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Bizzare wrote:nah, d roles doh ever change between the beater and the beti
rfari wrote:Centric wrote:Da cya be he wife jed...nah. i eh wa believe da. Anand shud be marry to ah ole goat...not Cinderella
~Vēġó~ wrote:looks good....I'd hit it too!!!
AllTrac wrote:who cares? he is indian so he is expected to beat his wife, his wife didnt get de memo orrr?
stupes, idgaf what he does indoors unless he use money from de treasury to buy de belt to cut she ass. lets keep the country issues on the front burner please.
THE SAGA OF SHERIFF DHANRAJ
Friday, October 10 2003
The other side of former UNC Minister Dhanraj Singh first came to public notice in April 1997 when he was charged with assaulting retired Asst. Police Commissioner Norton Registe during a traffic jam on the Solomon Hochoy Highway. He was then MP for Point a Pierre and Local Government Minister. One year later he was again in a clash, this time with workers at Tunapuna Piarco Regional Coropration who accused him of using his gun to intimidate them. According to the workers, Singh rushed on to the premises and let the workers see that he had a gun. Two days later following public outcry against his behaviour then Prime Minster Basdeo Panday ordered Singh to hand in his gun to the police for safe keeping.
Then came October 1998 when accountant Sohaila Omardeen reported to the Gasparillo Police that Singh verbally abused her and threatened to show her his gun while she was on a visit to her Charles Street South Gasparillo home. Singh had gone there to investigate complaints of the cleaning up of the Marie Doleur river which runs at the back of her home. On that same occasion Singh’s wife Leela denied that he was an abusive husband but by November of that same year Singh admitted that he slapped his wife Leela once in their marriage which at the time amounted to 14 years. Singh’s controversial life continued with several battles with PNM controlled regional corporations. He threatened to halt funding at several of these bodies. There were also charges by some men that Singh had summoned them to his constituency office in Marabella where they alleged that they were beaten by members of the Jamaat Al Muslimeen. Singh’s troubles continued when he was sued for $2M by Jerry Narace, Chairman of the PNM controlled Tunapuna Piarco Regional Corporation for allegedly libelous statements against Narace.
http://www.newsday.co.tt/news/0,10341.html
Sabriel wrote:a beta beat ah beti...
eliteauto wrote:what I always find funny, these guys are so litigious that the minute something comes up even when your name is not called you run to dispense pre-action protocol letters, thus cementing in the court of public opinion that you have something to hide. In a country that feeds on mauvais-langue politics (and votes on it too sadly) these guys act like political neophytes and do untold self-inflicted damage to both their character and their case. I personally feel it's a case of being too bright till you dotish. Again the UNC has the worst PR systems ever
I'd suggest the AG speak to Anil or Tim they may have some "experience" in these matters
pioneer wrote:Who say police shakedown on express
2005 wrote:I hope allyuh have court clothes, my daddy izza lawyer
Not a single police report has been filed by Attorney General Anand Ramlogan or his wife, Nalini, following their claims investigative reporter Anika Gumbs impersonated a police officer in pursuing a story.
Even Deputy Commissioner of Police Mervyn Richardson was at a loss when the Express contacted him on Monday on whether an official police report was made against Gumbs.
“I have received no report. Nobody has made any report to me,” Richardson said.
Ramlogan’s attorney, Pamela Elder, SC, in a letter to Express editor-in-chief Omatie Lyder dated September 5, 2013, claimed Gumbs impersonated a police officer to gain access to the Barrackpore home of his in-laws, Samlal and Shantee Nanan, last Wednesday and advised, “She has contravened Section 62 of the Police Service Act Chap 15:01, which provides that any person who ‘in any way pretends to be a police officer for any purpose which he would not by law be entitled to do of his own authority is liable on summary conviction to a fine of thirty thousand dollars and to imprisonment for three years’.”
Gumbs had journeyed to the AG’s Palm Villas home in Palmiste last Tuesday to interview his wife, Nalini, and then to his in-laws’ Barrackpore home last Wednesday.
The Express has proof that Gumbs did not impersonate a police officer nor did she pose as a family member or friend of the family during any of the interviews conducted during the investigation as claimed by the Ramlogans.
And on Monday, checks at the Barrackpore Police Station revealed no police report was made against Gumbs.
Similarly, no report has been made against Gumbs by Mrs Ramlogan at the San Fernando Police Station although in his legal letter to Lyder on September 7, her attorney, Jagdeo Singh, alleged Gumbs posed as a police officer twice, first at Palmiste where the Ramlogans live and then at the home of Mrs Ramlogan’s parents in Barrackpore where Gumbs had gone in pursuit of a story last week.
Singh’s letter also claimed Gumbs impersonated a police officer attached to the San Fernando Police Station when she interviewed Ramlogans’ neighbour Abdel Mohammed.
However, Express records show Gumbs never spoke to Mohammed and did not identify herself as a friend of the Ramlogan family as claimed by the Ramlogans as helper Goomatie Ragbir, who worked with her at the Guardian South Bureau, identified Gumbs to Mrs Ramlogan as a journalist.
The legal letters followed a number of questions that were e-mailed to Ramlogan after Gumbs obtained certain information and was seeking a response from him.
Questions were also sent to Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar relating to the matter, but no response has been forthcoming.
In fact, the PM said on Monday she was standing by her AG until there is evidence to show otherwise.
pioneer wrote:Man busy copy/pasting laws from canada
kurpal_v2 wrote:Centric wrote:Da cya be he wife jed...nah. i eh wa believe da. Anand shud be marry to ah ole goat...not Cinderella
Yuh fadda win that race
matthewmazda wrote:Every day my wife does beat me, licks like peas and me eh report it, cus i love she and rel fraid she
Hahahahahahha dem kinda ting does cause ah man to hornnnnn inno padna:lol::lol::lol: be faithful before u get ah cutarse and yuh cyah sidd down for a weekmatthewmazda wrote:Every day my wife does beat me, licks like peas and me eh report it, cus i love she and rel fraid she
matthewmazda wrote:Every day my wife does beat me, licks like peas and me eh report it, cus i love she and rel fraid she
matthewmazda wrote:Every day my wife does beat me, licks like peas and me eh report it, cus i love she and rel fraid she
Attorney Abdel Mohammed, the neighbour of Attorney General Anand Ramlogan named in a pre-action legal letter as a person interviewed by investigative reporter Anika Gumbs as she pursued a story following certain reports was actually not in the country at the time the letter alleged Gumbs spoke with him at his Palm Villas, Palmiste, home, next to the house the AG shares with his wife, Nalini Ramlogan, Sunday Express investigations have revealed.
Further investigations have shown that Mohammed is an attorney attached to the Freedom Law Chambers in Harris Street, San Fernando.
He is currently vacationing abroad and was out of the country when Gumbs went to the AG’s home two Tuesdays ago.
The law firm was formerly headed by Ramlogan and is now led by attorney Cindy Bhagwandeen.
Mohammed is on record with attorney Kent Samal, who is also attached to the chambers and has represented a number of defendants in matters against the State.
In a legal letter sent to Express editor-in-chief Omatie Lyder on Septem-
ber 7, attorney Jagdeo Singh—who is representing Mrs Ramlogan—alleged Gumbs identified herself as a police officer attached to the San Fernando Police Station when she interviewed Mohammed.
Mrs Ramlogan’s letter followed a similar one sent by attorney Pamela Elder SC, on behalf of the AG, on September 5 to Lyder, threatening legal action if the Sunday Express published “falsities” with regard to information Gumbs was investigating.
The Express, in keeping with sound journa-
listic principles, had earlier embarked on the investigation, following certain reports which led to an interview with Mrs Ramlogan in Palmiste, and another with her parents at their Barrackpore home, where certain questions were asked.
Like her husband, Mrs Ramlogan also alleged Gumbs impersonated a police officer at her parents, Samlal and Shantee Nanan’s, home two Thursdays ago, which would contravene Section 62 of the Police Service Act Chap 15:01.
Two Wednesdays ago, Ramlogan telephoned Lyder, claiming Gumbs had pretended to be looking for a place to rent when she approached his in-laws.
The Express record shows Gumbs did not impersonate a police officer to gain access to the Palm Villas compound and on meeting the AG’s father-in-law, Gumbs said: “Uncle, how are you going, we (identifying photographer Innis Francis) are from the Trinidad Express.”
Gumbs has denied not identifying herself to the AG’s wife and further said she was recognised by the AG’s helper who was at the home at the time and who had worked at the Guardian South Bureau at the same time in the past.
Continuing Sunday Express investigations have uncovered Mohammed has been on vacation for the past two weeks and is out of the country.
He is expected to return to work on September 23.
The Sunday Express record also shows Gumbs never interviewed Mohammed.
And up to Friday, no police report had been filed by Ramlogan, or his wife, following their claims against Gumbs.
In fact, Deputy Commissioner of Police Mervyn Richardson, when contacted last Friday on whether an official police report was made against Gumbs, said, “I have not received any such report.”
Similarly, checks at both the Barrackpore and San Fernando Police Stations showed no report was made against Gumbs.
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