Magistrate orders TV `talk show' host to appear in court
Reporter in aircraft stabbing case remanded to jail
Guyana Chronicle
February 27, 2001
A TV `talk show' host who reportedly interviewed the Chronicle reporter after she was charged with attempted murder in last month's mid-air stabbing drama has been ordered to appear in court.
As a result of the interview which was broadcast by Mr Mark Benschop, and other concerns, Chronicle reporter Sharon Lall was refused bail when she appeared before Magistrate Oscar Parvattan yesterday.
Lall, 22, was in hospital under police guard since her arrest but the magistrate yesterday ordered her to be remanded at the East La Penitence Police Station in Georgetown until March 5.
Yesterday was her first appearance in court since she was charged with attempting to murder the pilot of the aircraft and a passenger in mid-air on January 29.
Lall's lawyer, Mr Khemraj Ramjattan, pleaded for bail at the Vreed-en-Hoop Magistrate's Court, West Coast Demerara and Police Prosecutor, Inspector Christopher Griffith said he had no objections to bail.
But Mr Parvattan said one of the grounds for refusing bail was that Lall permitted Benschop, host of the `Straight Up' show on NBTV Channel Nine to interview her.
He ordered the prosecutor to ensure that Benschop appears in court when the case comes up again Monday.
Parvattan also warned Lall, "in her best interest" not to give any more interviews to reporters since the case was sub judice.
Media, under law, are supposed to report on court cases only what take place in the courtroom and are prohibited from interviewing accused persons. Those who breach the rule can be found in contempt of court and may be fined/jailed.
When the magistrate questioned her pertaining to the interview, Lall said that Benschop went to her bedside in hospital and asked her if she was a vicious person, which she denied.
Her lawyer Ramjattan said his client did not even know that Benschop had a tape recorder when he spoke to her in hospital.
"Mark is a reporter and she is also a reporter; she thought he went as a friend", Ramjattan told the magistrate.
Lall said she was absent from court before because she is suffering from depression and a stomach ulcer.
The pale and distraught accused who was accompanied by her mother and aunt in court, showed no outward emotions when she was ordered remanded to prison.
Ramjattan commented that remanding his client to prison was suicidal and suggested that the doctor treating her for depression, Dr Bhiro Harry, testify on the same day as to her stability.
Two medical certificates were produced in court by the lawyer but were not tendered because Ramjattan said he wanted to have copies of the documents.
The magistrate asked that Dr Harry appear in court on March 5.
In the application for bail, Ramjattan told the court that Lall is a reporter with the Guyana Chronicle and had never had any other "police matters".
He said the incident arose out of severe depression the defendant was suffering from, adding that if was placed on bail the police could be allowed to make regular checks at her home.
Lall is accused of stabbing with intent to murder pilot Yacoob Mazaharally and Vidya Gooray, a passenger on the aircraft.
According to reports the accused, the pilot and Gooray and her nine-year-old daughter were in a Cessna four seat aircraft when the stabbing took place.
They had departed the Ogle airstrip, East Coast Demerara for Spring Gardens, Essequibo Coast and shortly after, Lall allegedly pulled a knife from a bag and stabbed Mazaharally several times in his shoulder and neck, police said.
Gooray was wounded when she reportedly tried to prevent Lall from harming the pilot who managed to land the plane safely back at the Ogle airstrip.
The case was first called up in Georgetown before Chief Magistrate Paul Fung-A-Fat and she was remanded to the Georgetown Hospital under police supervision.
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