It is impossible for any outsider to know whether the U.S. Attorney General – or any federal official – received a letter.

Senior ABLP people are going around saying that acting U.S. Attorney General Todd Blanche did not receive the Caribbean Anticorruption Association’s recent letter.

There is no possible way that anyone in Antigua and Barbuda – or anywhere else – could know that.

If the United States Department of Justice confirmed or denied that it had received specific allegations of corruption or violation of U.S. law, few would dare come forward to expose wrongdoing.

Federal privacy laws, court decisions, and standard good practice ensure that private correspondence is kept confidential.

On top of that, the Browne government has no connections with any senior officials in Washington.

Ambassador Ronald Sanders has gone out of his way to alienate the United States government.

Sanders is so weak and unpopular in Washington that he can’t even get a personal meeting with officials to talk about the visa restrictions.

So there is no way he, or anyone in the Browne government, could ever be in a position to know what the U.S. Department of Justice leadership received.

Methinks the gentleman doth protest too much.

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