A former West End, Negril, pastor, accused of marrying a Canadian woman while he was still married, was freed on Tuesday by a seven-member jury when he appeared in the Westmoreland Circuit Court on a charge of bigamy as well as several other offences.
Ian Samuels, 37, who has been living in Canada since 2009, two years after he married the then 45-year-old Canadian woman in the resort town of Negril on Christmas Eve 2007, was arrested and charged by the Fraud Squad with bigamy, uttering forged documents, conspiracy to uttering forged documents, and possession of a forged document while vacationing on the island early last year.
It is alleged that Samuels used his marriage to his second wife to obtain permanent resident status in Canada. But the jury — comprising four men and three women — after deliberating for almost an hour on Tuesday, unanimously handed down a not guilty verdict on each of the four charges.
The verdict seemingly shocked many people inside the packed courtroom, including Justice Martin Gayle who presided over the seven-day trial. Describing the ruling as “a disgraceful verdict”, Justice Gayle remarked that “no wonder we don’t have any justice in this country,” as he ordered a probe to ascertain if the jurors “were reached”.
“I wonder if they were reached, and I so order an investigation…I really wonder if they were reached.” Justice Gayle also instructed the registrar to communicate copies of the written evidence to the Canadian Embassy.
He told the jurors that they would not be required to do any more jury duty during the present sitting of the Westmoreland Circuit Court. “I am releasing all seven of you for the rest of the term.
You can go and never return here; all seven of you. It is my wish not to see all of you for the rest of the term,” he stressed.
Turning to Samuels, who sat calmly in the prisoners’ dock, as the verdict was handed down, Justice Gayle said “stand up, your seven parishioners say that you are not guilty; a verdict not keeping with the evidence.
can walk, we will catch up with you one day.”
The Jamaica Observer West was unable to get a comment from the foreman of the jury or the other members of the panel about the verdict, as they all hurriedly left the courtroom and quickly disappeared from the precincts of the elegant courthouse.
But an obviously relieved Samuels expressed delight at the verdict. “God see seh mi nuh guilty, a set them set mi up, man. The Lord still in the miracle business,” he told the Observer West, as he thanked his attorney Oniel Brown, whom he said believed from the onset that he was innocent.
Brown was equally pleased.
“It was a good verdict. The jury retired for almost an hour, which means that they considered all the evidence that was brought in the case and, upon their consideration, they came back with an unanimous verdict, and we, the defence for Mr Samuels, are very happy,” he told the Observer West.
The prosecution had argued that Samuels got married to his second wife without divorcing his first, whom he wed in 1999. The union between himself and his first wife produced two children.
Evidence was also tendered during the trial that a year after Samuels tied the knot with the Canadian woman he acquired a certificate stating that he had divorced his first wife.
However the certificate proved to be fictitious, it was revealed in court. But Samuels, in his unsworn testimony from the dock, argued that he was not aware that the document was fictitious.
He told the court that in 2006 he paid a lawyer, who charged him $60,000 to file the divorce papers.
Months later, he said, the lawyer — whose name he said he could not remember — told him that the process was completed. He said he later gave copies of the document to the sister of his first wife.
Samuels added that before he got married to his second wife he told her that “I am going through a divorce, but I was not yet finished paying the money”.
Almost six months after the wedding with the Canadian woman, Samuels said, “the filing came through, I paid off the lawyer, got my visa, and went to live in Canada.”
And in his address to the jury Brown argued that the case is about vengeance.
“You must decide if you want to be a part of the vengeance plot,” said Brown, adding that Samuels’ second wife wanted him to be kicked out of Canada because she saw him with another woman.
Meanwhile, Justice Gayle in his roughly five-hour summation urged the jurors to consider the evidence tendered in court carefully before arriving at a verdict.
“Look at the evidence, look at the exhibits… and come to your true decision and return a true verdict, no less,” Justice Gayle urged. “You must return a true verdict; you must remain true to your oath. It’s not your responsibility about what happens after you return your true verdict.
Your responsibility is to return a true verdict in accordance with the evidence.” During the trial, evidence were also given by a representative of the Supreme Court, the Registrar General’s Department, members of the Fraud Squad, and Samuels’ two wives.
Bigamy is a felony under the Offences Against the Person Act and attracts a maximum penalty of four years, with or without hard labour, on conviction.
Smh….
So, dis case was the reason why Ian did haffe go a yaad so often. What was now a personal crisis is now known to the public. De case tek a toll pon him though, becaw him nevva did look so gray up. Ah hope when him come back a Canada, him can enjoy a game of dominoes, and just chill.
I understand how the Judge became outraged. How can somehow forget the name of a lawyer you hire to file your divorce case? Why not research the information about the lawyer before you come to court? This bigamist was obviously trying to pull one over the jury and was successful.
@ Anonymous, I hear you loud and clear. Also, @ Met, a so mi know say yu dey pon top a tings! Ian’s secrets are out now because mi never did even know say dat him was a Pastor one time, much more a bigamist. A him piccha mi see fe mek mi say “rawtid, nuh Ian dis”. Him quiet and don’t talk much, and mi shock to rawtid wid wey mi see inna de Observer and pon de JMG. Boy oh boy, you don’t know until you know!
A so him want to reach forrin he couldn’t even get a propah divorce. The jury nuh seem righted ah rahtid.