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Antigua: Cop and others accused of passport scam to face trial next month

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(Antigua Observer) Suspended senior police officer Ray John and his two co-accused will be judged next month for the passport scam they are believed to have committed almost four years ago.

John, an assistant superintendent of police, his mother Yvonne Nickie and his then partner Shakema Charles — who was an employee of the Antigua and Barbuda Passport Office — allegedly conspired to forge passports through the unauthorised use of Multi Layered Infilling Sheets (MLIS) belonging to the local passport office.

The offence allegedly occurred sometime between October 28 2014 and April 6 2018.

The Vincentian-born policeman, who was 45 years old at the time of his arrest, is also charged with two counts of larceny. He is accused of stealing 16 of the sheets valued at $1,600 and also receiving them knowing them to be stolen.

John, represented by attorney Dane Hamilton Snr, and the two women who are represented by lawyers Hugh Marshall and Michael Archibald, appeared in the High Court in February 2021 for their arraignment where they maintained that they did not commit the crimes.

Having made another appearance in the High Court yesterday, they were finally given a trial date of March 14 where around 30 pieces of evidence could be tendered.

The alleged passport scam was uncovered early in April 2018 when police in St Vincent and the Grenadines intercepted a man at the airport with five bio pages of Antigua and Barbuda passports, among other items, to include a large quantity of cash.

The collaborative work between the police in St Vincent and Antigua and Barbuda led to ASP John’s arrest.

On April 15 that year, the police pulled his then 63-year-old Vincentian mother from a flight that was set to depart Antigua and Barbuda, just days after lawmen had searched John’s Gunthorpes home and reportedly confiscated a number of items as evidence.

At the time, Nickie was in Antigua visiting her son, and during the search, they were both told by the police not to leave the state, yet she proceeded to attempt to leave.

They were subsequently charged and granted bail, but unlike the first two co-accused in the case, Charles was denied bail and remanded to prison when she appeared before the Chief Magistrate.

She was able to get bail in the High Court sometime after.

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