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Home Letters

Makes no sense going to court to prosecute an accused with a weak case  

Staff Reporter by Staff Reporter
July 25, 2021
in Letters
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Dear Editor

There seems to be a drastic problem within the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP). From 6th October, 2020 to now, there have been no less than thirteen (13) cases of serious offences which have been dismissed by various Courts because of No Case Submissions.

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These included ten murder cases involving fourteen accused, one case of armed robbery involving three persons accused of attempting to rob the Republic Bank on Water St., one case of threatening to bomb the University of Guyana and one case of causing death by driving.

In each of these instances, the case was dismissed or discharged because the defence said they had no case to defend as the prosecutors had failed to produce enough evidence against the defendants. This means that the DPP’s Office failed to produce enough evidence for the cases against the defendants to warrant the continuance of the trial, with the judges or magistrates agreeing to the No Case Submissions presented.

Why is the DPP’s Office wasting valuable resources by taking to trial these cases which are lacking sufficient evidence? Prosecutors working in that Office are highly trained lawyers who represent the State in seeking justice. However, it is unjust for persons to be: arrested, charged and in many cases remanded to prison (for many years), only to be freed because of a No Case Submission.

The website for the DPP’s Office states that while it does not conduct investigations into criminal offences, it provides legal advice to the various law enforcement agencies. The website continues: “We give personal and individualized attention to each police file, sifting through thousands of statements annually because each case is important to us as it is to you. We are committed to: hard work, service, justice, transparency and integrity.  We work to ensure that justice is done in each case.”

Therefore, the DPP’s Office should be advising the law enforcement agencies, that where necessary, they need to have stronger evidence provided, before the accused can be brought to Court. It makes no sense going to Court to prosecute an accused with a weak case.

Thirteen cases of serious criminal offences within a year, being thrown out of Court for a lack of evidence, is a serious indictment of the DPP’s Office. It would appear that the DPP’s Office has not been providing excellent legal advice to the law enforcement agencies and in so doing, damaging Guyana’s legal system.

Regards

Jonathan Yearwood

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