JAMAICAN MAN LOCKED UP FOR 9 YEARS WITHOUT TRIAL GIVEN $125K

By LAMECH JOHNSON

#A JUDGE yesterday ordered the immediate release of a Jamaican national who was shuffled back and forth between the former Her Majesty’s Prison and the Carmichael Road Detention Centre for more than nine years without trial on sexual assault, housebreaking and murder charges.

#Matthew Sewell, 27, appeared before Senior Justice Stephen Isaacs on a habeas corpus application seeking to challenge the state’s legal basis for holding him at the Detention Centre since November 2014 after the last of four criminal charges was dismissed against him in the Supreme Court.

#“Given the circumstances described, including the background, what I’m minded to order today, with a written judgment to follow, is that the respondent, having conceded that the committal order is irregular, a habeas corpus is issued,” the judge said.

#The judge ordered that Mr Sewell be released from detention immediately, his travel documents be returned to him immediately and he be allowed 60 days to resolve his legal status in The Bahamas upon making an application to the Immigration Department.

#The judge also awarded Mr Sewell legal costs for the application “to be taxed if not agreed.”

#When asked for his response to the ruling of Senior Justice Isaacs, Mr Sewell’s lawyer, Fred Smith, QC, told The Tribune: “The Bahamas is not Guantanamo Bay.”

#“You can’t just arrest thousands of people, never take them before a court, hold them in some cases like Mr Sewell for up to nine years and not expect consequences. We have to stop trying to reinvent the wheel. These same cases were dealt with in the 1980s, and 1990s.”

#Mr Sewell’s ordeal started back in June 2006 when, at the age of 18, he was granted three weeks stay to visit his father in the Bahamas before finding himself accused of raping a six-year-old girl. Yesterday he told The Tribune that he feels “very good” at the outcome of the hearing.

#“I feel so very good. I thank God for everything. I am thankful for Fred Smith and everybody who support me,” he said, including his father Clive Sewell, relatives and friends on that list.

#Speaking to his nine years in and out of the legal system, the 27-year-old said “it was awful and bad and inhumane.”

#“I don’t like it (but) I thank God for everything,” he said.

#Mr Smith confirmed Mr Sewell’s intention to take civil action against the government.

#“I guarantee you that Mr Sewell is going to sue for substantial damages, for assault, battery, false imprisonment, malicious prosecution, especially charging him with a murder count when he was already in Fox Hill (at the prison),” Mr Smith said.

#“That was completely malicious just to try and keep him under prosecution but I’m so very pleased that the judge was able to give a ruling very quickly and I’m very much looking forward to the full judgment which I hope will help to guide the immigration authorities on the lawfulness of all these thousands of arrests and detentions in which people are simply never taken before a court.”

#Mr Smith cited the historic case of Atain Takitota, which he relied on in his submissions yesterday, where the Japanese man was awarded more than $1 million in damages for his unlawful detention.

#Arriving in the Bahamas from Osaka, Japan in August 1992, Mr Takitota was granted permission to remain in the country for one week.

#During the same month, after losing all of his money and documents, he was arrested on Paradise Island for vagrancy and detained at Her Majesty’s Prison until October 2000, without being charged or tried.

#Once released, Mr Takitota successfully sued the government and was awarded $1,000 for his unlawful detention. Following an appeal to the Court of Appeal in 2006 and the Privy Council in 2009, it was determined that his compensation was insufficient and the Court of Appeal was ordered to increase the amount to reflect his eight years in prison and the suffering and damage that was caused.

#In 2009, the Court of Appeal increased compensatory damages to $500,000 and kept exemplary damages to $100,000. A 10 per cent interest per year on the eight years Mr Takitota spent in custody was also awarded by the court.

#Kendra Kelly, the Crown’s respondent for yesterday’s hearing, argued that the legal basis for Mr Sewell’s detention had been set out in the applicant’s own affidavit filed to the Supreme Court in May of this year.

#She highlighted that on June 20, 2006 he was accused of raping a six-year-old girl who lived next door to where he was residing during his visit. He was not released from custody until May 2008 when he was granted bail until his trial.

#He was accused of raping his girlfriend in April 2009, nearly a year later, and was not released on bail for that matter until August 2013.

#Two months later, he was arrested and charged with housebreaking and in March 2014 charged with murder.

#By the time of his scheduled appearance before Justice Bernard Turner on October 31, 2014 concerning the murder case, the remaining cases he had pending were dismissed after years of awaiting trial.

#The murder charge too was dismissed against him, however, he was turned over to the Detention Centre instead of being released.

#Ms Kelly argued that this history disputes Mr Smith’s claim that his client was in custody for some nine years as there were periods in between in which Mr Sewell was on bail.

#“It is only in November 2014 after the applicant appeared before Justice Turner that the applicant was in detained in custody and that was the subject of the committal order,” Ms Kelly said.

#The Crown representative said the Immigration Department was given power by the Immigration Act to detain any person found wanting, without or undeserving of legal status.

#“I haven’t heard you say he’s been convicted of anything,” Senior Justice Isaacs said.

#“I’m not seeking to say that, but based on the facts (since) his entry into the Bahamas, he has been accused and charged with a number of offences,” Ms Kelly explained.

#“Unless he was tried and convicted, in my view, he was wrongly accused,” the judge said.

#“I know there are reasons why cases are not heard but it doesn’t make him guilty of anything. It may make the authorities guilty of something,” the judge said.

#The judge asked the respondent if she accepted Mr Smith’s argument that the government’s committal order against Mr Sewell had no legal framework or existence in the Immigration Act.

#“I will acknowledge there are some issues with the committal order,” Ms Kelly said.

#“Can you name them?” Senior Justice Isaacs asked.

#“The first is that the Immigration Act doesn’t speak to a Section 19(4). It doesn’t speak to a committal order,” she noted, adding that the other was the period of proposed detention being stated “as unknown.”

#“A deportation order should’ve been issued but the Department of Immigration sought to expedite the process by speaking to his father in making arrangements for his return to Jamaica.”

#The judge said the father was not legally responsible or obligated to do so nor was the state able to make such requests of an individual they were detaining.

#“Our government spends tons of money on repatriations every year,” the judge said.

#Ms Kelly noted that even if the court ordered the release of Mr Sewell, the Immigration Department still had the authority to detain him because he still has no status to be in the country.

#“Are you suggesting it would make more sense to keep him in custody?” the judge asked.

#Ms Kelly said Mr Sewell’s expired passport complicated the issue.

#Mr Smith replied that Mr Sewell’s issue was a simple fix in that the judge could order his release and allow him time to either apply for some status in the Bahamas – as Mr Takitota was allowed – or allow him to renew his passport so that he could return to Jamaica and pursue his dream of joining the military.

#Senior Justice Isaacs ultimately ruled that Mr Sewell’s detention was not justified and ordered his immediate release and two months to resolve his status dilemma.

SEWELL

Jamaican Detained Without Trial Is Awarded $125,000

#A JAMAICAN who spent nine years in and out of prison and the Carmichael Road Detention Centre without trial was awarded a $125,000 settlement in Supreme Court yesterday.

#Matthew Sewell made a return appearance before Senior Justice Stephen Isaacs who, last October, ordered his immediate release from the detention facility.

#Yesterday’s status hearing was held to update the judge concerning ongoing discussions between counsel for Mr Sewell and the Crown on an appropriate amount in damages and taxation for the time he was detained at the Department of Correctional Services and the Detention Centre without trial.

#Fred Smith, QC, and Crown representative Greg Francis confirmed that the parties had agreed on $125,000 being an appropriate settlement. The court accepted the agreement and said interest will be applied until full restitution is made to Mr Sewell.

#Mr Sewell, 28, spent nine years in and out of the prison system; however he was never tried on any of the charges he faced.

#The Jamaican was first arrested in 2006 for the alleged rape of a six-year-old girl. He was in the country visiting his father at the time. He was released on bail in 2008, but was arrested in April, 2009, and charged with the alleged rape of a girlfriend.

#He received bail for that charge in August, 2013, only to be arrested two months later for allegations of housebreaking and murder. However, those charges were thrown out in 2014 when it was found that Mr Sewell was in custody when the alleged crimes occurred.

#However, he was later detained at the Carmichael Road Detention Centre.

#In addition to ordering his immediate release last October, Senior Justice Isaacs further ordered that he have his travel documents returned to him and be allowed 60 days to resolve his legal status in the Bahamas upon making an application to the Immigration Department.

2 thoughts on “JAMAICAN MAN LOCKED UP FOR 9 YEARS WITHOUT TRIAL GIVEN $125K

  1. My eyebrows are raised on this one…either he is a serial rapist and a murderer or he just has the worst luck in the world…

    I would watch this one like a hawk especially around women and kids..consider it nine years served for crimes that he very well may have committed. Only he and God knows.

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