LISTEN: PM Says DPP Should Explain Controversial Decisions to Avoid Claims of Political Influence

Browne Says DPP Must Explain Controversial Decisions to Maintain Public Confidence
Prime Minister Gaston Browne has challenged Director of Public Prosecutions Clement Joseph’s reported assertion that he is not obligated to explain the exercise of prosecutorial discretion, arguing that public officials have a responsibility to provide explanations when controversial decisions raise concerns among citizens.
Speaking on his weekly radio programme on Saturday, Browne said while the DPP enjoys constitutional independence, that independence should not be interpreted as immunity from public accountability.
WATCH:
Browne said when asked about comments attributed to Joseph. “He’s right in terms of his independence. He’s right in terms of his constitutional authority.”
However, the prime minister said the public has a legitimate interest in understanding decisions that generate widespread concern, particularly in high-profile criminal matters.
“When you have situations in which the public becomes concerned about certain decisions, he has an obligation to allay the fears and to provide, at least, a level of justification for his decisions, obviously without revealing confidential information,” Browne said.
Joseph recently stated that the Constitution grants him discretion over criminal prosecutions and that he is not required to justify the exercise of that discretion to the public. Browne suggested the DPP may have been misquoted but said that if the comments were accurately reported, they reflected a troubling approach to public accountability.
“Maybe he didn’t say it in that way,” Browne said. “So in my response to him, I gave him the benefit of the doubt that possibly he was misquoted. But if indeed he did respond in that way and show some level of contempt for the public, maybe that was not his intention, but he came across in that way.”
The prime minister argued that all public officials are accountable in some form, regardless of the independence of their offices.
“Even though he has some level of independence and independent authority, he’s not an authority unto himself,” Browne said. “The authority and independence that he has, they’re not absolute.”
Browne contrasted Joseph’s position with his own approach as prime minister.
“I come here on a Saturday not only to inform the public but also to give account of my stewardship,” he said. “I don’t see how DPP could take the position that he’s not accountable to the public.”
The prime minister’s criticism was closely linked to public reaction surrounding recent narcotics-related cases in which prosecutions were discontinued.
Browne said the controversy was not necessarily about the decisions themselves but rather the absence of an explanation that could reassure the public and prevent speculation.
Referring to one matter involving an ill female prisoner, Browne noted that existing procedures already allow for compassionate release or sentence commutation through a process involving the prison superintendent, the Attorney General and ultimately the Governor General.
“There’s a formal process in place already to commute people’s sentences,” Browne said. “Sometimes based on good behavior.”
He suggested that if the circumstances surrounding the woman’s health had been publicly explained, many of the concerns could have been avoided.
“I had a report, for example, from the prison superintendent who said that this lady is not in the kind of health condition that she could serve time,” Browne said. “Based on the medical reports and the recommendation of the head of the prison, the prison superintendent, I would have acted based on the recommendations and even published a letter.”
“There’s nothing untoward about that,” he added. “What is so confidential about that?”
Browne also referenced a second matter involving a Jamaican national connected to a narcotics case whose prosecution was also reportedly discontinued.
“There’s another gentleman involved in a narco case, a Jamaican gentleman, who also was given a reprieve. He dropped the case,” Browne said. “Now, he may have had good reason or reasons so to do, but he has to be careful.”
While repeatedly emphasizing that he was not accusing Joseph of wrongdoing, Browne warned that a lack of transparency could create the perception that outside influence had affected prosecutorial decisions.
“I understand he’s a man of impeccable integrity,” Browne said. “But the knee-jerk reaction — and already I would have heard people speculating — is that some high-ups would have given him some kind of direction to drop that case.”
The prime minister said such perceptions could damage public trust in the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions and potentially affect Antigua and Barbuda’s international reputation.
“Two sets of people involved in narco-trafficking got a reprieve within the space of a week or two,” Browne said. “What’s going on in Antigua?”
He warned that observers outside the country could draw negative conclusions about the administration of justice if controversial decisions are left unexplained.
“You have people in other capitals, especially the U.S. and so on, who look at us and say, ‘Wait, hold on. Two sets of people involved in narco-trafficking got a reprieve within the space of a week or two.’”
According to Browne, transparency does not require the disclosure of confidential information but rather enough information to assure the public that decisions are being made for legitimate reasons.
“He needs to allay the fears rather than to come across as haughty and unaccountable, telling people he doesn’t have to account to them,” Browne said. “By so doing, he could damage the confidence and trust in himself as DPP.”
The prime minister concluded by directly rejecting the notion that the DPP has no obligation to explain controversial decisions.
“All I’m saying to the DPP is be sensitive to the fact that those kinds of decisions even go beyond you in terms of consequences,” Browne said. “You’re wrong, you’re dead wrong, to say that you’re not accountable to the public.”
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