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Wednesday, June 18, 2025

Opposition MP deeply concerned about AG’s memory

by

Gail Alexander
1091 days ago
20220622
Chaguanas West MP Dinesh Rambally.

Chaguanas West MP Dinesh Rambally.

Office of the Parliament

At­tor­ney Gen­er­al Regi­nald Ar­mour’s lat­est state­ment on his dis­qual­i­fi­ca­tion from a Mi­a­mi court in re­la­tion to a Pi­ar­co In­ter­na­tion­al Air­port fraud mat­ter has raised more ques­tions than it has an­swered, ac­cord­ing to Op­po­si­tion MP Di­nesh Ram­bal­ly.

Ram­bal­ly has al­so ex­pressed deep con­cern about Ar­mour’s mem­o­ry af­ter the AG ex­plained that he de­tailed his in­volve­ment in the Pi­ar­co Air­port case based on his “best rec­ol­lec­tion.”

“Mr Regi­nald Ar­mour, SC, has failed his Of­fice, the Gov­ern­ment and peo­ple. His con­duct as a lawyer, and more so as an At­tor­ney Gen­er­al, war­rants ad­mo­ni­tion and re­buke,” Ram­bal­ly said af­ter Ar­mour broke his si­lence on Mon­day via a me­dia re­lease, af­ter his ini­tial re­sponse to con­cerns.

Ram­bal­ly added: “The Law As­so­ci­a­tion’s con­tin­ued si­lence would be per­plex­ing and rep­re­hen­si­ble in light of (his) sec­ond re­lease.”

Ar­mour sought to ad­dress con­cerns re­volv­ing around his in­volve­ment in the Mi­a­mi civ­il case on mat­ters stem­ming from the Pi­ar­co In­ter­na­tion­al Air­port probe.

The Mi­a­mi courts in May dis­qual­i­fied him from that.

Ar­mour pre­vi­ous­ly rep­re­sent­ed Bri­an Kuei Tung in crim­i­nal pro­ceed­ings on the Pi­ar­co mat­ter but stat­ed on af­fi­davit that he had a ju­nior role when, in fact, he had a greater in­volve­ment. The AG ex­plained ear­li­er this week that at the time, he was re­call­ing events some 14 years ago and at the time of sign­ing the af­fi­davit, he was on va­ca­tion in Eu­rope.

Gov­ern­ment has ap­pealed the dis­qual­i­fi­ca­tion.

Ram­bal­ly said Ar­mour’s lat­est state­ment comes as pres­sure mounts for him to re­sign.

“He con­sid­ers the con­cerns em­a­nat­ing from the pub­lic do­main to be plain­ly le­git­i­mate, now, and not be­fore, as he was tak­ing shel­ter in the sub ju­dice prin­ci­ple,” he said.

“Now that he’s spo­ken, try­ing to ex­plain his glar­ing mis­con­duct in a for­eign court, his sec­ond re­lease has raised more eye­brows and even more ques­tions than it has an­swered.”

He added that Ar­mour’s most re­cent ex­pla­na­tion “ap­pears to be a clever at­tempt to put in the pub­lic do­main what he may have want­ed to have put on the court record” re­gard­ing clar­i­fi­ca­tion on the is­sue.

“He makes ref­er­ence to re­cus­ing him­self from act­ing on T&T’s be­half. But his first me­dia state­ment makes clear he was ‘walled off’ from cer­tain as­pects of the case, while he kept con­trol of oth­ers. One would hard­ly call that re­cusal,” Ram­bal­ly said.

“He al­so stat­ed his pri­or in­volve­ment in Kuei Tung’s de­fence was ‘im­ma­te­r­i­al’ to the ex­tent he re­cused him­self from the mat­ter. Well, the US judge didn’t think so in the least.

“Nei­ther do we in T&T. It goes to the heart of a ‘con­flict of in­ter­est’—the ba­sis of the oth­er par­ty’s suc­cess­ful ap­pli­ca­tion for dis­qual­i­fi­ca­tion.”

Ram­bal­ly added that Ar­mour signed an af­fi­davit con­tain­ing a “brief” de­scrip­tion of his in­volve­ment in Kuei Tung’s de­fence. He said maybe Ar­mour didn’t un­der­stand it was the de­scrip­tion that was meant to be brief, not that his in­volve­ment need­ed to be craft­ed as such.

“In any event, for a per­son who’s qual­i­fied to be the At­tor­ney Gen­er­al, it is dif­fi­cult to imag­ine he could not ap­pre­ci­ate the full im­pli­ca­tion of such an af­fi­davit. In an at­tempt to em­phat­i­cal­ly min­imise his in­volve­ment in Kuei Tung’s de­fence, he goes on to take refuge in his lapse of mem­o­ry.”

Ram­bal­ly said it was in­fan­tile, “to sug­gest that mem­o­ry de­pends on hav­ing your pa­pers with you at all times, or on be­ing in a par­tic­u­lar lo­ca­tion, as such mem­o­ry is ex­pect­ed to dim with ge­o­graph­i­cal dis­tance.”

“More con­cern­ing, how­ev­er, is the AG’s ap­par­ent strug­gle with his abil­i­ty to re­mem­ber and re­tain in­for­ma­tion,” Ram­bal­ly added.

He al­so ques­tioned:

Does the AG re­mem­ber cross-ex­am­in­ing per­sons in the mat­ter?

“If no, we should be wor­ried. If yes, we should be con­cerned. Can Ar­mour tru­ly ex­pect to jus­ti­fy how he del­e­gat­ed the giv­ing of in­struc­tions to the for­mer AG, in the cir­cum­stances as de­scribed by him?

“The AG in­sin­u­at­ed that whilst on hol­i­day, he couldn’t find a No­tary Pub­lic, so he was on­ly able to sign and email the doc­u­ment with dis­patch. It is not clear whether he meant to say that be­cause of the pres­sure of time, and the ur­gency of the sit­u­a­tion, his mem­o­ry failed, and he ren­dered an in­ac­cu­rate af­fi­davit,” Ram­bal­ly said.

He al­so not­ed that it might have made sense for Ar­mour to ap­ply for an ex­ten­sion of time, that is un­less, as Ram­bal­ly put it, the AG didn’t re­call he could have ex­er­cised such an op­tion.

“It still doesn’t ex­cuse him from the stun­ning mis­rep­re­sen­ta­tion of the truth on be­half of the un­wit­ting pop­u­la­tion,” the UNC MP added.


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