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Ramesh L. Maharaj Brother Might be freed of murder

Postby bluefete » August 10th, 2013, 6:16 pm

Read this then read the Scott Drug Report from back in the day and it will all make sense!

Framed by Miami Vice: British man locked up for murder may walk after stunning new evidence he was set up by bent cops and drug cartels could free him and his loyal wife after 27 years in prison hell


By David Rose

PUBLISHED: 21:00 GMT, 10 August 2013 | UPDATED: 21:07 GMT, 10 August 2013

Across the table at the South Florida Reception Centre, a jail for elderly inmates on the outskirts of Miami, British businessman Krishna Maharaj grasps the armrests of his wheelchair.

‘My trial was a conspiracy to have me murdered,’ he says. ‘But now the truth is coming out, and those responsible are running for cover.’

Image
New hope: British businessman Krishna Maharaj, 74, pictured with his wife Marita during a recent prison visit, has been imprisoned in Miami for 27 years for a double-murder he says he did not commit

Once a multi-millionaire food and property magnate whose horses raced the Queen’s at Royal Ascot, Mr Maharaj has been a prisoner for the past 27 years – the first 16 of them on Death Row, facing the electric chair.

Now 74, he’s serving life for the 1986 gangster-style slaying of a father and son, Derrick and Duane Moo Young, and his earliest possible parole date is 2040.

Last week, Mr Maharaj told of his ordeal in an exclusive interview with The Mail on Sunday, the first that he has been able to give for many years.

The story he describes sounds like a far-fetched episode of the 1980s TV crime show Miami Vice. But thanks to an investigation by his lawyers which has lasted years, it is now the subject of a fresh appeal, supported by multiple witnesses and copious documentation.

Image
Brutal slayings: Mr Maharaj was sentenced to the electric chair for the shooting of Derrick Moo Young, one of his former business associates, and his son Duane in 1986

According to papers reviewed by a Florida court last week, seen by this newspaper, Mr Maharaj was ‘victimised by the pervasive environment of corruption and drug traffic endemic at the time .  .  . the 1980s, when cocaine money entered the bloodstream of the city of Miami.’

The result, say these documents, was that a respectable businessman with an impeccable legal record found himself trapped by corrupt police officers and witnesses who lied in order to protect the real killers, hitmen from Colombia’s notorious Medellin drugs cartel.

‘God allowed me to be born British,’ says Mr Maharaj. ‘I have always been proud of my country, and I pray that what happened to me never happens to another British citizen. I worked hard all my life. I made a fortune, but I was never dishonest, let alone a murderer.

‘I pleaded not guilty from day one, and before my death sentence was commuted in 2002, I decided I would not seek clemency: clemency is for people who are guilty. Now at last the evidence is conclusive. I always told the truth, and I was framed.’

Image
Better days: Mr Maharaj and wife Marita with one of his beloved Rolls-Royces in London before his conviction of murder


The Mail on Sunday has also spoken to Mr Maharaj’s wife Marita, who has stood by him. She too has not given an interview for years.

As the documents filed in Mr Maharaj’s appeal point out, in the 1980s, not only was corruption endemic throughout the Miami criminal justice system, the city was also America’s murder capital. Following an FBI probe, five criminal judges were indicted for taking huge bribes to ‘fix’ drugs cases.

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Behind bars: Mr Maharaj is serving his 27th year of his life sentence at this correctional facility for elderly prisoners in Miami Florida

Another inquiry that started a year before Mr Maharaj’s arrest resulted in 20 police officers jailed for racketeering and drug dealing. Several were convicted of murder.

The documents cite a body of fresh testimony stating that similar corruption was at work in the Maharaj case. Some of it comes from Pete Romero, a retired Miami policeman who was one of the main detectives on the Moo Young case.

Before he committed suicide last year, the documents say, he said explicitly that police had both committed further murders and framed Mr Maharaj. That claim, The Mail on Sunday has learned, is now supported by other Miami Police Department whistleblowers.

Before interviewing Mr Maharaj, I met a seasoned legal source who is close to one of these whistleblowers and who is co-operating with Mr Maharaj’s defence. There was a ‘pattern’ of criminal wrongdoing by officers, the legal source said, especially in its Narcotics Vice squad – the inspiration for the TV series.

‘This was about making certain people disappear. Teams of officers were directly involved in murders, in both carrying out hits and in an accessory role, framing others and allowing hits to occur.’

But should any of the whistleblowers’ identity become known, the source went on, ‘they’re dead. Maybe not now, maybe not in a year. But they will get them.

‘And the way the drugs business works, their families will also be seen as fair game.’

That, he admitted, did not make it easy for Mr Maharaj: ‘His lawyers are trying to vindicate him, but at the same time that’s putting others in mortal danger.’

Two years ago, Mr Maharaj – who was born in Trinidad when it was a British colony – fell prey to the flesh-eating bug, necrotising fasciitis. He shows me the resultant scar: a dark hollow where his calf muscle should be – the reason for his wheelchair.

For three months, he hovered close to death, but confounding the prison doctors’ expectations, he recovered.

As we talk, it’s obvious that this is a man of tremendous inner strength but he attributes his survival to Marita, also 74, who relinquished her own jet-set lifestyle when he was arrested in order to be near him, and has been living ever since in a humble rented house in Fort Lauderdale.

The couple speak by telephone twice a day, and she visits him every weekend, just as she has for the past 27 years. ‘As a young man, my great weakness was for lovely young ladies,’ says Mr Maharaj. ‘But Marita was sent to me by God. She’s the reason for my sanity, the heroine of this tragedy.’

‘I think we’ve helped each other’, Marita tells me later at her home, ‘because I need him as much as he needs me. I told him when he was arrested, “Don’t worry, I came here with you, and one day I will leave with you – I will take you home to Britain.” Even now, the most painful part for me is leaving the prison without him after each visit.’

Mr Maharaj’s talent for making money became apparent when he was just 18 and took his first job as a salesman for an Austin car dealership in Trinidad. He was on a two-month trial, being paid only commission. But by the end of this period, he had negotiated lucrative contracts to supply three of the island’s biggest firms with all their company cars, and was earning several times as much as his boss.

‘Austin tried to put me on a fixed salary,’ he says. ‘So I switched to Ford. I knew I could make more on commission. But I wanted more.

‘I saved enough money to come to England, and to pay my way through law school.’ He arrived in 1960, and settled in Peckham, South London.

Mr Maharaj studied hard, but a part-time job as a lorry driver allowed him to spot the opportunities which led to his first steps in the food business. He started by importing small consignments of yams from Nigeria, and exporting British beef. By the mid-1960s, he had paid off an initial £1,500 bank loan and become a millionaire, dealing in a wide range of what were then considered exotic fruits – such as bananas – and vegetables.

Around the same time, he acquired the first of the approximately 100 Rolls-Royce cars he has owned, usually four at a time.

He also built up a stable of 110 racehorses – Britain’s second biggest. One of his proudest moments came in 1974 when his horse King Levenstall came in at 11-2 to beat the Queen’s in the Queen Alexandra Stakes at Ascot. ‘She came over to congratulate me. I bowed. Her Majesty was very gracious,’ he recalls.

Kris, as he is known, met Marita, a glamorous, multi-lingual banker from a wealthy Portuguese family, at a party in Oxford in summer 1976. Five months later they were married and they had ten ‘wonderful years’ together.

It wasn’t only his evident Midas touch that convinced Mr Maharaj that he was born lucky. Early in his career, he had cheated death when a traffic jam on the road to Heathrow meant he missed a flight to Nigeria for a business trip. ‘The plane crashed. They had overbooked, and the guy who sat in what should have been my seat was killed.’

By the mid-1980s, he had new interests in publishing and real estate in Florida. He had started a venture with local businessman Derrick Moo Young, only to discover that Moo Young had been embezzling from the company.

At the time of the murders, Mr Maharaj had a pending civil lawsuit to recover the stolen money – around £300,000.

‘That alone ought to undermine my supposed motive,’ he says. ‘If I had wanted to kill him, surely I’d have waited until I’d got my money.’

The bullet-riddled bodies of Derrick and Duane were discovered in room 1215 at the five-star Dupont Plaza hotel in downtown Miami on the afternoon of October 16, 1986.

Mr Maharaj’s fingerprints were in the same room, and the following year he was convicted and sentenced to death. He says: ‘When I heard the verdict, I fainted.’
Alleged killers: Colombian drugs baron Pablo Escobar, pictured dressed as a Mexican bandit, was once the head of cartel Medellin to which it is alleged the hitmen belonged

Image
Alleged killers: Colombian drugs baron Pablo Escobar, pictured dressed as a Mexican bandit, was once the head of cartel Medellin to which it is alleged the hitmen belonged

What followed was a 24 hours-a-day lockdown, except for three weekly visits to the showers, on Death Row at the state prison in Starke, in the far north of Florida.

‘I never went outside because I was scared,’ says Mr Maharaj.

‘I was not a criminal, and I’d never associated with criminals. Here were all these murderers and drug dealers, and I was frightened of what they might do.

‘Death Row was terrible in so many ways. I broke my arm when I slipped in the shower, and because it wasn’t treated for a long time, it got so badly infected I was lucky it wasn’t amputated.

‘While I was recovering and couldn’t use the arm, my one friend, who lived in the cell next door, used to write my letters for me. He got a stay of execution 45 minutes before he was scheduled to die. His head and leg had been shaved: prepped to take the electrodes.’

Nowadays, Mr Maharaj can at least wheel himself around the single-storey geriatric jail and its ring-fenced yards. But he sleeps in a dormitory with 91 others. ‘You could not say this is a good quality of life,’ he says.

The Mail on Sunday revealed in December some of the astonishing discoveries made about the case by his solicitor Clive Stafford Smith, of the human rights charity Reprieve, and his colleagues.

For example, the Moo Youngs – portrayed at Mr Maharaj’s trial as almost penniless – controlled funds worth billions of pounds, while their front company, Cargil SA, was registered in the Bahamas at the office of a notorious drug cartel lawyer.

The documents filed for Mr Maharaj’s appeal state that a new forensic analysis of the Moo Youngs’ secret accounts not only show they were involved in money laundering on an almost unimaginable scale, they were also skimming extra commissions worth many millions from their drug baron clients – so creating the strongest possible motive for their murder.

Only one room on the 12th floor of the Dupont Plaza besides 1215 was occupied on the day they were killed. Across the hall was Jaime Vallejo Mejia, a Colombian who was later convicted in Oklahoma of transporting and depositing vast sums in cash into Swiss bank accounts as a cartel courier.

Stafford Smith and his team have also established that six alibi witnesses who have always said they were having lunch with Mr Maharaj 30 miles away when the Moo Youngs were shot have stuck by their stories, although – inexplicably – his trial defence lawyer, Eric Hendon, failed to call them as witnesses.

So why were Mr Maharaj’s fingerprints at the murder scene? Because hours before the Moo Youngs got there, the real killers – planning to frame him – lured him to a business meeting with a man who never turned up.

Further inquiries have also disclosed that Mejia and other cartel members were at the Dupont and knew all about the extra ‘commissions’ stolen by the Moo Youngs, and that they were working for the infamous Medellin boss, the late Pablo Escobar.

Stafford Smith knows that however persuasive the evidence unearthed for Mr Maharaj’s appeal, the prosecution will continue to fight: when documents containing details of Romero’s testimony were filed earlier this year, it asked the court to rule them inadmissible because they were not typed in the correct format.

But Mr Maharaj is optimistic. ‘I’ve always had faith in God, and I am certain I will be exonerated. Even in the darkest times, I have never given in to despair.’

‘For so long now our lives have been a nightmare,’ Marita tells me later. ‘But this time, I truly believe we’re going to wake up.’

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... z2bbgaFsRC
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Re: Ramesh L. Maharaj Brother Might be freed of murder

Postby hustla_ambition101 » August 10th, 2013, 6:19 pm

cliffs?

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Re: Ramesh L. Maharaj Brother Might be freed of murder

Postby bluefete » August 10th, 2013, 6:27 pm

hustla_ambition101 wrote:cliffs?


Nope! It's a fascinating read.

Arite! He was in with the Moo Youngs in the 1980's. They were murdered and he was convicted and sentenced to death. This was commuted to life in 2002. He has maintained his innocence and now there might be evidence to prove same.

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Re: Ramesh L. Maharaj Brother Might be freed of murder

Postby K74T » August 10th, 2013, 7:45 pm

Whoopee :|

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Re: Ramesh L. Maharaj Brother Might be freed of murder

Postby brams112 » August 10th, 2013, 8:50 pm

bluefete wrote:
hustla_ambition101 wrote:cliffs?


Nope! It's a fascinating read.

Arite! He was in with the Moo Youngs in the 1980's. They were murdered and he was convicted and sentenced to death. This was commuted to life in 2002. He has maintained his innocence and now there might be evidence to prove same.

Talk done.

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Re: Ramesh L. Maharaj Brother Might be freed of murder

Postby Team Loco » August 10th, 2013, 9:56 pm

Ive always followed this case. Most people would have given up by now. Good luck to him

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Re: Ramesh L. Maharaj Brother Might be freed of murder

Postby UML » August 11th, 2013, 4:49 pm

Eat ah food!!!

Best-seller book and movie and sue the state too

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Re: Ramesh L. Maharaj Brother Might be freed of murder

Postby zoom rader » August 11th, 2013, 6:38 pm

Hmm followed this a while now, but it's the states they find something to save face

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Re: Ramesh L. Maharaj Brother Might be freed of murder

Postby DTAC » August 11th, 2013, 9:02 pm

Sounds like a good episode for Dateline NBC.

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Re: Ramesh L. Maharaj Brother Might be freed of murder

Postby TriniAutoMart » August 11th, 2013, 10:11 pm

Shame on d Bas for not believing.

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Re: Ramesh L. Maharaj Brother Might be freed of murder

Postby RoTaRyBoYz » August 11th, 2013, 10:21 pm

So yuh saying in the end, Dole & his boys didn't need to hang? *gets run over by speeding Range Rover*

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Re: Ramesh L. Maharaj Brother Might be freed of murder

Postby Redman » August 11th, 2013, 10:23 pm

27 years on death row
and he ain't the real criminal in the family.

Trinis for the win.

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Re: Ramesh L. Maharaj Brother Might be freed of murder

Postby RoTaRyBoYz » August 11th, 2013, 10:28 pm

There was an old thread about this a few years ago with clips from the documentary.. His wife is a real sweet heart to stick by his side through all this..


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Re: Ramesh L. Maharaj Brother Might be freed of murder

Postby bluefete » December 29th, 2013, 5:52 pm

This Briton has spent 27 years in jail for murder. Now Colombian drugs barons admit they did it: The Rolls-Royce-driving socialite sentenced to death for gang hit and the new evidence making a mockery of US justice

Krishna Maharaj, 74, was convicted of double murder in 1986
Imprisoned for the slaying of an ex-business associate and his son
Five alibi witnesses were not allowed to prove his innocence at trial
Now a reformed drugs baron names notorious Medellin hitman as the killer

By David Rose

PUBLISHED: 22:00 GMT, 28 December 2013 | UPDATED: 13:27 GMT, 29 December 2013

It sounds like the plot of a thriller: a multi-millionaire British socialite whose horses raced against the Queen’s is framed for the brutal killings of a father and son – deaths that were, in reality, professional hits ordered and perpetrated by Colombian drug cartels.

Now, 27 years after Krishna Maharaj was arrested and jailed in Florida, his lawyers have unearthed sensational new evidence that confirms the story is true.

Revealed today by The Mail on Sunday, the evidence – statements from key cartel members who had direct knowledge of the killings – will be presented next month in a Miami court by Maharaj’s lawyers, led by Clive Stafford Smith, of human rights charity Reprieve.

ImageKris Maharaj, pictured in court in Miami in 1997, was framed for a double murder by corrupt detectives, according to new documents filed in court
ImageKris's wife Marita, pictured right in Miami with lawyer Clive Stafford Smith, has stood by her husband since his arrest


They include sworn evidence from ‘El Asistente’, an enforcer for the infamous Pablo Escobar, whose murderous reign as the Medellin cartel’s chief drug lord ended in a shootout with Colombian police in 1993.

El Asistente, whose statement describes crucial details of the murders, says: ‘I am giving this [statement] because I have reconnected with my religious faith. The idea that Krishna Maharaj has served more than a quarter-century in prison for a crime I know he did not commit appals me. I want to set the record straight and ensure he gets justice.’

Next month’s hearing is Maharaj’s final chance to appeal. His original death sentence was overturned at an earlier appeal in 2003. About to turn 75, his earliest possible release date is currently 2040.

Maharaj once lived a glamorous life. Born and schooled in Trinidad when it was still a British colony, he moved to Peckham, South London, in 1960, where, with the help of a £1,500 loan, he quickly built up a thriving food import business. Maharaj became a fixture of the Swinging London social scene, had many celebrity friends, and was a generous charity donor.
New hope: British businessman Krishna Maharaj, 74, pictured with his wife Marita during a recent prison visit, has been imprisoned in Miami for 27 years for a double-murder he says he did not commit

New hope: British businessman Krishna Maharaj, 74, pictured with his wife Marita during a recent prison visit, has been imprisoned in Miami for 27 years for a double-murder he says he did not commit

He loved collecting Rolls-Royces – he usually owned four at a time – but Maharaj’s greatest passion was racehorses. At one time, he owned 110 – the second-biggest stable in Britain.

In 1974, the year he met and married his wife, Marita, a Portuguese banker, his horse King Levanstell won the prestigious Queen Alexandra Stakes at Royal Ascot, defeating a thoroughbred owned by the Queen.

The fateful path that led Maharaj to death row started when he began to invest in property in the 1980s. He formed a business with Derrick Moo Young, ostensibly a respectable Florida businessman. However, Maharaj says he soon discovered that Moo Young had embezzled £300,000 from the firm they set up.

The bodies of Derrick and his son Duane were found in room 1215 of the Miami Dupont Plaza Hotel on October 16, 1986. Derrick, 53, had been shot six times. His son, 23, died from a single bullet fired from a gun placed in his mouth as he knelt by the bed.

Maharaj has always insisted that he was having lunch 30 miles away at the time – an alibi supported by five witnesses, who, inexplicably, were never called to testify at his trial. But his fingerprints were in room 1215.

The reason, he has always maintained, was that he had been let into the room to attend a business meeting there earlier that day. But the man he was waiting for did not turn up, so he left.

The prosecution claimed Maharaj’s dispute over the £300,000 was motive for the murders – a claim he angrily denies. As he told The Mail on Sunday in an interview in prison in August, when the pair died he was suing Derrick Moo Young. ‘If I’d wanted to kill him, surely I’d have waited until I got my money?’ he said.

This newspaper has previously revealed some of the holes that have been exposed in the prosecution case. For example, vital witnesses lied, including the late Tino Geddes, who testified that Maharaj’s alibi was false.

Supposedly an innocent Jamaican journalist, legal documents state that Geddes was a member of the Shower Posse, a Jamaican gang linked to the drug cartels. Arrested for gun-running before Maharaj’s trial, Geddes did a deal with prosecutors to avoid going to prison.

We also reported earlier this year that former police officers have now come forward to say that corrupt colleagues in the pay of the drug lords fabricated the case against Maharaj to hide the cartels’ involvement. Sources say this was part of a pattern – at least one other innocent man was condemned to death and executed.


ImageBrutal slayings: Mr Maharaj was sentenced to the electric chair for the shooting of Derrick Moo Young, one of his former business associates, and his son Duane in 1986

But the main subject of the latest evidence is the Moo Youngs. At the trial, they were described as virtually penniless. In reality, they were money-launderers who had fallen out with their cartel paymasters.

It was just months after Mr Stafford Smith became Maharaj’s lawyer in 1994 that he first discovered crucial documents which had been hidden all along in police files. They revealed that at the time of their deaths, the Moo Youngs were negotiating to buy a Panamanian bank for £400 million and were involved in bond deals worth £3 billion. Analysis of their financial records by accountants Ernst & Young states the Moo Youngs’ real business was money-laundering – on a mind-boggling scale. But rich as they were, the analysis says, they were also greedy, skimming an extra one per cent from every deal they did for their cartel clients.

THAT appeared to be a much more plausible reason for the murders than Maharaj’s missing £300,000. Now, following further enquiries by Reprieve in the US and Colombia, the theory has been corroborated by cartel members themselves. ‘Escobar complained directly to me that the Moo Youngs had stolen his money and that of his partners and had to die,’

El Asistente says under oath. We cannot reveal his true identity, nor the circumstances of his interview. ‘There are a number of people who I know intend to kill me,’ he says.

However, his relationship with Escobar and the extent of his knowledge of cartel operations have been confirmed by two kingpins Mr Stafford Smith interviewed in US prisons. One is a top Medellin boss who cannot yet be named. The other is Miguel Rodriguez-Orejuela, 69, a leader of the rival Cali cartel, whom Mr Stafford Smith met at a jail in South Carolina, where he is serving a 30-year sentence for trafficking cocaine to the US.

‘Orejuela was polite, a little reticent,’ Mr Stafford Smith says. ‘But I made it clear we have no interest in getting anyone else indicted, only in clearing Kris’s name. He told me El Asistente had close links with both the Cali and the Medellin cartels, and because of his close relationship with Escobar, he would be by far the best person to say why and how the Moo Youngs were killed.’

El Asistente says: ‘I particularly remember the Moo Young name because I always thought of it as moo like a cow.’ The money they had stolen was ‘particularly sensitive’, he adds, because some of it belonged to other drug lords with whom Escobar sometimes collaborated. The description of the way they ran their financial empire dovetails closely with documents that record it: ‘Escobar told me the money was entrusted to middlemen to be taken to Switzerland. They were also using a bank in Panama that the Moo Youngs said they or their contacts controlled.’

El Asistente also names the assassin at the Dupont Plaza – Guillermo Zuluaga, a notorious Medellin hitman known as Cuchilla, which means ‘the blade’. ‘I know the details about Cuchilla’s involvement because he admitted to me that he had done it,’ El Asistente says.

Cuchilla also orchestrated the murder of CIA agent Barry Seal in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, according to El Asistente.

Cuchilla made enough money from his murders to buy a farm in Colombia. But he did not enjoy it for long. In 1993, after the Cali cartel had fallen out with Escobar and was trying to find and murder him, Cali hoodlums kidnapped Cuchilla. He refused to talk. After being tortured for several days, he was pushed – still alive – into a sugar-cane threshing machine.

Another man El Asistente names as playing a leading role in the Moo Young murders is Jaime Vallejo Mejia, a smuggler and cartel money-man. Unbeknown to the Maharaj jury, he had checked into another room at the Dupont Plaza when the Moo Youngs died.

Astonishingly, Mr Stafford Smith’s investigators tracked down Mejia and spoke to him in Colombia. Before being able to do so, they were held at gunpoint for three days, then driven while blindfolded to a secret location.

ImageAlleged killers: Colombian drugs baron Pablo Escobar, pictured dressed as a Mexican bandit, was once the head of cartel Medellin to which it is alleged the hitmen belonged



Mejia confirmed claims that the murders were committed by the cartels, and that Maharaj had nothing to do with them. The day before their deaths, Mejia had confronted the Moo Youngs and warned them they had better come up with the money they owed. They produced a letter of credit for millions of dollars, drawn on a bank in New York.

Mejia and his cartel colleagues used their contacts to check this out. El Asistente says: ‘The letter of credit turned out to be false. When this was ascertained, the order was given to kill them.’

Yet however strong the new evidence, prosecutors in Florida are fighting to stop it being properly heard, urging the court to dismiss the appeal without any witnesses being called. Their response to one legal document filed this year by the defence was to claim it was invalid because it was not set out in double-spaced type.

The costs of Maharaj’s legal battle means he long ago lost almost everything, while Marita, who lives in a humble Fort Lauderdale bungalow, struggles to survive. ‘But while we have hope we will fight,’ she says. ‘This can only end in one of two ways: either Kris’s death in prison, or his release.’

But time is running out. Two years ago, Maharaj came close to death after contracting the flesh-eating bug necrotising fasciitis, which has forced him to use a wheelchair.

For several years, he had been held in a jail for elderly prisoners in Miami. But earlier this month he was moved to a different site in Florida City, where almost all the other inmates are young, violent men. ‘He is very bad shape now,’ Marita says. ‘The new jail is a horrible place. It’s so noisy, Kris can’t sleep. When I visit him, he can barely keep his eyes open.

‘I have to get up at 3am to be there for an 8am visit because it takes so long for everyone to get through security. Kris used to phone me every day, but now that’s become impossible. I tell him, “Don’t let them win,” but I’m really worried about him. He’s very depressed.’

Last week, Mr Stafford Smith wrote to Foreign Office Minister Hugh Robertson asking the Government to fulfil an old promise on which it later reneged – to grant a £20,000 loan to help fund Maharaj’s defence. Reprieve’s investigations have cost more than £80,000.

He also asked the UK to put pressure on the US and Colombian governments to disclose potentially crucial documents about the killings and the cartels believed to exist in their files, but to which the defence has so far been refused access.

The Foreign Office said the loan promise could not be honoured because ‘our policy has changed’. Nor could the Government help obtain the documents: ‘We must respect US judicial systems, just as we expect them to respect the UK’s laws and legal processes. We continue to monitor Mr Maharaj’s case and to provide consular support.’

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Re: Ramesh L. Maharaj Brother Might be freed of murder

Postby pioneer » December 29th, 2013, 6:51 pm

Ask any politician about cartels, they would tell you they only exist in movies.

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Re: Ramesh L. Maharaj Brother Might be freed of murder

Postby kjaglal76 » December 29th, 2013, 9:43 pm

wow, like a movie yes

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Re: Ramesh L. Maharaj Brother Might be freed of murder

Postby trinivampire » December 29th, 2013, 11:32 pm

amazing read..

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Re: Ramesh L. Maharaj Brother Might be freed of murder

Postby RoTaRyBoYz » December 29th, 2013, 11:33 pm

Man, that is woman to have! She left everything behind to stand by him & after 2 decades in prison, she never gave up hope or on him. Amazing

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Re: Ramesh L. Maharaj Brother Might be freed of murder

Postby zoom rader » December 29th, 2013, 11:37 pm

RoTaRyBoYz wrote:Man, that is woman to have! She left everything behind to stand by him & after 2 decades in prison, she never gave up hope or on him. Amazing

Well she's not a trini woman for sure

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Re: Ramesh L. Maharaj Brother Might be freed of murder

Postby S_2NR » December 29th, 2013, 11:58 pm

RoTaRyBoYz wrote:Man, that is woman to have! She left everything behind to stand by him & after 2 decades in prison, she never gave up hope or on him. Amazing


that kind of loyalty is rare nowadays

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Re: Ramesh L. Maharaj Brother Might be freed of murder

Postby kjaglal76 » December 30th, 2013, 8:29 am

RoTaRyBoYz wrote:Man, that is woman to have! She left everything behind to stand by him & after 2 decades in prison, she never gave up hope or on him. Amazing


i wont doubt the lawyer ponging it tho

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Re: Ramesh L. Maharaj Brother Might be freed of murder

Postby desifemlove » December 30th, 2013, 9:41 am

never knew Ramesh had a brudder. haha..

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Re: Ramesh L. Maharaj Brother Might be freed of murder

Postby cinco » December 30th, 2013, 10:18 am

desifemlove wrote:never knew Ramesh had a brudder. haha..

He doh know you either ha ha

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Re: Ramesh L. Maharaj Brother Might be freed of murder

Postby desifemlove » December 30th, 2013, 10:28 am

er.. yeah, but then yeah, family ah public figures doh get highlighted too ent? the fact kamla has chirren and grandchirren is probably jus a media plot, right?

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Re: Ramesh L. Maharaj Brother Might be freed of murder

Postby kjaglal76 » December 30th, 2013, 12:30 pm

multi millionaire trini indian, residing in miami during d cocaine boom & not in drugs?

dah equation could nvr add up

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Re: Ramesh L. Maharaj Brother Might be freed of murder

Postby dogg » March 5th, 2014, 10:49 am

http://www.reprieve.org.uk/press/2014_0 ... _10k_days/
Krishna 'Kris' Maharaj, a British businessman sentenced to death in 1987, will tomorrow (March 4th) spend his 10,000th day in a US prison, despite compelling evidence of his innocence.

Now 75 years old, Mr Maharaj was handed a death sentence three decades ago in Miami for the murders of Derrick and Duane Moo Young. Over the years, evidence suppressed by the US government has leaked, showing the Moo Youngs were laundering up to US$5bn for the Colombian drug cartels. Recently, former cartel operatives admitted that the murders were carried out by the Medellín drug cartel on the orders of drug lord Pablo Escobar.

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Re: Ramesh L. Maharaj Brother Might be freed of murder

Postby kurpal_v2 » March 5th, 2014, 11:23 am

kjaglal76 wrote:multi millionaire trini indian, residing in miami during d cocaine boom & not in drugs?

dah equation could nvr add up





dais the nigz in yuh

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Re: Ramesh L. Maharaj Brother Might be freed of murder

Postby RIPEBREDFRUIT » March 26th, 2014, 7:33 am

every politican has their skeletonz

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Re: Ramesh L. Maharaj Brother Might be freed of murder

Postby Chimera » August 12th, 2017, 1:23 pm

saw an update in april this year that they going to review the evidence from that night

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... rders.html

https://www.change.org/p/justice-for-krishna-maharaj

Highlights of the new evidence include:
Admissions by former cartel members that they and not Kris Maharaj were responsible for the murders;
admissions by former Miami police and those closely associated with law enforcement that they framed Maharaj and had a deal to help cover up Colombian cartel murders;
proof that the only other occupied room on the 12th floor on the day of the murders – Room 1214 directly opposite the murder scene – was occupied by one Jaime Vallejo Mejia, a Colombian then wanted for his involvement in a cartel laundering case involving $40 million in cash. Mejia was deported to his native country where there is further proof of his drug associations;
evidence that Tino Geddes, the witness who changed from alibi to incrimination, did so because he had been linked for years with the Shower Posse, the main drug cartel in Jamaica, closely associated with the Colombians;
documents that show how ‘eyewitness’ Neville Butler was himself involved in the murders, failed a lie detector test, and has – on a number of other occasions – committed perjury in court to promote his own interests.

All of this comes on top of Kris’s six alibi witnesses and overwhelming evidence concerning the Moo Youngs' own role in laundering drug money.

On April 24th 2014, Judge William Thomas in Miami granted Kris a full Evidentiary Hearing on the strength of this evidence. A date has yet to be set for the hearing, but it represents the biggest step towards Kris' exoneration since his conviction in 1987.

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Re: Ramesh L. Maharaj Brother Might be freed of murder

Postby Chimera » August 12th, 2017, 1:24 pm

they must be hoping and waiting for him to die rather than expose that they lock up the wrong man for 30 years.....

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