Noel Arrigo walks free after 22 months
Early release likely to rekindle outcry
Disgraced former Chief Justice Noel Arrigo clutching Rosary beads as he is taken home by relatives after serving 22 months of a 33-month sentence for bribery. Photo: Jason Borg
Noel Arrigo emerged a free man from Mount Carmel Hospital’s Forensic Unit yesterday after serving 22 months of a 33-month sentence for accepting a bribe to reduce the jail term of a drug dealer while he was Chief Justice.
He benefitted from a standard reduction in the prison sentence given for good behaviour.
The disgraced Chief Justice has spent his entire term at the forensic unit – a facility meant to house sick inmates and ones trying to overcome a drug habit – ostensibly on account of ill health and depression.
In the days after he was sentenced in 2009, doctors recommended that he should stay temporarily at the facility because he was suffering from depression and other health problems.
However, it stretched to his entire term.
Yesterday, he was picked up at around 7 p.m. by a small group of relatives who made their way to the facility in two SUVs. There was a moment of indecision as they tried to dodge cameras assembled outside the gate.
Eventually, the black 4x4 he was in, made its way slowly through the prying cameras.
Dr Arrigo said nothing and did not display any emotion, but he could be seen clutching rosary beads, as he had done throughout his trial.
On November, 26, 2009, he was sentenced to two years and nine months imprisonment, after a 15-day trial which ended a seven-year legal battle which Dr Arrigo put up against his charges after first being arraigned with co-accused, former judge Patrick Vella, on August 4, 2002.
Both were found guilty of accepting money for reducing a sentence of notorious drug trafficker Mario Camilleri, known as L-Imnieħru, from 16 to 12 years.
The two had been caught through phone taps employed by the Malta Security Service.
Dr Arrigo’s sentence, which included a perpetual general interdiction, was 18 months below the maximum allowed by law at the time the crime (since then the thresholds have been increased).
The sentence had caused an outcry which is likely to be rekindled with his early release for good conduct yesterday. A Facebook group was set up protesting against his term barely a few hours after news broke about his release yesterday.
All those involved in the case, including childhood friend and middleman Anthony Grech Sant, had been jailed by the time Dr Arrigo faced trial. Dr Vella, who had pleaded guilty in March 2007, has been free since July 2008.
He had been given a two-year jail term, when the maximum was four, and he walked out of the Corradino Correctional Facility where he was held in a secure unit after serving 16 months.
After sentence was delivered, Dr Vella’s lawyer read out a statement in court in which he apologised, “without any conditions, to Maltese society in general for his actions” and declared his regret for the damage caused to society.
Dr Arrigo, however, continued to fight his case. He never admitted to the charges, and though he accepted, in the face of overwhelming evidence, that money had changed hands, he argued through his lawyers that his decision had not been influenced by monetary gain.
His defence team mounted the legal argument that Dr Arrigo received the money only after deciding on the case and that therefore, under the Maltese definition of bribery, he could not be found guilty.
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Mr J Galea
Sep 11th 2011, 22:27
So much for seeing that justice is meted out to all in like fashion! Mickey mouse Malta.
Marianne Tabone
Sep 11th 2011, 21:03
halluh lil dan il-bniedem! Zbalja imma issa hallas tal-izball li ghamel. Issa nsewh u halluh jghix hajtu fil-privatezza. Il-kastig li ha ma kienux ix-xhur li ghamel fl-isptar imma l-fatt li tilef kull sens ta' rispett mis-socjeta. Allura halluh jghix bi kwietu u insew li jezisti. Nahseb li m'ghandux jissemma aktar halli hekk ikun jista' jkompli jghix hajtu bhala cittatidin privat b'mod seren. Niftakru li ahna nigu ggudikati bl-istess kejl li niggudikaw lil haddiehor!! U din mhux jien ghidtha. Qalha s-Sinjur taghna Gesu Kristu.
Joe Brincat-LL.D
Sep 11th 2011, 11:50
The article contains a value judgment which is wrong. "Early release" means before it was due. If I arrive early for work, it means that I am there before I should be there. It is true that in the text mention is made that he benefited from standard reduction. So it was not early. It was when due. Journalists should watch their words.
R. Borg
Sep 11th 2011, 10:50
Hope that people who went to church to day heard what the bible had to say. Pardon your enimy so that God will pardon your sins.
Peppi Azzopardi
Sep 11th 2011, 09:51
il habs ma jghmlux il post izda c cahda totali tal-liberta, l umiljazzjoni li minn prim imhallef tipicca l habs, il-habs li jibda minn go fik u jieqaf go fik. Hajjet dr. Noel Arrigo ma tista qatt tkun l istess u ghax hu min hu u ghax hawn hafna nsara dr. Arrigo ma jistax ikun bniedem hieles li jpoggi warajh dak li gara. Ovvja nghi dan bi swied il-qalb ghax nixtieq u nemmen li Dr. Arrigo ghandu jhares -il quddiem u fic-cirkostanzi jghix hajja normali.
X inhu l iskop tal-habs? mHux biex bniedem jirriforma u jerga johrog fis-socjeta? Allura x differenza taghmel jekk ikunx kordin jew post iehor? Jew bil-habs iridu vendetta?
Dak iz zmien kien qalu li l-kmamar fejn kien Dr. Arrigo kienu airconditioned. Dak iz mzien iccekjajt u din hija gidba totali. Dan huwa habs iehor. Iltqajt ma persuni fil-habs li kienu f'dan il-habs u talbu biex jergghu imorru kordin.
peppi
M. Bezzina
Sep 12th 2011, 07:58
skuzi ta mhux hu kin involut fil korruzzjoni!!Ha dak li haqqu ux!!
Mr A. Mizzi
Sep 11th 2011, 08:02
Jail sentence? when not even one day was spent in jail but in a residence surrounded by orange groves and being waited upon at the tax-payer's expence?
That's no justice....... going home after such a short spell and fully recovered from his ailments that had him transferred to this Inmates' VIP resort.....