Turnquest supports email ruling

By AVA TURNQUEST

Tribune Chief Reporter

aturnquest@tribunemedia.net

ALTHOUGH his party has not released an official position, Free National Movement Deputy Leader K Peter Turnquest yesterday expressed support for the court ruling that Education Minister Jerome Fitzgerald could not be protected by parliamentary privilege when he tabled the personal emails of members of Save the Bays.

Mr Turnquest noted that while the court may not have jurisdiction in the matter, he believes that Parliament must do a better job at policing itself.

“I certainly support the principle of parliamentary privilege,” he said.

“Parliament ought to be free to speak with regard to issues that come up with respect to their constituency or matters that affect the government or legislation, and to be able to point out areas of wrong doing and corruption, etc.

“I draw the line, however, when persons’ private conversations are dragged into Parliament for no connected purpose other than to cast aspersions on the reputation of persons who don’t have the same right to defend themselves. In this particular instance the issues go way beyond reputation damage to the individual but potential damage to the country’s financial services industry.

“In as much as the court may not have jurisdiction in this matter,” he said, “I believe the Parliament itself must do a better job in policing itself in terms of what is allowed.”

When pressed for his party’s official position on the matter yesterday, FNM Leader Dr Hubert Minnis told reporters outside the House of Assembly that he had not yet been able to consider the matter.

In her landmark ruling earlier this month, Supreme Court Justice Indra Charles declared that Mr Fitzgerald was not legally justified when he tabled the private emails of environmental action group Save The Bays in Parliament, and therefore could not be protected by parliamentary privilege.

Justice Charles ruled that the Marathon MP’s actions were an infringement of the constitutional rights of the applicants and ordered Mr Fitzgerald to pay $150,000 in damages for the breach.

Mr Fitzgerald was permanently banned from disclosure and publication of any further material belonging to Save The Bays and was ordered to delete all electronic and hard copy material within 14 days of the ruling.

The Office of the Attorney General said that it would appeal the ruling and was granted a stay pending the appeal.

The following day, MPs reacted with outrage in the House of Assembly, with Mr Fitzgerald calling the ruling a “ridiculous conclusion.” But the most severe rebuke came from Marco City MP Greg Moss, who suggested that without Parliament’s “restraint” in addressing the matter, the ruling could lead to a constitutional crisis.

Mr Moss questioned whether Save the Bays was “forum shopping” given that it has had several of its cases before Justice Charles.

“Why are all these controversial cases coming before the same judge?” he asked, prompting parliamentarians to beat their desks in approval. “I’m not able to answer that. That should not be an issue I have to speak to in this House because the Supreme Court is supposed to conduct itself with judicial decorum not to create a constitutional crisis with the Parliament in this country.”

The comments were branded as an egregious insult by Save the Bays’ Legal Director Fred Smith, who pledged to make a formal complaint to the Office of the Attorney General and the Bar Association in an effort to get Mr Moss disbarred.

Bahamas Bar Association President Elsworth Johnson has said the matter shows that parliamentarians must not abuse parliamentary privilege, and cautioned parliamentarians to be responsible.

Outside parliament yesterday, House Speaker Dr Kendal Major said he did not take issue with Mr Moss’ comments but would have to review the transcript to make any further determination.

“The Parliament has its jurisdiction and exclusive cognisance, meaning that we are self-regulating,” Dr Major said. “So Parliament is minding its business and functioning as parliament should.”

When asked for his opinion on Mr Moss’ assertion, Mr Turnquest said: “I thought the comments were on the edge, but he (Mr Moss) being an officer of the court I thought he knew what he was doing. I was little uncomfortable with that.”

Comments

TalRussell says...

Comrade Peter, you can't be for and against something, both at the same time. Common sense mandates that the board of any private or public organization should be the pillar which holds the company or organization up. The late great legal brain Paul L. Adderley, once remained me during a legal opinion sought session over the actions of a company I sat on that collectively be it in times of success or failure each member of the board is the conscience, soul, legs and arms of each and every other director. That no company nor organization walks itself around. Shouldn't this also include shared responsibility inviting great in the 'public domain' controversy?

Posted 9 August 2016, 5:54 p.m. Suggest removal

Voltaire says...

TalRussell - you drunk hey? That didn't make any sense, even by your standards.

Posted 9 August 2016, 9:34 p.m. Suggest removal

Publius says...

> When pressed for his party’s official position on the matter yesterday, FNM Leader Dr Hubert Minnis told reporters outside the House of Assembly that he had not yet been able to consider the matter.

What a louse.

Posted 10 August 2016, 12:12 a.m. Suggest removal

VDSheep says...

Save the bays is a surrogate/agent/proxy for an individual (we should know who is that person) their aim is to make the PLP look bad - because their policies favour that invidual arch enemy! Members of the PLP ought to be careful how and when they respond. They seem to be tied to an FNM affiliation ' obviously - there is no other entity they can use. Still ' all of it is a non-genuine - propaganda blitz sponsored by couple of folks with a lot of money and a niggeradly attitude towards each other..., and in the process they are using the government and opposition in their little game.

Posted 10 August 2016, 10:17 a.m. Suggest removal

licks2 says...

What. . .are you for real? So they can't use the PLP because "that other person" already has it used up? Lol! Child the PLP needs no help from anybody for looking bad. . .Peter Nygard has that job sewed-up! That move in the house through putting private persons information into the public domain in the HOA is a breach of our constitution. . .and yes. . .they seem tied to the FNM party. . .but all this nonsense talk about that foolish move by MP Fitzgerald is pure politics you talking there fella/girl. . . go somewhere with that. . .that move by MP JF is going down in history as the most "boneheaded" move made by any MP in our history to "shut" the mouths of MPs in the HOA!

Posted 10 August 2016, 12:57 p.m. Suggest removal

VDSheep says...

..., and of course they cannot play without the lawyers. There is something terribly wrong with this county.

Posted 10 August 2016, 10:22 a.m. Suggest removal

realfreethinker says...

And that terribly wrong thing in this country is "The PLP"

Posted 10 August 2016, 1:37 p.m. Suggest removal

Well_mudda_take_sic says...

Minnis as PM would be worse by a factor of 100.

Posted 10 August 2016, 3:09 p.m. Suggest removal

birdiestrachan says...

Save the Bays is not what it appears to be. Where is STB getting all of this money from? They bought in a detective from the USA and let us not forget toogie and boggie I may have their names wrong. One of them took fish to roc with Doc.**they were paid.. and how did Doc become involved in all of this. and poor Pintard, Never mind Bostwick he was in this mix also ..

Posted 10 August 2016, 3:53 p.m. Suggest removal

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