|
Anna Nicole stirs up Bahamas
From John Marquis
NASSAU (Bahamas)—Actress Anna Nicole Smith is shaping up as a major
political embarrassment for the government of the Bahamas with one
minister under pressure to resign for giving her special treatment.
Since arriving in Nassau three months ago, and being struck by tragedy
when her 20-year-old son Daniel Wayne Smith died, the former reality TV
star has sparked a Cabinet crisis, angry editorials and inspired
lawsuits that could drag on for months.
The 39-year-old former Playboy playmate and widow of an oil billionaire
who was 63 years older than she, fled to the Bahamas to find peace, give
birth to her daughter Dannie Lynn Hope and escape the attention of the
Hollywood paparazzi.
But Smith’s presence set off a succession of legal disputes, a
controversy over ministerial integrity and has drawn almost daily,
unwelcome attention to the Bahamas from U.S. cable networks. In
addition, American tabloids have examined almost every aspect of her
life as she hides behind the walls of her island home.
Ex-lover Larry Birkhead, who claims to be the father of Smith’s
2-month-old daughter, says Smith is “laughing in the face of the Bahamas
government” by using the country to escape Californian paternity laws
and a DNA test on her baby.
But he and his attorney Debra Opri have vowed to “fight to the finish”
to get justice in his paternity claim, alleging the baby was conceived
during a two-year relationship that ended only after he expressed
concern about how her lifestyle might be harming the unborn child.
For the Bahamas, trouble began when Smith’s son Daniel died at her
bedside at Doctors Hospital in Nassau on September 10 — the day after he
arrived to visit his mother and his then 3-day-old sister.
Daniel’s death triggered several embarrassing disclosures for the
Bahamas government, including the fast-tracking of her residency permit
by Immigration Minister Shane Gibson.
PRESSURE, RIDICULE FOR MINISTER
Gibson, who claimed to be a close friend of Smith, is now under intense
pressure to quit for not doing due diligence in allowing her to stay in
the country. He also faces ridicule for being photographed at her
much-publicized “exchange of vows” with lawyer boyfriend Howard K. Stern
on a catamaran while her son’s body lay in a local morgue.
With a Bahamas general election less than five months away, the Bahamian
media is demanding that Prime Minister Perry Christie fire Gibson.
It also wants to know when legal authorities are going to order an
inquest into Daniel Smith’s death. So far, Bahamian officials have been
strangely quiet on autopsy tests and an inquest date, in spite of U.S.
pathologist Dr. Cyril Wecht’s disclosure that the youth’s body contained
methadone and at least two antidepressants.
If all that weren’t bad enough, another of Smith’s ex-lovers, South
Carolina realtor Ben Thompson, is suing in the Bahamian courts to
establish his ownership of the $900,000 house that formed the basis of
Smith’s residency permit.
Under Bahamian law, a person has to buy a property worth at least
$500,000 before qualifying for residency but Thompson says he only
advanced money to buy the house on the understanding that Smith would
take out a mortgage to repay him.
Thompson alleges that Smith “double crossed” him by reneging on the deal
once her residency was established, claiming the property was a gift. He
is suing in the hope of getting his money baack or establishing
ownership
Smith and Stern, who also claims to be father of her daughter, have
failed to respond to Thompson’s eviction notice, which expired on
October 31. They continue to live in the house, which stands on Nassau’s
exclusive Eastern Road, traditional base of the nation’s wealthy white
merchants. |