Dr
Christopher Ogunsalu stirred up a hornet's nest recently by requesting J$1.8 million for the release of his
findings from an analysis of remains believed to be those of a murdered
Trinidadian school teacher Michelle Coudray-Greave.
Michelle
Coudray-Greaves, as gathered by KiyoandFilo Blog is a Trinidad-born
teacher at Cornwall College, Montego Bay. She was the daughter of a Trinidad
and Tobago government minister, whose burnt body was found in a cane field in
the western parish of St. James last June, after she was reported missing for
two weeks.
According
to reports available to KandF, Dr Ogunsalu was expected to
deliver his forensic reports at the Montego Bay Resident Magistrate's Court
where Ivan Taylor, a 46-year-old taxi driver, who was accused of killing Michelle
Coudray-Greaves, is being tried.
However,
Ogunsalu, who was President of the Caribbean Osseo integration Dental Implant
Society in 2004, was reported to have declined releasing the findings until the
sum of J$1.8 million ($18,282) is paid. The news of his refusal caused mass
outrage.
One
of the persons said to be dissatisfied with the development was Marlene Coudray
(the mother of the deceased teacher). Jamaican Observer reported she was
unhappy with the dental expert’s action because it led to the murder case being
delayed unnecessarily.
"The
family is very distraught and disappointed about how the whole thing had
unfolded," Marlene Coudray, Trinidad and Tobago's minister of Gender Affairs,
told the Jamaica Observer.
"We
have been very distressed," she added "I could not understand what
had been happening."
THE TURN
However,
things took a different turn, when the Director of Public Prosecution (DPP)
Paula Llewellyn announced on Thursday that Dr Ogunsalu has had a change of mind
and will provide the findings for free.
On
Friday, the medical expert delivered the forensic dental report to
the Montego Bay Resident Magistrate's Court clerk, Natalie Malcolm. Llewellyn
said he explained to her that the whole ordeal was a misunderstanding.
Meanwhile,
KandF
learnt the murder case would be transferred to Home Circuit Court in Kingston. DPP
Paula Llewellyn said she had issued the directive seeking the change in venue
based on certain difficulties being experienced in the case; apparently
pointing to the absence of dental records which were used to identify the body.
Come
July 16, the matter will be transferred to the Home Circuit Court in Kingston
where 46-year-old Ivan Taylor will eventually be tried for Coudray-Greaves'
murder.
Dr
Christopher Ogunsalu, a Nigeria-born naturalised Jamaican Oral Surgeon graduated
from the University of Ibadan in 1987, before travelling to UK and Jamaica for
his Masters and Doctorate degrees.
He is
a full-time faculty staff of the University of the West Indies, Mona Kingston,
Jamaica, where he lectures Medical, Dental, Physiotherapy and Bachelor of Basic
Medical Sciences Students in Anatomy. He also lectures the MSc Students in
Forensic Science in the area of Forensic Odontology and Anthropology.
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