
Allan Sim, 60, who was sentenced to 60 years’ imprisonment for the November 2015 murder of his ex-lover, Georgetown Public Hospital (GPH) Ambulance Dispatcher, Melissa Skeete, has moved to the Court of Appeal where he is challenging his conviction and sentence. On October 15, 2020, Sim was found guilty of the crime by a jury following a trial before High Court Judge Navindra Singh at the Demerara High Court.
In a Notice of Appeal filed on October 21, 2020, at the Court of Appeal in Kingston, Sim, through his lawyer, Adrian Thompson, said that he is dissatisfied with the decision of the jury and is asking that the sentence of Trial Judge Navindra Singh be reversed, varied and set aside. He has so far proffered three grounds and indicated that further or additional grounds will be added with leave of the court.
Sim contended that the Trial Judge admitted evidence that was prejudicial to a fair trial. He further contended that the decision of the jury was against the weight of the evidence. He complained that his sentence is unduly severe.
Based on reports, on the day in question, Sim picked up the mother of four, with whom he shared a child, from her place of work in his motor car, PRR 6801, but sometime after, she was discovered near Carmichael Street, Georgetown, lying facedown and bleeding profusely from several stab wounds. The woman died while receiving treatment at the GPHC.
Three months after Sim was charged with the murder of Skeete, his son, Allan Sim Jr, was charged with being an accessory to the crime. According to the charge against the younger Sim, between November 23 and 25, 2015, at Georgetown, he received, comforted, maintained and relieved his father after his father had murdered Skeete. The younger Sim was not required to plead to the indictable charge.










