TUESDAY i’m lovin’ it!
HIGH 84ºF LOW 70ºF
The Tribune Established 1903
24/7 BREAKING NEWS ON TRIBUNE242.COM
Biggest And Best!
VOLUME:115 No.67, FEBRUARY 27TH, 2018
THE PEOPLE’S PAPER: $1
WOMAN: OVERBURDENED? TIME FOR A GREAT ESCAPE
Crash families ‘kept in the dark’ Anguish of Andros plane relatives after debris find By RICARDO WELLS Tribune Staff Reporter rwells@tribunemedia.net THE son of one of the North Andros plane crash victims has said the news that officials have found the debris field from the accident is the “latest and hardest” hit in a series of stunning blows. Kermit Adderley Jr’s mother, Margaret Adderley, was travelling to Nassau from Andros to see her newborn grandson when the ill-fated plane went down in the ocean. The 49-year-old mother of two was one of six people on board who died. On Sunday, nearly six weeks after the incident, crash investigators
TEENAGER’S DOUBLE MURDER CHARGE
confirmed a debris field discovered by fishermen in waters off Andros earlier this month was that of the plane that crashed. “I am still working through the flight going down,” Mr Adderley told The Tribune. “Now we have to go through this process hit by hit, with no one showing the people who died any respect.” According to Mr Adderley, crash investigators have not been forthcoming with information related to the incident. He said family members have been left to comb through media reports and internet gossip to learn of any changes in the case. SEE PAGE THREE
THE Jamaican wife of a Bahamian man and her 11-year-old daughter were left traumatised and degraded after spending ten days in detention at an immigration safe house for women and children, according to a court filed affidavit. Kediesha Bent-John, 35, said she and her daughter
were fingerprinted and forced to give blood and urine samples without their consent before spending the entire detention period locked in a basement room with poor ventilation. She also claimed she was denied food for three days while detained due to her behaviour. She characterised the cramped environment as a “female prison” for adults SEE PAGE SIX
By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net
A MAN was killed yesterday when a woman suspected of fleeing the scene of an earlier car crash was in collision with his vehicle. Chief Superintendent Craig Stubbs said the shocking accident nearly led to an altercation between the female driver and witnesses who believed she was driving recklessly. He said no decision has been made yet about whether any charges would be brought in connection with the accident. “Shortly before 1pm this afternoon,” Supt Stubbs told The Tribune, “police control received a report of a traffic accident at the intersection on Malcolm Road and East Street.” SEE PAGE SEVEN
ALIV AND BTC LINE UP FOR BATTLE By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
MOTHER AND DAUGHTER’S ORDEAL IN DETENTION By AVA TURNQUEST Tribune Chief Reporter aturnquest@tribunemedia.net
‘FLEEING’ DRIVER IN SECOND FATAL CRASH
KEOANTE PINDER, aged 18, being brought to Magistrate’s Court yesterday to be charged with murder. Photos: Shawn Hanna/Tribune Staff
RIVAL firms Aliv and BTC yesterday signalled their readiness to battle it out in the marketplace - with Aliv revealing a massive investor oversubscription, yet facing BTC staff who were “not quaking in our boots” over the firm’s revenue decline. Aliv said it had gained “massive firepower” from its $50m-plus capital raise, which will likely accelerate its growth. Its share issue was more than three times oversubscribed. Meanwhile, Bernard Evans, of the Bahamas Communications and Public Officers Union, said they were “not overly concerned” by the competition. FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS
ALL CHANGE - NEW PROSECUTOR PARACHUTED INTO SMITH TRIAL By NICO SCAVELLA Tribune Staff Reporter nscavella@tribunemedia.net
FORMER PLP Senator Frank Smith’s bribery and extortion trial was adjourned to Wednesday after his lawyer lamented the “shoddiness” surrounding the Crown’s intent to produce additional
FORMER Senator Frank Smith. documents at such a “late stage” in the proceedings connected to its case against
the accused. This came as Crown prosecutor Anthony Delaney, originally the lead prosecutor on the matter, announced that English attorney Edward Jenkins, QC, would be leading the Crown’s case against Smith henceforth. SEE PAGE FIVE
Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper
LIVING WITH THE AFTERMATH OF FOX HILL SHOOTINGS
SEE PAGE EIGHT