Court Opinion

ID: 9954787
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-03-26 21:16:43.814644+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:15:03.008997
License: Public Domain

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE VIRGIN ISLANDS
                          DIVISION OF ST THOMAS AND ST JOHN

PEOPLE OF THE VIRGIN ISLANDS                                 )

                          Plaintiff                          ;        CASE NO ST 2023 CR 00260
                 vs                                          )
                                                             )        Cite as 2024 Super lSU
KISHON HERBERT                                               )

                          Defendant                          ;
                                                             l

                             MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

1]]       Before the Court are Defendant Kishon Herbert s ( Herbert ) Motion to Dismiss Counts

Two and Four of the Information ﬁled on September 19, 2023, and the People of the Virgin

Islands ( People ) October 27, 2023, Motion to Amend the Information Having considered the

motions, the Court will grant the People 5 Motion to Amend Information and deny Herben 5

Motion to Dismiss Counts Two and Four of the Infonmtion as moot

      I      BACKGROUND & PROCEDURAL HISTORY

1X2       011 April 25, 2023, while two women         Sara Selato Molyneuax( Selato Molyneuax ) and

Shanya Hanley (‘ Hanley ’)        were leaving the Carnival Village and heading towards Emancipation

Garden Herbert tried to engage them in conversation ' Selato Molyneuax and Hanley ignored

Herbert and began speaking with another male, Travis Matthew ( ‘Matthew ), an apparent friend

of Herbert Herbert became angry, claimed he was a millionaire, began acting aggressively, drew

his ﬁrearm, and pointed it at the women Matthew intervened and de escalated the situation

Selato Molyneuax and Hanley then made their way out of the vicinity of the Emancipation Garden

Shonly after, Matthew caught up with Selato Molyneuax and Hanley and apologized for Herbert s

I The facts are as rcponed in the Information and Afﬁdavn in Support of an Arrest Warrant for Kishon Herbert
attached to the Probable Cause Fact Sheet
Pwple (me Vugm Islands vs [mm Hmbut
ST 2023 CR 00260
Memorandum Opinion & Order
Page 2 of 13

action Late: that day a male with the Facebook handle Khemistry Khzimeh attempted to contact

Hanley who recognized the male as the individual who pointed a ﬁrearm at her and her friend

Selato Molyneuax

113    The next day April 26, 2023, Selato Molyneuax s father Tyrone Molyneuax, went to the

Food Fair at Emancipation Garden to confront Herbert about the incident on the previous day

involving his daughter and her friend Tyrone Molyneuax videotaped his interaction with Herbert

VIPD reports that on the video, Herbert can be heard apologizing t0 Tylone Molyneuax and

claiming that the incident did not happen as it was reported to him On that same day, at about 3 55

p m , Selato Molyneuax reported the April 25, 2023 assault at the Richard Callwood Command

The Virgin Islands Police Department conducted a ﬁrearms registry check on Herbert, and it was

discovered that Herbert has a permit to possess and carry a ﬁrearm in the U S Virgin Islands

114    On August 17, 2023 the People ﬁled its Information, charging Herbert with ﬁve counts

Third Degree Assault in violation of V I CODE ANN tit l4 § 297(a)(2) (Sata Selato Molyneuax)

(Count One) Possession of a Firearm During the Commission of a Third Degree Assault in

violation of V I CODE ANN tit 14 § 2253(a) (Count Two); Third Degree Assault in violation of

V I CODE ANN tit 14 § 297(a)(2) (Count Three) (Shanya Hanley) Possession of a Firearm

During the Commission of a Third Degree Assault, in violation of VI LODl: ANN tit 14 §

2253(a) (Count Four) (Shanya Hanley); and Reckless Endangerment in the First Degree. in

violation of V I CODE ANN tit 14 § 625(a) (Count Fi\ e)

15     Herbert ﬁled a Motion to Dismiss Counts Two and Four of the Information on September

19, 2023 Following the ﬁling of the Motion to Dismiss, the People, on October 27, 2021, ﬁled an

Opposition to Herbert 5 Motion to Dismiss and a Motion to Amend Information Herben ﬁled an
People of the Vzrgm Islands vs Kzshon Herbert
SI 2023 CR 00260
Memorandum Opinion & Order
Page 3 of 13

Opposition to the Motion to Amend the Information on November 1 2023 The People 5 Amended

Information seeks to amend Counts Two and Four from Possession of a Firearm During the

Commission of a Third Degree Assault, in violation of V I CODE ANN tit 14 § 2253(a), to

Carrying 0r Using a Dangerous Weapon During the Commission of a Crime of Violence            Assault

Third Degree in violation of V I CODE ANN tit 14 § 2251(a)(2)(B) The People claim that the

amendments are in accord with Rule 3(d) as the amendments do not charge an additional offense

nor prejudice a substantial right of Defendant On the other hand Herbert argues that the People

are seeking to add a different offense, which Rule 3(d) prohibits Herbert further contends that the

amendments should be denied as the People seek to amend the Information to deprive him of his

absolute defense to the previous Section 2253(a) charges, as Herbert had a licensed ﬁrearm at the

time of the alleged offense Thus, the key issue here is whether the People 5 amendments seek to

add additional 01 different offenses such that Rule 3(d) 0f the Virgin Islands Rules of Criminal

Procedure has been violated

     [1    LEGAL STANDARD

T6        The Revised Organic Act of 1954 requires that a criminal defendant be informed of the

nature and cause of the accusation against him      Eh ea v People 54 V l 466, 478 (V I 2010)

(citing Revised Organic Act of 1954 § 3 48 U S C § 1561) Generally for a felony offense the

intormation is “a plain concise and deﬁnite written statement of the essential facts constituting

the offense ’ VI R Crim P 3(b)         For each count, the information must give the ofﬁcial or

customary citation of the statute rule regulation, or other provision of law that the defendant is

alleged to have violated   Id Even though an information must allege more than just the essential

elements of the offense    so long as there is sufﬁcient factual orientation to permit a defendant to
People of the Vlrgm Islands 1 9 Kishon Herbert
ST 2023 CR 00260
Memorandum Opinion & Order
Page 4 of 13

prepare his defense and invoke double jeopardy} no greater speeiﬁcity than the statutory language

is tequired PLOPIL 1 Whyte 62 V1 95 100 01 (V1 Super Ct 2015)(intemal citations omitted)

Pleading detailed allegations in the information is unnecessary Id The criminal information

should be construed as a whole using common sense to interpret the information to include

logically and rationally implied facts Gonsalies v People 70 \I I 812 844 (V I 2019)

W      The determination of whether to prosecute a criminal case and what charges to bring

generally rests in the prosecutor s discretion Brown v P(Oplc 74 V1 601, 611 (VI 2021)

However, once charges have been ﬁled, leave of the court is required for amendment of an

information Virgin Islands Rule of Criminal Procedure 3(d) governs the procedures for amending

an information    Rule 3(d) allows the own to permit amendment of an information at any time

before vetdict or ﬁnding unless an additional or different offense is charged or a substantial right

of the defendant is prejudiced V I R Crim P 3(d) See also (Jonsa/ves v People 70 VI at 844

( The amendment of an information is prohibited if the amendment 1) adds a new or different

offense than what was charged or 2) would prejudice a substantial right of the defendant ); Elizee

v People 54 V] at 478 ( While the Superior Court may permit an information to be amended at

any time before the verdict, it may not do so if an additional or different offense is charged, or a

substantial right of the defendant is prejudiced ) The additional or different prohibition is

independent of any claim of prejudice Thus, a defendant is not required to show that the

amendment will prejudice him, only that the amendment is an additional or different oftense

People v Yam 00d, 58 V I at 70 The objective and fundamental purpose of the additional and

different prong is to place a defendant on notice of the criminal conduct of which he is accused
People of the V1: gm Islands vs KlShl)" Helix”
ST 2023 CR 00260
Memorandum Opinion & Order
Page 5 of 13

and to avoid prejudieing his defense by the last minute additions of substantive changes of which

he is uninformed       Demeksoni Meyus, 177 Fed Appx 247, 250 (3d Cir 2006)

      III       ANALYSIS & DISCUSSION

      (a) Additional or Different Offense

118         Whether the prosecution is seeking to charge an additional or different offense usually

arises when the prosecution seeks to amend the information or other charging documents to bring

nevi or altered charges that were not present in the original information Generally, an additional

or different offense often describes a new charge that requires proof of elements beyond those

required by the original charge Lcttsome v People 63 V1 980 1007 (App Div DC 2015)

afﬁrmed by Gm tof the Virgin Islands v Lettsomc, 680 Fed Appx 88 (3d Cir 2017) In other

w01ds, an additional or different offense typically would tequile proofot an extra or different fact

In most instances an amendment is not considered an additional or different offense if the new

charge falls under any of the following categories it is a lesser included offense2 it merely

speciﬁes a different manner of committing the same crime initially charged,3 it is a related or

cognate offense,4 seeks to correct an erroneous statutory citation} or cited most of the elements

2 AIChlba/d 1 People 70 V1 975 982 (V1 2019) ( a defendant is not deprived of his right to notice when the
prosecution amends an infomation to add a lesser included offense since the elements of the lesser offense are
necessarily contained in the greater )
3 VHgIH Islands v Redford 671 F 2d 758, 765, (3d Cir 1982)(no new or different offense charged where the count
contained all the elements necessary to charge both offenses); Simon 1 Govemmem Q] the Vngin Islands 929 F 3d
118, 134 (3d Cir 2019) (substitution of a charge of felony murder for premeditated murder does not constitute a
different offense, however the addition of a robbery charge constitutes an additional or different offense because the
information was not detailed enough to alert the defendant of the new charge)
4 Commonwealth 1 51716101! 2006 PA Super 83, P13, 897 A 2d 1218, 1222 (Pa Super 2006) (even where amendment
vitiated planned defense, amendment permitted where the crimes speciﬁed in the original information involved the
same basic elements and arose out of the same factual situation as the crime added by the amendment)
  Peoplet Benjamin 2019 V l LEXIS 80 *2 2019 V1 SUPER 32U 2019 WL 3294891 (V1 Super Ct March 2019)
People 0/ the Virgin Islands 15 Kishon Herbert
ST 2023 CR 00260
Memorandum Opinion & Order
Page 6 of 13

but omitted an essential element of a charge 6 It is pertinent to note that amended offenses

comprising some but not all of the elements of the offense charged initially ate not necessarily

considered a different offense People v Yamood 58 V I 61, 71, (V I Super Ct Jan 16, 2013)

(amending an information to include a crime, which is not a lesser included offense does not

necessarily violate the rule prohibiting the amendment of an infomation to charge an additional

or different offense); Walters v Government of the Virgin Islands, 172 F R D 165 (D V I App

Div 1997) (noting that it is not necessarily true that amending an infonnation to include a crime

which is not a lesser included offense will violate the rule ”)

119      Here, the People ﬁled an Amended Information to remove Possession of a Firearm During

the Commission of a Third Degree Assault in Counts Two and Count Four of the Information and

replace these charges with Carrying or Using a Dangerous Weapon During the Commission of a

Crime of Violence           Assault Third Degree In determining whether the amended charges are

considered additional or different, the Court must consider the Information as a whole, the

differences between the count initially charged and the count under the proposed amendment, and

whether the original Infomation provides adequate notice of the added charge Simon v

Governmcm 0f the Virgin Islands 929 F 3d 118 134 (3d Cir 2019)

1110     The Court must look at the language of the statute under the oniginal count charged under

14 V I C § 225 3(a)7 and the statutory language of the proposed amended count under 14 V l C §

‘5 Lettsome 1 People 63 V I 980, 1007 (App Div DC 2015) afﬁrmed by Gm ’t ofthc Virgin Islands t Lettsome, 680
Fed Appx 88, (3d Cir 2017) (permitting amendment where the information omitted an essential element from each
of the six weapons charges and the defendant had ample notice of the crimes with which he was being charged)
 Title 14 V I C § 2253(a) provides
          Whoever, unless otherwise authorized by law, has, possesses bears transports or carries either, actually or
          constructively, openly or concealed any ﬁrearm, as deﬁned in Title 23 section 4510) of this code, loaded or
          unloaded, may be arrested without a warrant, and shall be Sentenced to imprisonment of not less than ten
          years and shall be ﬁned not less than $10,000 nor more than $15,000 or both the ﬁne and imprisonment,
          except that if such person shall have been convicted of a felony in any state, territory, or federal court of the
Pe oplc of the Virgin Islands vs Kishon Herbert
ST 2023 CR 00260
Memorandum Opinion & Order
Page 7 of 13

2251(a)(2)(B) 3 To obtain a conviction under Section 225 l (a)(2)(B) t“ 0 elements must be proven

Firstly, it must be shown that the defendant was in posseSsion of a dangetous weapon Secondly

it must be proven that the defendant intended to unlan fully use the weapon against another person

Nantou v People 52 V I 466 480 81 (V I 2009) Under Section 2251(a)(2) a ﬁrearm is

considered a dangerous weapon               Connor v People, 59 V I             286, 294 295 (V I 20! 3) The

determination of whethet the dangerous Vt eapon was used in a crime 01 violence undet subSection

(B) is not an element of the crime but, instead serves as a sentence enhancer where the possessor

of the dangerous weapon carries or has under his proximate control the weapon during the

commission or attempted commission of a crime of violence Pom]! 1 People, 59 V I 444, 458

(VI 2013)

MI       The elements of the crime of unauthorized possession of a ﬁrearm require proof that ( I)

defendant, (2) knowingly (4) possessed, (4) a ﬁrearm, (5) without lawful authorization                      DaVlb v

People 69 V l 619, 663 (V I 2018) Section 2253(a) ﬁtrther provides for circumstances under

which the sentence for violating that section is enhanced Again, although not technically an

element of the crime the application of the penalty enhancement in section 2253(a) that a ﬁrearm

          United States, or if such ﬁrearm or an imitation thereof was had, possessed, borne, transported or carried by
          or under the proximate control of such person during the commission or attempted commission of a crime of
          violence as deﬁned in subsection (d) hereof, then such person shall be ﬁned $25,000 and imprisoned not less
          than ﬁfteen (15) years nor more than twenty (20) years The foregoing applicable penalties provided for
          violation of this section shall be in addition to the penalty provided for the commission of or attempt to
          commit, the felony or crime of violence
8 Title 14 V I C § 2251(a)(2)(B) provides
           Whoever with intent to use the same unlawfully against another, has, possesses, bears transports carries
          or has under his proximate control, a dagger, dirk dangerous knife, razor, stiletto or any other dangerous or
          deadly weapon shall if he has previously been convicted of a felony, or has, possesses, bears transports,
          carries or has under his proximate control, any such weapon during the commission or attempted commission
          of a crime of violence (as deﬁned in section 2253(d)(l) hereof) shall be ﬁned $10,000 and imprisoned not
          more than fifteen (15) years, which penalty shall be in addition to the penalty provided for the commission
          of or attempt to commit, the crime of violence
People of the Virgin Islands 15 Ktslzon Heiber!
SF 2023 CR 00260
Memorandum Opinion & Order
Page 8 of 13

was possessed dun'ng the commission of a crime of violence must be alleged in the information

and proved to a jury beyond a reasonable doubt [d at 664 5 Considening the elements and

sentencing enhancer in both offenses, the only factor that essentially distinguishes Possession of a

Firearm During the Commission of a Third Degree Assault and Carrying on Using a Dangerous

Weapon During the Commission of a Crime of Violence         Assault Thiad DegIee is ‘ without law ful

authorization" element which is unique to unauthorized possession of a ﬁrearm In analyzing the

m o statutes and reading the Information as a whole, the Court ﬁnds that the proposed amendments

do not signiﬁcantly alter the character of the initial Information in a way that would substantially

burden or hamper Herbert s ability to properly raise a defense See e g , People v Elmo 2020

VI SUPER 6SU 8 2020 VI LEXIS 57 *5 (VI Super Ct June 2 2020) (the inclusion of the

aiding and abetting statute did not add new or different charges but simply pr0\ides an alternate

means by which Defendant may be held accountable for the same offenses already charged and

does not constitute the charging of new or additional offenses beyond those that were included in

the original inf01mation)

11l2   While Gaming or Using a Dangerous Weapon Duting the Commission of a Crime of

Violence Assault Third Degree is not a lesset included offense of Possession of a Firearm During

the Commission of a Third Degree Assault this does not foreclose the People 5 amendments to

the Information Amending an information to include a CI ime that is not a lesser included offense

does not automatically or ineluctably violate the additional or different oftense prong 0t Rule 3(d)

The court must look at the speciﬁc statutes that formed the basis of the criminal charges in the

context of existing facts at the time the original Information was ﬁled to determine whether the

amendment seeks to add an additional 01 different offense In Virgin Islands v Bedford, 671 F 2d
People offhe Virgin Islands \3 Kishon Herbert
ST 2023 CR 00260
Memorandum Opinion & Order
Page 9 of 13

758 765 (3d Cir 1982) the ( ourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit upheld the amendment of an

information to include a charge of assault with a deadly weapon when the original information

charged only assault with intent to rob The Bedford Court held that [b]ecause of the detailed and

particular language used in Count Three [of the Information} it not only contained all the elements

necessary to charge assault with intent to rob but also all the elements of assault with a deadly

weapon If the govemment had proved all it had alleged, the crime shown would have constituted

both an assault with intent to rob and assault with a deadly weapon ” Virgin Islands v Bedford,

67] F 2d at 765 The Appellate Court held that no additional or different offense was charged in

the amended information

$3     In this instance the People are not seeking to charge the Defendant with a more serious

offense with additional elements Courts have permitted amendments charging a crime of similar

gravity with different elements if the core elements of that crime are the same as those of the crime

charged initially See e g Commonwealth \ Grekzs 4| 1 Pa Super 513, 601 A 2d 1284 (Pa

Super 1992) (allowing amendment where the crime charged involved the same basic elements

and factual situation) The core claim by the People is that Defendant pointed a ﬁrearm at Hanley

and Selato Molyneuax Except for proving that the ﬁrearm was unlicensed, all of the elements and

enhancing facts required to prove Carrying or Using a Dangerous Weapon During the Commission

of a Crime of Violence    Assault Third Degree would be the same elements and enhancing facts

to prove Possession of a Firearm During the Commission of a Third Degree Assault The

amendment would not add an element to the offense which is not present in the cuiTent offense

Defendant would not be required to defend against any new element not present in the original

offense Therefore, the amendments to Counts Two and Four of the Infonnation do not constitute
People of the Vugm Islands \ \ Kwhon Herbert
ST 2023 CR 00260
Memorandum Opinion & Order
Page 10 of 13

an additional and diffetent offense AIChlbtl/d v People 70 V I 795 983 (V I 2019) (explaining

that when comparing the elements 01 two crimes without consideling the facts of the case an

offense is not deemed an additional or different it the offense in the amended information does not

require an element beyond the offense in the original information)

1114     The People do not allege any new facts The prosecution is not adding a new set of facts

vastly different flom that outlined in the original Information or Afﬁdavit in Support of an Arrest

Warrant that was used to support probable cause in the Magistrate Division The crimes alleged

in the Amended Information arose out of the same factual predicate as the crimes in the original

Information 9 Derrtckson 1 Meyeu               177 Fed Appx 247 250 (3d Cit 2006) (unpublished)

( “here the initial information charges an offense that involves the same basic elements and

evolved out of the same factual situation as the crimes speciﬁed in the amended indictment or

information, the defendant is deemed to have been placed on notice regarding his alleged criminal

conduct     (intemal quotation marks and ellipses omitted) The Court therefore, ﬁnds that the

People 3 amendments fall within Rule 3(d)

         (b) Prejudice

1115    The People argue that Defendant will not be prejudiced by the amendment A defendant

has a constitutional right to fair and adequate notice prim to the commencement of trial of the

charges against which he must defend himself Arclubald v People 70 V]                           at 982    Rule 3(d)

9 See eg brate v Lowe 2015 Kan App Unpub LEYIS 49 *6 342 P 3d 2 (Kan App 2015) (unpublished opinion)
(explaining that the State's amendment of a complaint to charge an alternative theory for committing the same aim:
is permitted even if the new theory requires that the State prove different material elements and concluding that even
though the amendment changed the elements the State had to prove the State did not charge a different crime ) Slate
1 Howard 2013 Wash App LEXIS 113 ‘6 7 (Wash Ct App Jan 22 2013) (holding that the court did not abuse
its discretion by allowing the amendment as the amendment merely speciﬁed a different manner of committing the
crime originally charged and the defendant should have been prepared to defend against the use of a ﬁrearm because
the count of ﬁrst degree robbery accused him of being armed with a deadly weapon )
People ofthe Vugm Islands v.3 Kishon Herbal
ST 2023 CR 00260
Memorandum Opinion & Order
Page 11 of 13

aims to ensure that the defendant is fully apprised of the charges and to avoid prejudice by

prohibiting the last minute addition of alleged e1 iminal acts of which the defendant is uninformed

People v Yamood 58 V I at 61 At all times, Defendant was tully apprised of the factual scenario

that supports the charges in the amended complaint The probable cause afﬁdavit clearly states

that a ﬁrearm registry check was conducted on Mr K Herbert with positive results tor Herbert

having a permit to possess and carry a ﬁrearm in the US Virgin Islands ’ See Gonsalves v People

70 V I at 812 (when considering the prejudice      if any   to the defendant for a claimed lack of

notice of the charges   sources in the information extrinsic to the speciﬁc count can be used to

determine whether the defendant was sufﬁciently apprised of the offense charged )

1116   From the inception of this case, Defendant was on notice that even though he had a license

to carry a ﬁrearm he would be charged with using the ﬁrearm to commit a third degree assault

The Defendant was made aware of his alleged criminal conduct as the crimes speciﬁed in both

the original and amended Information involved the same basic elements and originated from the

same factual situation Since Defendant was on notice of the charges in the Amended Information

he cannot feign surprise It is only where the amended provision alleges a different set of events

or the elements to the amended crime are materially different from the elements to the crime

initially charged such that the defendant would be prejudiced by the ehange, that the amendment

is not permitted Ptoplt v Elmes 2020 V1 SUPER 65U at 13

$117   It was no secret that the ﬁrearm Defendant used to commit the alleged criminal act is a

licensed ﬁlearm This was clearly documented in the probable cause fact sheet It may have been

merely an oversight by the People to initially charge the Defendant with Possession of a Firearm

During the Commission of a Third Degree Assault rather than with Carrying or Using a Dangerous
People of the V1! gm Islands vs Kishon Herbert
ST 2023 CR 00260
Memorandum Opinion & Order
Page 12 of 13

Weapon During the Commission of a Crime of Violence                       Assault Third Degree in the ﬁrst

instance Defendant claims that the amendment defeats his defense that he has a licensed ﬁrearm '0

The assault charges do not vanish because the Defendant had a licensed ﬁrearm Having a licensed

ﬁrearm does not create an absolute immunity from prosecution for assault Indeed, Herbert can

still prepare for and assert his defense that ‘it didn t happen like your heard which he purportedly

told Mr Tyrone Molyneuax “ Hence, Defendant is not prejudiced

$18         Timing is a crucial factor in determining prejudice Courts tend to differentiate between

amendments made before and during the trial See Elzzee v People 54 V I at 48 This is not a

case where the prosecutor is seeking to amend the information on the eve of trial or during or after

the presentation of all evidence at trial Here, there has been no trial, verdict, or ﬁnding '2 The

Motion to Amend the Information was brought before the Court with sufﬁcient time for Herbert

to prepare for trial The Court ﬁnds that Defendant has adequate time to prepare his defense

       IV      CONCLUSION

‘ 19        For the reasons stated above the amendments proposed by the People do not constitute

additional or different offenses within V I R Crim P 3(d)                  Because the Court will grant the

Peoples Motion to Amend the Information the Court need not decide Defendant 5 Motion to

Dismiss Counts T“0 and Four in the original Information as that motion is now moot

Accordingly it is hereby

 ’ Cf. People I Buyamm, 20l9 VI LEXIS 80 at *4 (court permitting amendment and overruling Defendant s
objection where the Defendant objected to replacing the “0rd ‘ riﬂe with the word ‘ weapon because the Magistrate
Judge found probable cause to charge the Defendant with pointing a riﬂe and no riﬂe was found in defendant 5
possession)
“ Afﬁdaw it in Support of an Arrest Warrant at 1114
  Moreover, any prejudice in preparation before the trial can be avoided by granting a continuance
 People ofthe Virgin Islands vs Kishon Haber!
 ST 2023 CR 00260
 Memorandum Opinion & Order
 Page 13 of 13

        ORDERED that the People 5 Motion to Amend Information is GRANTED, and the

 Amended [nfonnation is deemed the Information in this matter, and it is further,

        ORDERED that Defendant KISHON HERBERT 8 Motion to Dismiss Counts Two and

 Four of the original Information is DENIED as moot; and it is further

    ORDERED that this Order be directed to all counsel of record

                                                             j

 DATED March 26 2024                                    gm)? 31 W W
                                                            CAROL THOMAS            COBS
                                                             Judge of the Superior Count
                                                                of the Virgin Islands

ATTEST
Tamara Charles
Clerk of e/Court

B               /                    Mé/Mﬂf
                                 J

(4/ Latoy amacho
    Court Clerk Supervisor