Jamaican Crown Counsel ‘Goes to Washington
KINGSTON, Jamaica – The U.S. Embassy in Jamaica has confirmed that Attorney- at-Law Tasha Manley has been selected to participate in the American Fellows Program administered by the Partners of the Americas, and funded by the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs (ECA).
The American Fellows Program sponsors international exchanges of outstanding civil servants to promote mutual understanding and excellence among governments in the Western Hemisphere. This is undertaken by the exchange of technical expertise and resources by sending and receiving agencies that in turn serves to improve the relationship between the Unites States and its neighbors.
Tasha Manley
Ms. Manley, who is Crown Counsel in the Attorney General’s Office, will do her fellowship at the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission in the Office of Cooperative Enforcement in Washington D.C. While there she will see firsthand how the Commission ensures enforcement of commodity futures laws by engaging in criminal cooperative enforcement with Federal, State, and international agencies and branches of the U.S. government. The fellowship will be for three months.
Ms. Manley is elated about the opportunity the fellowship affords her and is looking forward to delving into the intricacies of the U.S. and International Financial Regulatory framework and believes that her participation in the program will broaden her knowledge of the U.S. justice system. This knowledge, she believes, will assist her in identifying areas of practice and procedure in the Attorney General’s Department that might need some adjustment and will enable her to make meaningful recommendations for change.
Ms. Manley is also looking forward to investigating methods employed in dealing with financial crimes, knowledge that will be beneficial to her, particularly in light of the Mutual Criminal Assistance Agreements signed by the governments of Jamaica and the United States. “I hope that exposure to U.S. jurisprudence will enable me to contribute to the development of the legal system of my own country, and will no doubt assist me in litigation before the Jamaican courts in matters involving U.S. law, particularly in issues of extradition, cross-border financial crimes, and asset forfeiture,” she said