JavaScript is disabled in your web browser or browser is too old to support JavaScript. Today almost all web pages contain JavaScript, a scripting programming language that runs on visitor's web browser. It makes web pages functional for specific purposes and if disabled for some reason, the content or the functionality of the web page can be limited or unavailable.

Tuesday, May 20, 2025

CCJ denies special leave application for Guyana Defence Force members

by

662 days ago
20230728
CCJ

CCJ

The Trinidad-based Caribbean Court of Jus­tice (CCJ) has de­nied spe­cial leave to mem­bers of the Guyana De­fence Force (GDF) who were seek­ing to chal­lenge the con­sti­tu­tion­al­i­ty of the death penal­ty.

Two GDF mem­bers, Sher­wyn Harte and De­on Greenidge had sought per­mis­sion to ap­peal the sen­tence im­posed by the Court of Ap­peal up­on them and to chal­lenge the con­sti­tu­tion­al­i­ty of the death penal­ty it­self.

Harte, Greenidge and an­oth­er un­named GDF mem­ber were in­dict­ed in 2013 un­der the Crim­i­nal Law Of­fences Act (CLOA) for the mur­der of Dwieve Kant Ram­dass, who was killed on 20 Au­gust 2009.

The three sol­diers robbed Ram­dass of GUY$17 mil­lion (One Guyana dol­lar=US$0.004 cents) and threw him over­board where he drowned. They then pro­ceed­ed to di­vide the stolen mon­ey among them­selves equal­ly.

The three men were sen­tenced to death on a manda­to­ry ba­sis, pur­suant to the un-amend­ed sec­tion 100 of the CLOA, All three ap­pealed their con­vic­tions. Harte and Greenidge al­so ar­gued that the death penal­ty was an un­con­sti­tu­tion­al pun­ish­ment, and the At­tor­ney Gen­er­al par­tic­i­pat­ed as an in­ter­ven­er to re­but that ar­gu­ment.

The Court of Ap­peal up­held the con­vic­tions but agreed that the orig­i­nal death sen­tences should be va­cat­ed and re­placed by life sen­tences and that the two men should serve 18 years in prison be­fore be­ing el­i­gi­ble for pa­role.

But Harte and Greenidge sought per­mis­sion to ap­peal this sec­tion of the judg­ment to the CCJ. Greenidge al­so sought per­mis­sion to ap­peal his con­vic­tion on the ground that the ev­i­dence against him con­sist­ed sole­ly of the con­tents of his cau­tion state­ment, which did not dis­close any pri­or plan to mur­der or par­tic­i­pate in the mur­der of the de­ceased.

Harte and Greenidge al­so sought to ob­tain an or­der from the CCJ de­clar­ing the death penal­ty to be “un­con­sti­tu­tion­al” and, there­fore, could not be law­ful­ly im­posed in Guyana on any­one.

But in its rul­ing, the CCJ, Guyana’s high­est and fi­nal court, took the view in re­la­tion to Greenidge’s con­vic­tion, that he did not es­tab­lish any re­al­is­tic pos­si­bil­i­ty that there had been a mis­car­riage of jus­tice.

The CCJ ruled that there was am­ple ev­i­dence in the cau­tion state­ment and the cir­cum­stan­tial ev­i­dence on which a ju­ry, prop­er­ly di­rect­ed, could have reached the con­clu­sion that Greenidge was par­ty to the joint en­ter­prise to rob and mur­der the de­ceased.

The Court al­so not­ed that there was no ev­i­dence of any at­tempt by Greenidge to as­sist the de­ceased when he was in dis­tress or oth­er­wise to dis­as­so­ci­ate him­self from par­tic­i­pat­ing in the heinous crime against a cit­i­zen of the Re­pub­lic whose safe­ty he had sworn to pro­tect.

Re­gard­ing the con­sti­tu­tion­al­i­ty of the death penal­ty, the CCJ ruled that Harte and Greenidge faced no threat of ex­e­cu­tion, so the ar­gu­ments raised on this is­sue were pure­ly aca­d­e­m­ic in na­ture. It reaf­firmed that the Court will on­ly hear aca­d­e­m­ic ap­peals in ex­cep­tion­al cir­cum­stances.

Harte and Greenidge al­so took is­sue with some of the rea­son­ing of the Court of Ap­peal re­gard­ing the death penal­ty be­ing a “saved law” from the colo­nial era. The CCJ re­mind­ed that it had ex­pound­ed clear views on the is­sue of the sav­ings clause and nat­u­ral­ly, if there is any vari­ance be­tween those views and the rea­son­ing of the Court of Ap­peal, the views of this Court must pre­vail.

Harte and Greenidge al­so con­tend­ed that the Court of Ap­peal did not ad­here to the prop­er sen­tenc­ing method­ol­o­gy in va­cat­ing the death penal­ty and im­pos­ing life sen­tences with tar­iffs. The CCJ, bear­ing in mind that the of­fend­ers were mem­bers of the De­fence Force who robbed and mur­dered an in­no­cent cit­i­zen, found that there was no ground for re­gard­ing the sen­tence im­posed as ex­ces­sive or so man­i­fest­ly out­side the main­stream of sen­tences as would mer­it grant­i­ng leave to ap­peal it.

Fur­ther­more, the Court of Ap­peal had im­posed the min­i­mum sen­tence that it was man­dat­ed to do un­der the CLOA (in­deed less than the min­i­mum of 20 years) and there­fore the ap­pli­cants had no ba­sis for com­plaint.

The CCJ said as a re­sult, the ap­pli­ca­tion for spe­cial leave was dis­missed, with no or­ders as to costs.

PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad, Jul 28, CMC

CMC/ag/ir/2023

Instagram


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored