Georgetown: Alleged Ponzi scheme operator, Ateeka Ishmael, the wife of Cuban National, Yuri Garcia-Dominguez, was Friday placed before a City Magistrate and charged for allegedly falsifying a positive COVID-19 test result.
Ishmael made her appearance in the Georgetown Magistrates’ Courts before Senior Magistrate Leron Daly in the company of her lawyer, Darren Wade.
She was charged with conspiracy to commit a felony. Ishmael denied the charge which alleges that on July 27, 2021, she conspired with her husband and others to forge a COVID-19 test result to show that she was positive.
Senior Magistrate Daly placed her on $200,000 bail for the offence and the matter was adjourned to September 10, 2021.
According to information, on the day in question, the couple was slated to appear in the Sparendaam Magistrate’s Court to answer 60 additional fraud charges. However, when the matter was called, the couple’s lawyer, Dexter Todd presented to the Magistrate two medical certificates, on their behalf, purporting that they both tested positive for COVID-19.
The Guyana Police Force (GPF), however, was not buying any of it and suspected that the medical certificates were fake. An investigation was then launched to determine the authenticity of the documents. In a subsequent release on the matter, the police stated that, “The investigation has confirmed that the medical documents tendered were falsified.”
Ishmael was later arrested and charged for the offence, but no charge was brought against her husband or anyone else.
Garcia-Dominguez was granted citizenship in June 2020. He and his wife are officials of Accelerated Capital Firm Inc. (ACF), a company that lured thousands of Guyanese to invest their money by promising them a 40 percent profit on their investment.
The couple is accused of bilking thousands of Guyanese out of millions of dollars and is currently before three different courts facing 80 plus fraud charges and two charges under the Anti-Money Laundering and Countering the Financing of Terrorism (AML/CFT) Act. They were released on $30M bail after spending over a month in prison on remand.
The charges were brought against the couple by the Special Organised Crime Unit (SOCU) and represented the first time SOCU has instituted charges under the AML/CFT Act. The AML/CFT Act, Chapter 10:11, prohibits businesses from operating as financial institutions without the necessary registration for regulation and supervision by the Regulatory Authorities, the Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU) and Guyana Securities Council.
Moreover, in June 2021, two agents/marketers for Garcia-Dominguez were slapped with money laundering charges. Aubrey Norton and Martina Seepersaud of Lot 242 Track ‘A’ Coldigen, East Coast Demerara, were slapped with two charges under the Anti-Money Laundering/Countering the Financing of Terrorism (AML/CFT) Act.
They too were charged by SOCU. The duo was not required to plead to the charges that were read to them and were placed on $200,000 bail each.
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