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Home Letters

Beyond Borders: When Corruption Crosses the Caribbean Sea

Admin by Admin
January 7, 2026
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Dear Editor,

“A new wave of controversy has struck the Guyanese government following revelations linking a Florida-based LLC and high-value U.S. properties to Minister Susan Rodrigues. As official documents surface, questions mount over undeclared assets, cross-border money flows, and possible breaches of Guyana’s Integrity Commission laws. This commentary calls for full transparency, independent investigation, and the end of institutional silence in the face of transnational corruption.”

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“Editor people may lie — but not with the precision, persistence, and purpose of a cabal protecting its own.”

Just a day after the Leader of the Opposition revealed documentary evidence from the State of Florida, official records now point directly to an American corporate entity — Revelle Investments LLC — formed on January 16, 2024, naming Susan M. Rodrigues as both Manager and Authorized Person.

That company, according to U.S. state filings, is tied to at least two properties in Broward County, Florida, including a US$540,000 transaction in March 2024. These aren’t political talking points — they are official filings from a foreign government’s public registry, traceable and verifiable by anyone

“This is no longer political debate — it’s about the lawful movement of wealth by a sitting government minister.”

Guyanese law is clear. Under the Integrity Commission Act, every minister and senior public official must declare all holdings — domestic and foreign — in their own name or through any corporate entity. This requirement extends to all assets, liabilities, bank accounts, and beneficial interests of spouses and dependents.

Failure to make complete and truthful declarations constitutes a breach that warrants full investigation and potential prosecution.

So, the questions write themselves —

  • Was Revelle Investments LLC ever declared to the Integrity Commission?
  • Were the U.S. real estate interests included in the Minister’s asset filings?
  • What is the source of funds used to acquire these properties?
  • Through which local or international banks were these transfers routed?
  • Did the Bank of Guyana and Financial Intelligence Unit review or authorize these outbound financial transactions?

If these transactions were not financed by legitimate income, the implications extend beyond ethics into criminal territory. Investigators and the public alike must now consider whether such assets are linked to proceeds of illicit trades — whether drug or gold smuggling—were the diplomatic channels utilized to facilitate their movement? Or were  other money-laundering channels camouflaged through offshore shells and straw ownership structures?

When a public official’s financial footprint expands abroad without transparent, declared income — and without scrutiny from domestic oversight agencies — the line between private enrichment and state capture begins to blur.

Neither SOCU, the Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU), nor the Integrity Commission can continue to  remain silent in this storm, giving rise to suspicions that the hidden hands of power are on the lever. Their mandates exist precisely for such circumstances — to protect the public purse from infiltration, laundering, or conversion of state-linked wealth into private offshore assets.

“Silence from the guardians of integrity is not neutrality. It is complicity by omission.”

Accountability is not an option when 

the  people of Guyana expect clarity. They need to know how a minister — on a public salary — became the principal of a U.S.-registered company linked to high-value real estate. They deserve disclosure of bank trails, property transfers, and corporate records. They are entitled to see that the laws protecting the nation’s ethical framework apply to everyone, not selectively.

This is bigger than one individual. It is a test of the country’s institutions — the Integrity Commission, SOCU, the FIU, and the Bank of Guyana — to prove that the rule of law still means something in public service.

“When corruption learns to travel, it doesn’t pack lightly. It carries our future in its luggage.”

Guyana’s international reputation, its financial systems, and its moral center are all at stake. A full forensic financial audit, cross-border agency cooperation, and transparent disclosure of all holdings tied to public officials must follow — not next year, but now.

Until there are answers, every unanswered question will echo louder than any denial.

When corruption crosses borders and the institutions tasked with oversight cross their arms, the truth itself becomes the next victim.

 

Sincerely, 

Hemdutt Kumar

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