DEREK ACHONG
Senior Reporter
The Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) has discontinued the case against two men charged with murder after it was prevented from utilising the evidence previously given by a deceased eyewitness due to its repeated delays in applying to do so.
Randy "Saroop" Flemming and Okachukwn "Chanka" Moyo were freed by High Court Judge Sherene Murray-Bailey after State prosecutors announced their intention to present no further evidence against them.
The duo was charged with murdering Jason "Rasta Man" Fullerton on March 13, 2009.
Fullerton was walking on a track off Ramsamooj Trace in Marabella when he was shot several times.
The duo was arrested and charged after a woman, Alicia McKenzie, claimed that she saw Moyo and another man shoot Fullerton after Flemming threatened to kill him (Fullerton) earlier that day.
She also claimed that Flemming and another man were present when Fullerton was shot and they ran away with the two shooters.
McKenzie was murdered almost a month after Fullerton.
However, her statements implicating the duo, which she gave to homicide detectives before her death, were used in the duo's preliminary inquiry and during their first trial in 2018.
Their first trial ended in a hung jury with jurors unable to unanimously decide on their guilt or innocence.
During case management hearings in preparation for their retrial, State prosecutors signalled their intention to apply under Section 15C of the Evidence Act to utilise McKenzie's statements again.
After they repeatedly missed extended deadlines for officially filing the application, the case was set for trial.
On the eve of the start of the retrial, the application was filed and prosecutors sought relief from their sanction of not being able to use the statements due to their procedural delays.
They also claimed that the judge did not have the power to impose the sanction.
Delivering a ruling, last Friday, Justice Murray-Bailey rejected the application as she stated that the Criminal Procedure Rules explicitly empowered the court to impose consequences for non-compliance.
“The powers granted to the court are clear, and they include the authority to specify the consequences of failing to comply with directions,” Justice Murray-Bailey said.
“The prosecution has courted these consequences through persistent non-compliance,” she added.
She described the prosecution’s approach as a “tapestry of procrastination” after repeated failures to comply with court orders.
Guardian Media understands that the DPP's Office has already signalled its intent to appeal the ruling over the general ability of judicial officers to impose such sanctions but not specifically how it was applied in the duo's case.
In a statement issued shortly after the DPP's Office announced its decision, yesterday, Flemming's lawyer Kevin Ratiram indicated that he will be filing a malicious prosecution case over what transpired in the case.
Flemming was also represented by Annalee Girwar. Moyo was represented by Stephen Wilson, Shaunelle Hamilton, and Laurina Ramkaran, all from the Public Defenders' Department (PDD).
The DPP's Office was represented by Shervon Noriega and Maria Lyons-Edwards.