The Other Side of the Coin
Posted: Tue Mar 07, 2006 12:55 am
Tobago radio announced that a lady German tourist has been convicted today of making false accusations. She reported that she had been attacked by armed men at Back Bay and robbed of various items, including money and a camera. Police suspicions were aroused because she seemed over-keen to receive a written report confirming that she had reported the ‘offence’, apparently for her holiday insurance company. Police arrested her as she was boarding her flight home and found the camera and other ‘stolen’ items in her possession.
Sadly, I was answering a telephone call as the news item was broadcast and failed to hear the full sentence. However, I did hear the term “hard labour” mentioned – so it would appear that she was given a jail sentence. The case was not mentioned on subsequent news broadcasts or the evening TV news, but undoubtedly will be reported in the online Tobago newspaper later this week. I imagine that a Trinidad jail bears as much resemblance to a cushy German or British jail as a MacDonalds does to real food. We might argue that the sentence was a bit harsh, but those are the laws here, so if you don’t like the rules, don’t play the game.
As a follow-on to the same news item, a senior government official alleged that insurance scams like this have dramatically increased in recent years and are making crime on Tobago appear worse than is really the case. I suspect that that is just another case of political spin (and let’s be fair, I can’t be critical of politicians in Tobago when Tony Blair is a world-class Supremo). However, the facts do convince me that there is a certain truth to this claim.
Without wishing to appear ‘heavy’, may I please stress the following in view of today’s report.
Over the last two years Tobago hotel owners and managers have regularly ‘complained’ to me that there is a rising tide of dishonest guests who claim theft of items from their rooms even, even when all evidence leads management to believe that no such theft took place. These guests often warn management that unless they make appropriate compensation, they will report the case on myTobago and other websites. This sort of blackmail is obviously totally unacceptable.
I have said it before and regular readers will excuse me from saying it again, but I will NOT allow myTobago to be used as a club to blackmail Tobago businesses, wayward or not. Genuine complaint is one thing; spiteful criticism when blackmail fails is another thing altogether and if and when I find that criticism has been made following claims for compensation, I will certainly not refrain from publishing the facts, including the claimants name and email address.
Tobago is a VERY small island and it easy for me to establish who to trust and who not to trust. One reader attempted to use this forum as part of a campaign to blackmail a hotel and file a false insurance claim. Claims investigators contacted the hotel and subsequently myself. The claimant is now facing prosecution for attempting to defraud the insurance company. I have promised to provide testimony if it is needed.
I will be the first to jump on any hotel or accommodation owner should I feel that the public are being treated shoddily. However, please let’s keep it fair and wayward readers be warned - don’t make the mistake of using myTobago as a cudgel.
Sadly, I was answering a telephone call as the news item was broadcast and failed to hear the full sentence. However, I did hear the term “hard labour” mentioned – so it would appear that she was given a jail sentence. The case was not mentioned on subsequent news broadcasts or the evening TV news, but undoubtedly will be reported in the online Tobago newspaper later this week. I imagine that a Trinidad jail bears as much resemblance to a cushy German or British jail as a MacDonalds does to real food. We might argue that the sentence was a bit harsh, but those are the laws here, so if you don’t like the rules, don’t play the game.
As a follow-on to the same news item, a senior government official alleged that insurance scams like this have dramatically increased in recent years and are making crime on Tobago appear worse than is really the case. I suspect that that is just another case of political spin (and let’s be fair, I can’t be critical of politicians in Tobago when Tony Blair is a world-class Supremo). However, the facts do convince me that there is a certain truth to this claim.
Without wishing to appear ‘heavy’, may I please stress the following in view of today’s report.
Over the last two years Tobago hotel owners and managers have regularly ‘complained’ to me that there is a rising tide of dishonest guests who claim theft of items from their rooms even, even when all evidence leads management to believe that no such theft took place. These guests often warn management that unless they make appropriate compensation, they will report the case on myTobago and other websites. This sort of blackmail is obviously totally unacceptable.
I have said it before and regular readers will excuse me from saying it again, but I will NOT allow myTobago to be used as a club to blackmail Tobago businesses, wayward or not. Genuine complaint is one thing; spiteful criticism when blackmail fails is another thing altogether and if and when I find that criticism has been made following claims for compensation, I will certainly not refrain from publishing the facts, including the claimants name and email address.
Tobago is a VERY small island and it easy for me to establish who to trust and who not to trust. One reader attempted to use this forum as part of a campaign to blackmail a hotel and file a false insurance claim. Claims investigators contacted the hotel and subsequently myself. The claimant is now facing prosecution for attempting to defraud the insurance company. I have promised to provide testimony if it is needed.
I will be the first to jump on any hotel or accommodation owner should I feel that the public are being treated shoddily. However, please let’s keep it fair and wayward readers be warned - don’t make the mistake of using myTobago as a cudgel.