May 8, 2017 Source
Justice Franklin Holder this morning recused himself from presiding over Carvil Duncan’s challenge to his suspension as Public Service Commission Chairman.
Prime Minister Moses Nagamootoo last Friday authorised Attorney General Basil Williams, SC, to request that Justice Holder recuses himself, in the light of his fear that he would not receive a fair hearing.
However, Williams did not appear before Justice Holder this morning. Instead, he was represented by Attorneys Judy Stuart-Adonis and Collene Liverpool.
Nagamootoo’s letter, which was released by Williams’s confidential secretary, had said that due to the alleged courtroom confrontation and the judge’s subsequent petition to acting Chancellor Justice Yonette Cummings-Edwards, he was of the opinion that “neither the state nor, I will receive a fair hearing in the matter.”
At the last hearing on March 23, Justice Holder rose from the bench in the middle of an exchange with Williams without adjourning the matter.
Justice Holder, in his formal complaint to her, made it clear that he would not be hearing Williams as an attorney unless he apologises in open court for his conduct. Williams, for his part, responded to the judge’s complaint in a letter to President David Granger and he made it clear that he saw no reason for an apology.
Nagamootoo, in his letter, which was also sent to President Granger, Justice Cummings-Edwards and acting Chief Justice Roxane George-Wiltshire SC, listed three reasons for him concluding that he would not receive a fair hearing.
First, he noted that the judge had the power to handle the alleged incident between himself and the Attorney General amicably in court instead of retiring to his chambers without the formal rising of the court. Second, he pointed to the judge’s petition to the acting Chancellor requiring Williams to compulsorily apologise in open court before the continuation of the matter; and third, the forwarding of the said petition by the acting Chancellor to President Granger, who is also a party to the case brought by Duncan.
“Based on all the above-mentioned grounds, I am of the opinion that I would be prejudiced in the suit because my attorney is barred from being heard in the matter,” he wrote.
As a result, he said he was authorising Williams to request that the judge recuses himself from further hearing the matter.