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Mark Seawell’s extradition hearing begins
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Posted: 06/03/2007 - 10:04 AM
Author: Keisha Milligan

After hearing the preliminary arguments from both sides for Mark Seawell’s extradition hearings, the Chief Magistrate, Margaret Gabb-McKenzie, in courtroom #1 today, scheduled the second appearance for Tuesday, April 3.
 
The United States of America, on November 10 last year, had requested Mark’s extradition, along with that of his brothers – Dwayne, presently in their custody, and Gary Seawell, still being sought by Belize police.
 
In court were Edwin Flowers, Solicitor General, who is representing the US Government; Crown Counsel Bryan Neal; and Senator and attorney Dickie Bradley, representing Seawell.
 
Flowers said that after receiving the extradition request, the Police Department, on February 15, issued a warrant for Mark and Gary’s arrest.
 
Flowers read the charges from a very large compilation of documents, which he said are evidence that will be used in the hearing against the brothers. He said that the US is charging Mark with 10 counts of drug trafficking, money laundering and intent to import drugs into the US between the years 1997-1998.
 
Flowers then requested an adjournment in order to give him time to go through the documents he had received.
 
Bradley said that he had no problem with the adjournment; he only wanted to be certain that his client would not be “spirited” to the US, noting that it had been done in other cases, such as those of George Herbert and Liston McCord, Belizeans who had been wanted on drug trafficking charges in the US.
 
A group of protestors outside had been waiting patiently to see Mark Seawell, who was taken away in a police car, without his supporters even knowing. Among the group of about forty protestors was his young son, who held up a placard saying that he needed his father.
 
Mark Seawell’s cousin, Eleanor Enriquez, said that she is upset not just over the fact that her cousin was detained, but the fact that they were not given formal visits until Thursday, March 1 the day before Seawell’s court hearing.
 
“The visits are arranged at three times a week and we believe that is unfair to us. If they want to extradite him, we won’t be able to see him anymore. So at least while he is in the country we want to see him, and I think that is his right and our right. ... They don’t say anything to us, they just tell us that he cannot have visits and he is in sanction and I don’t understand why.”
 
“We don’t want anybody to believe that Mark is going to America willingly; I want you to know that he is not agreeing to this at all, he wants to take his proper course through the court.”


Last Edition
More questions than answers in murder of Christopher Galvez, 23
• Galvez’ family upset with police’s behavior; Ministry of National Security appoints inquiry team... The first of four murders in the Christmas season is perhaps the most puzzling. A 23-year-old man with everything to live for went out with a friend, ostensibly on an errand, but ended up dead, leaving his 1- year-old son orphaned and his family grieving.
Jim Baxter, rest in peace
• Jim Baxter died today. His real name and picture are in Sports, sin and subversion. I’m glad now that I got the chance to talk to him before the book went to press. Jim Baxter was one of the football personalities who made the MCC Grounds such a wonderful, exciting experience on weekends in the 1960s and 1970s. He loved football and he lived football.
“Panta” gunned down at family’s apartment during evening news
• Residents of the Ebony and Sarstoon Street area continue to struggle with the crushing loss of a prominent sportsman and area resident to gunfire shortly after the Christmas weekend.
Lusby Martinez, 25, the alleged grenade thrower, is charged with murder
• With his head bent low to avoid the media’s cameras that were focused on him, Lusby Martinez was escorted from the police holding cell to the #1 Magistrate’s Court, where he appeared in front of Chief Magistrate, Margaret Gabb-McKenzie, who arraigned him on a single count of murder and other related charges in connection with the City’s fifth grenade incident that claimed a minor’s life in the Kraal Road area of the city.
Standstill at Tower Hill
• Sugar cane deliveries are again at a standstill today, as things took an unfortunate turn at about 1:10 this afternoon, when the Belize Sugar Industries at Tower Hill, Orange Walk, lost power, reportedly after transformer failure.
Gold, silver, lead at Chiquibul
• Caribbean company explores... Belize, particularly the Cayo District, is being explored for its store of precious metals, such as gold and silver, as well as lead and other associated metals—tin and zinc. How much of these metals are buried underneath the surface of the Chiquibul area in western Belize is uncertain, but a letter dated August 15, 1978, made available to our newspaper recently, suggests that there may be more “wealth untold” in The Jewel than Belizeans know.
From The Publisher
• I asked four of UBAD’s former officers to sit with me on New Year’s Day morning. These were Galento X Neal, Ismail Shabazz, Rufus X and Wilfred Nicholas, Sr. These men had joined with me in hosting Norman “Imamu” Fairweather, another former UBAD official, at a dinner in September last year. (Norman lives in New York.) I reported to you on that September reception, pointing out that it was of a social rather than an organizational nature.
In remembrance of Arthur Innis Barrow
• Mr. Arthur Innis Barrow, Senior Pharmacist of the Ministry of Health, was the son of Ebenezer Oliver Bunting Barrow, an able public officer in British Honduras, and his wife, Iris, the first lady of the south side, whose love and devotion to her family and neighbours calmed the rambunctious and disorderly conduct of the visitors of the famous “Water Lane,” and the charming and beautiful neighbours on both sides of the canal.
Female lawyers battle for Belize
• While the men lawyers line up to follow di money, women lawyers in Belize battle for justice. Add the name of Mrs. Audrey Matura Shepperd alongside Ms. Lois Young (the battle for BTL), Ms. Antoinette Moore (the battle for the rights of our brothers and sisters in Toledo), and Mrs. Candy Gonzalez (the battle for clean water, and the rights of river dwellers).
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