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Woman charged after missing girl found at her home

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NASSAU- A woman is facing charges after a missing teenager was allegedly found at her home on April 14.

Prosecutors allege that Allison Forbes, 19, of Blue Hill Road, had the 14-year-old girl from April 9 to 14.

Forbes and the girl reportedly met on Facebook. The child’s family reported her missing after they woke up and found her gone. Some of her clothing was also missing.

Forbes appeared before Chief Magistrate Joyann Ferguson-Pratt on Monday charged with abduction of an unmarried a teenager, an offence that carries a maximum of two years’ imprisonment.

Forbes did not have to enter a plea to the charge and was denied bail.

She returns to court on June 29. At that time, prosecutors intend to fast-track the matter to the Supreme Court by presenting a voluntary bill of indictment.

Woman denies selling forged COVID-19 test results

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NASSAU- A 35-year-old woman has denied selling COVID-19 test results on the black market.

Laderia Russell, of Grantana Subdivision, is accused of supplying travelers with forged negative COVID-19 test results.

Several countries require proof of a recent negative test for travel. But some travelers have managed to travel on forged results purchased for as little as $50.

So far, Russell has denied 40 counts of possession of a forged document at her arraignment before Chief Magistrate Joyann Ferguson-Pratt. Police have laid 160 charges.

Russell returns to court tomorrow for the continuation of her arraignment.

She has been remanded to prison in the interim.

Man pleads guilty to gun 6 murdered men quizzed on

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One of 10 men questioned regarding the seizure of an illegal gun has pleaded guilty.

Police arrested Rashawn Taylor, 25, of Sunshine Park, along with three other men after they found a loaded .45 Smith and Wesson pistol hidden in the trunk of the car they were in on April 13.

Officers had set up a road block at the exit of the Paradise Island bridge. They signaled the car to stop and found the gun, loaded with five rounds of ammunition, under the spare tire.

Taylor told police that he’d found the gun on Cabbage Beach and planned to turn it over to his uncle who’s a policeman.

Though Taylor admitted to owning the firearm on the scene, police later arrested six other men in connection with the discovery.

Those six men were murdered in an ambush on Jerome Avenue on April 15, a short time after police released them without pressing charges.

Taylor, Philip Smith, a 16-year-old boy and Teno Adderley appeared before Chief Magistrate Joyann Ferguson-Pratt on Friday charged with possession of unlicensed firearm and possession of ammunition.

Taylor pleaded guilty and was sentenced to one year in prison.

He could spend an extra year in prison, if he doesn’t pay fines totaling $3,600.

As a result of his guilty plea, the charges were dismissed against his codefendants.

Ex-con accused of second shooting at same bar

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NASSAU- An ex-con has been charged with attempted murder in a shooting that was captured on security cameras.

Tavare Mejias, 44, of Blenheim Road, Stapledon Gardens, is accused of the April 10 shooting of Desmond Smith at a bar on Bethel Avenue.

He did not have to enter a plea when he made his first court appearance before Deputy Chief Magistrate Andrew Forbes on Thursday.

Bail was denied and Mejias is due to return to court on June 7.

Mejias, otherwise known as Lil Spoon, was in 2013 convicted of the attempted murders of two men at the same bar on December 25, 2010. He was sentenced to 10 years in prison, with credit for the one year spent on remand.

According to the evidence, Darvin Forbes and Apricio Fox were sitting at the bar watching a basketball game when Mejias suddenly pulled a gun after eating three “herb cookies”. Mejias shot Forbes before turning the gun on Fox.

Both men said they had known Mejias all their lives.

However, Mejias maintained his innocence. The Court of Appeal upheld his conviction and sentence in 2014.

6 men killed after leaving police station

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NASSAU- Six men were killed in an ambush shooting soon after they left the Wulff Road Police Station Thursday.

A 19-year-old woman and a two-year-old girl who were in another vehicle were also critically wounded in the crossfire. They remain in hospital.

One of the dead men is Renardo “Crack Teeth” Bastian, the reputed leader of the Kemp Road-based Crack Nation gang.

Also dead are Maurice Pinder, 21; Travis Cooper, 25; Delano Smith, 34; Dequant Brown and Kendal Lord, 30.

Bahamas Court News understands police arrested Bastian and the men on Tuesday regarding a firearm investigation. However, they were released without being charged on Thursday afternoon.

Gunmen, armed with assault rifles, and apparently aware of their movements, riddled their Honda Inspire with bullets at the juncture of Jerome Avenue and Chesapeake Avenue before 5pm. The wounded driver lost control of the Inspire and ran into bushes.

Police said that they hope that surveillance footage from nearby business would assist in the investigations.

Police Commissioner Paul Rolle also said police would maintain a strong presence, particularly in the Kemp Road area, to minimise the likelihood of retaliatory shootings.

 

 

 

Gang leader killed in shooting

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NASSAU- The reputed leader of the Crack Nation gang was shot dead Thursday afternoon.

Renardo “Crack Teeth” Bastian was killed along with five of his associates in a shooting on Jerome Avenue shortly before 5pm.

Also dead are Maurice Pinder, 21; Travis Cooper, 25; Delano Smith, 34, Dequant Brown, 28, and Kendal Lord, 30.

Bastian’s brother, Alfred “Half Man” Bastian was gunned down at Cooper’s Terrace, in the Kemp Road area, on December 3, 2020.

Another brother, Kino Kelly-Bastian, was also murdered at Kemp Road, in 2017.

Bahamas hanged 13 since independence

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Facts

Although capital punishment remains on the books, just 13 people have been executed in The Bahamas since the country attained independence on July 10, 1976.

In 2000, David Mitchell was the last person sentenced to death. Convicted of the 1994 stabbing deaths of Horst and Traude Jennings as they slept in their home in Abaco, Mitchell was hanged on January 6, 2000. Beautician John Higgs was scheduled to hang on the same day for the 1993 murder of his wife, Joan, the granddaughter of former Governor General Sir Milo Butler. However, two days before his scheduled execution, Higgs committed suicide in his cell by slitting his wrists.

Mandatory death sentenced abolished

On March 8, 2006, Privy Council, the country’s final court, declared the mandatory death penalty unconstitutional in the case of Forrester Bowe of Trono Davis. The highest appellate court said the ultimate punishment was reserved for the most extreme and exceptional cases.

The landmark decision resulted in new sentences for murder convicts, whose death sentences had been deemed unlawful by the court. Davis and Bowe were both re-sentenced to life imprisonment. However, some murder convicts were released as a result of the re-sentencing exercise.

One month after Privy Council outlawed the mandatory death penalty, a judge imposed the death penalty on Maxo Tido for the murder of 16-year-old Donnell Conover on April 30, 2002. She was found dead in a quarry pit off Cowpen Road, with her skull crushed. The Court of Appeal upheld his sentence in 2008, remarking that “the level of homicide has increased substantially” since the 2006 Privy Council decision.

Nonetheless, on June 15, 2011 the Privy Council overturned the sentence after ruling that Donnell’s “appalling” murder could not be considered “the worst of the worst” or the “rarest of the rare.”

In 2012, Tido was resentenced to 60 years in prison, which was reduced to 52 years after taking into account the eight years he had already spent in prison.

Tido appealed against the sentence, and on February 25, 2015 the Court of Appeal substituted a sentence of 40 years’ imprisonment.

Death eligible

In 2011, Parliament defined capital offences: the murder of law enforcement; murder of a juror or judicial officer; contract killings; murders in the course of an armed robbery, murder of kidnapping and if the convict had a previous murder conviction. Despite this, the Bahamian courts have not upheld any death sentences in any of these scenarios.

Parliament also set a sentencing range 0f 30 to 60 years for non-capital offences.

 

 

Third suspect charged in $3.1 million cocaine bust by

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NASSAU- Police on April 14 charged a third suspect in connection with a $3.1 million cocaine bust in Governor’s Harbour, Eleuthera.

Two days after he surrendered to police, Pilot Michael Andrew Taylor, 37, appeared before Deputy Chief Magistrate Andrew Forbes over his alleged involvement in the March 29 cocaine smuggling operation.

Taylor’s alleged co-conspirators appeared in court earlier this month.

Prosecutors allege that Taylor and Brandon Miller, another pilot, conspired with Johnnie Emil, 46, of Rock Sound, Eleuthera to import the cocaine and distribute it.

The pilots alone are charged with drug possession with intent to supply and drug importation.

Taylor, like his alleged co-conspirators, pleaded not guilty to the charges.

Magistrate Forbes granted him $10,000 bail. Taylor will return to court for trial on September 1.

Officers from the Drug Enforcement Unit went to the Governor’s Harbour Airport on March 29 after learning of the alleged drug run, police said.

DEU officers stopped and searched two men who disembarked the target airplane and searched them.

But they didn’t find anything illegal. However, DEU officers later found several cocaine-filled bags in bushes near the airstrip.

Cops hunt third man as 2 charged in $3.1m coke bust

 

Teen dealer admits selling pot edibles at school

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NASSAU-A student of S C McPherson Junior High School has admitted to having pot edibles to sell to classmates.

The 15-year-old admitted the charge of drug possession with intent to supply when he appeared before Juvenile Court Magistrate Kara Turnquest-Deveaux on April 13.

The magistrate ordered a social inquiry report and has adjourned the matter to July 27.

Officers from the Drug Enforcement Unit seized 19 marijuana-infused Rice Krispies treats from the student on March 24.

Police became involved after seven students at the school became sick after they allegedly bought the homemade marijuana edibles from the teenager for $5 each.

Man denies approaching witness in shooting case

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Correction: A photo attached to a previous post misidentified Fenton D Ferguson, 44, as Fenton D Ferguson, 21. They are father and son. We apologize for the error.

NASSAU- A man has denied trying to convince a woman not to testify against his son.

Prosecutors say that Fenton Ferguson, 44, of Spice Street, Pinewood Gardens attempted to get Denise Terveus to agree not to testify in a judicial proceeding.

He pleaded not guilty to a charge of corruption of a witness and was granted $4,000 bail. Ferguson returns to court for trial in July.

Ferguson’s son, Fenron Ferguson, is accused of shooting at Terveus and another woman in a domestic incident on April 4.

Prosecutors intend to fast-track his case to the Supreme Court in May.

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