Former Attorney General Anil Nandlall called in for questioning by SOCU

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Former Attorney General Anil Nandlall

…in relation to missing law books

Inews was reliably informed that the Special Organized Crime Unit (SOCU) has called in former Attorney General Anil Nandlall for questioning as it relates to missing law books.

The books in question are the Commonwealth Law Books that were housed at the Legal Affairs Ministry on Carmichael Street. An audit had been launched into the matter and came up empty.

Nandlall had repeatedly said that the books were part of his service, an assertion backed up by former President Donald Ramotar.

Attorney General Basil Williams, SC, had indicated to the media on several occasions that charges are looming against Nandlall, who had accused Williams of victimisation for criticizing his performance.

However, Williams had posited that whether or not his predecessor is critiquing his work as the Attorney General, Nandlall will have to face criminal charges nonetheless.

“He (would) say that because he is attacking me, that I’m retaliating,” the Attorney General told media operatives. “Mr Nandlall has stolen Government property and he will be charged, whether he attacks me now or never!”

Responding to this statement, Nandlall had declared at a press briefing that he has gone too long ignoring the utterances of the Attorney General, and will take legal action against him.

In April, Nandlall kept his word and sued AG Williams for $125 million in compensation for the “considerable distress, anxiety and public humiliation” he reportedly faced by the utterances from Williams in relation to the missing law books.

Nandall in his court action outlined statements that Williams made, such as “Nandlall stole government property…the law books…he still has the law books and he will get lock up for the law books and anyone who claim they gave him permission to steal the law books will get locked up as well because there is no immunity for stealing and doing criminal acts in this country”, among others as reasons for his ‘distress and anxiety’.

According to the former Attorney General, during the transition process following the 2015 Elections, he had informed Williams of the arrangement with the State, to which Williams had reportedly responded by saying he wished that he, too, had had a subscription, so that the State could pay for it as well.

Nandlall has previously explained that when he was appointed Attorney General, he requested as part of his contract of service for the Government of Guyana to stand the expense for his subscriptions for the Commonwealth Law Books. He had subscribed to Lexis Nexis, the publishers of the Law reports.

He said the issue of the “missing books” was raised months later, after he had begun criticising Williams’s work. “He said to me in the National Assembly one day that unless I stopped my public criticism of him, he would make this allegation about missing law books, and I said to him, ‘Go ahead’.”

Moreover, Nandlall had posited that the most recent utterance by the AG Williams — of charges to be filed against him — coupled with similar pronouncements made by Public Security Ministry Khemraj Ramjattan ahead of the arrests of several former prominent Government officials by the Special Organised Crime Unit (SOCU) earlier this month, reflects a larger picture of Government’s policy in relation to the Opposition.

“We have informed the international community that democracy (in Guyana) is under threat; that if a person is critical of the Government or critical of a Minister, then he exposes himself to trumped up criminal charges and persecution,” Nandlall had outlined.

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