Pinder: Sue for $13m over ‘Bahamas papers’

A former financial services minister yesterday suggested that this nation sue to recover the $13 million in Companies Registry search fees owed by the international journalists’ group responsible for the ‘Bahamas papers leak’.

Ryan Pinder described the publication of 1.3 million documents from the Bahamas’ corporate registry back in September as “much ado about nothing”, suggesting that the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) be sued for $13 million in retrieval fees.

The Graham Thompson & Company partner, while making a presentation at yesterday’s Accountant’s Week session, said: “They were only able to get consolidated information, publicly available information, such as the names of directors. It came from the Registrar General’s Department and it’s publicly available.”

Mr Pinder added: “The only problem is the ICIJ has 1.3 million documents, meaning at $10 a search they owe the Government of the Bahamas $13 million. I told the Attorney General we should sue them. They owe us $13 million for taking our information.

“Other than that it is much ado about nothing. There is no adverse affect on the business. I have not lost one client, and I was only asked about it for one day. It’s much ado about nothing, that’s all it is.”

The corporate registry ‘leak’ came five months after the country’s financial services sector was dragged into the spotlight as a so-called ‘tax haven’ in the infamous ‘Panama Papers’ leak.

In the Bahamas’ case, the ICIJ unveiled a free online database created from 1.3 million files from the Bahamas’ corporate registry. Its members circumvented the retrieval fee and incomplete online registry by providing a searchable forum of the directors, and some shareholders, of more than 175,000 Bahamian companies.

Comments

Well_mudda_take_sic says...

Ryan Pinder is an absolute moron. He ought to know full well that the government has absolutely no grounds whatsoever for making a claim against the ICIJ as a result of the leaked info. The ICIJ did not illegally obtain the info and, in any event, only made the info available to the public after it had already been made public in the first place by those who had illegally obtained it by hacking into our registry department's insecure computer systems. I just can't believe this idiot Pinder is now a partner at GTC. It certainly does not speak well of that law firm! His very short stint at Deltec says it all.

Posted 16 November 2016, 2:51 p.m. Suggest removal

Socrates says...

hackers may have accessed the data but it became news when ICIJ posted it so i agree with Pinder, even if a long shot. we need to stop taking everything lying down.. Go Trump!

Posted 17 November 2016, 5:24 a.m. Suggest removal

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