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News / Virgin Islands / February 15, 2018

ST. THOMAS — Lisa Forde, the wife of Senator Jean Forde and principal of Addelita Cancryn Junior High School, is under investigation by the Virgin Islands Department of Justice for what is said to be thousands of dollars in unaccounted funds, The Consortium has learned. Attorney General Claude Walker told The Consortium on Wednesday that the department’s policy prohibits him from commenting on ongoing investigations, therefore, details could not be provided.

But while details remain scant, the matter appears to be serious, according to a D.O.J. source employed at the institution, who requested anonymity because of strict confidentiality policies set in place by Mr. Walker. “With the amount of things happening in the Virgin Islands, if this case wasn’t serious, D.O.J. would not be investigating it,” this person said.

The matter is said to involve a safe kept at the school where money is stored, and the unauthorized removal of funds from the safe by someone with access to it.

The Department of Education is said to have either suspended or placed on leave the educator while she’s under investigation. And D.O.J. is expected to comment on the matter once the investigation concludes.

The news comes at a bad time for Mrs. Forde’s husband, who has been recovering from a faux pas in March 2017, when he said he would not accept a pay cut while in the Senate. The comment was made during a town hall meeting held by Democrats to debate the sin tax measure introduced by Governor Kenneth Mapp, which the governor said was needed to help allay the territory’s fiscal crisis.

Residents were allowed to participate in the town hall, and like clockwork, a question about the senators’ $85,000 salary was posed: “My first question, Act 6905. [Is] the 32nd Legislature willing to take a $10,000 or a $20,000 cut?” asked Taheema Edwards. Senators Neville James and Myron Jackson said they would take a pay cut if it came across the board, meaning the legislative and administrative branches of government.

But Mr. Forde disagreed.

“I will tell you straight up, that if this job was paying $20,000 less, I would not run for it,” Mr. Forde said. “Because 1), I was making more than that — as a matter of fact, it is a lateral move for me. 2), It’s because that my efforts, my energy of what I have put in, that I am giving the money’s worth.”

By then, the audience had started to mumble, a sign of dissent among constituents.

Mr. Forde continued: “I know this might not be popular to say…. But I’m telling you that I think that I am worth what I’m being paid.” The senator said if he’d accepted the current salary of $85,000 and thought that he was not deserving of it, “then I would be guilty of some degree of fraud. And I have never defrauded this government,”  he said.

“And this is not a popular position to take,” Mr. Forde went on, “but I can tell you that I could not afford to make less than what I’m making.” The dissent among residents attending the town hall was palpable, with mumbles turning into outright audible denunciations of Mr. Forde’s remarks.

Mr. Forde said his aim was to empower individuals, and pointed to his landmark legislation of minimum wage increase. “I believe in empowering people,” Mr. Forde said resolutely, but the audience was in an uproar by then, with the moderator attempting to restore order.

The senator then pivoted, suggesting that the community’s call for a reduction in the pay of lawmakers, amounted to teaching the territory’s youth that they are not worth high salaries.

“We have got to be very careful as we send our children off to become educated, and we tell our children that 1), Your parents are not even worth the salary that they’re making, therefore you simply can’t even make that kind of salary,” Mr. Forde said, which again provoked the audience’s ire. “I am saying that I am worth my salary, and if the salary was less, I’m not going to run for it.”

When given the opportunity to respond, a resident rebuked Mr. Forde.

“Most of us in here are not getting paid and haven’t been paid — especially a lot of retirees — what we are worth, and they still owe retirees back-money, retro, that no one talks about,” she said.


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Ernice Gilbert
I wear many hats, I suppose, but the one which fits me best would be journalism, second to that would be radio personality, thirdly singer/songwriter and down the line. I've been the Editor-In-Chief at my videogames website, Gamesthirst, for over 5 years, writing over 7,000 articles and more than 2 million words. I'm also very passionate about where I live, the United States Virgin Islands, and I'm intent on making it a better place by being resourceful and keeping our leaders honest. VI Consortium was birthed out of said desire, hopefully my efforts bear fruit. Reach me at [email protected].




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