, around 4am, Williams, Johnson, Bastian, Jamal Dorfevil and Leo Bethel were in a car near the Double D’s restaurant on Mackey Street. Earlier, the trio had agreed to rob people at Hammerheads on East Bay Street, and then later on Mackey Street. SEE PAGE SEVEN

POACHERS’ HAUL - HALF WAS UNDERSIZE By MORGAN ADDERLEY Tribune Staff Reporter madderley@tribunemedia.net

ACTING Director of Fisheries Edison Deleveaux yesterday estimated that more than 20,000 to 30,000 pounds each of fishery products were on board two of the three Dominican vessels that were apprehended by the Royal Bahamas Defence Force over the weekend. The count on the third vessel had not been

ONE OF THE POACHERS completed up to press time. However, Marine Resources Minister Michael Pintard added that a “tremendous amount of

undersized products” are among the Dominicans’ catch, with Mr Deleveaux approximating that more than 50 percent of the catch consisted of undersized lobsters and groupers. One hundred and twenty-four Dominican poachers on three vessels were arrested by the RBDF on Saturday. The poachers engaged officers in a shootout before they were subdued. However, no one

Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper

SEE PAGE NINE

A COMIC’S VIEW: ‘THE PLP WAS GONNA DO IT’

SEE PAGE EIGHT


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