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Man denies indecent assault

indecently assaulting a boy under 14 years old.Twenty-two-year-old Jamal Carlos Caines, of Union Street, who denies the offence, was bailed on condition he gives up his passport, reports every Monday to Hamilton Police,

indecently assaulting a boy under 14 years old.

Twenty-two-year-old Jamal Carlos Caines, of Union Street, who denies the offence, was bailed on condition he gives up his passport, reports every Monday to Hamilton Police, and has no contact with the boy.

He also denied unlawfully entering a house at night.

A trial was set for March 1 next year.

TREATMENT ORDER CTS Treatment order A 24-year-old drug user has been ordered to get addiction treatment by a magistrate.

Derrick Duval Binns, of Cricket Lane, Sandys, agreed with Senior Magistrate the Wor. Will Francis that he had a problem with drugs.

The court heard how Police searched Binns' bedroom on March 18 and found a plastic twist and a piece of paper containing traces of freebase cocaine.

Binns admitted possessing drug equipment. Mr. Francis put him on 18 months probation on condition he regularly goes for drug addiction treatment.

PEMBROKE FIRES FIR Pembroke fires Firemen were called out to tackle two residential fires over the weekend. The first occurred in Cavendish Heights, Pembroke, just before 4 a.m. on Saturday when a pot left on a stove burst into flames.

Two vehicles and ten firefighters responded, and the fire was extinguished within half an hour.

Later that evening, three vehicles and 11 firefighters put out a gas fire at a residence on the North Shore in Pembroke.

STEER CLEAR TFC Steer clear Motorists are being urged to avoid for three weeks a section of Dundonald Street, between Parliament Street and Brunswick Street in Hamilton.

The section is being resurfaced, and sidewalks are being installed.

Mr. Roger Sherratt, secretary of the Corporation of Hamilton, said work would take up to three months to complete.

But traffic should be able to flow smoothly again once resurfacing is finished in three weeks.

"We regret the inconvenience, but the renovations are necessary and will greatly improve that section of Dundonald Street,'' said Mr. Sherratt.