🗣 TODAY'S HOT TOPIC 🗣

The Pattern Every Woman Should Know— Exposing the Alleged Tactics of Lee Andrew and the Danish Deception Scammer

Predators in Plain Sight: The Alarming Parallels Between Lee Andrew and the ‘Danish Deception’ Scammer Share Romantic fraud is not a new phenomenon, but the digital age has given rise to a new breed of manipulator — men who weaponise affection, urgency and illusion to exploit women emotionally, financially and psychologically. The allegations surrounding Lee Andrew , currently under scrutiny after reports of suspicious behaviour and concerns raised by his wife, echo chillingly similar patterns to the man behind the viral Danish Deception scandal. In both cases, women describe a charismatic figure who moved quickly, created emotional dependency, and allegedly concealed a darker reality beneath a polished exterior. What makes these cases so disturbing is not just the alleged actions themselves, but the volume of women who remain silent until one finally steps forward. Victims of romantic fraud often carry shame, fear of judgement, or a belief that...

Anguilla’s Unsolved Crimes: A Paradise More Invested in Its Image Than Its People


Residents Demand Healthcare, Safety, and Real Community Investment

Anguilla’s Royal Police Force (RAPF) has recently demonstrated swift action, not in solving crimes, but in protecting its official crest. In a email/warning to All Angles UK, the RAPF insisted that the insignia “must not be reproduced or utilised in any publication, digital content, or promotional material without prior consultation and formal approval.” The Force demanded its immediate removal. Yet while the RAPF defends its emblem with urgency, many Anguillians are asking a far more pressing question: Where is this urgency when it comes to solving murders, protecting victims, and restoring public trust?

A paradise with 11 unsolved murders last year — and more already this year. How long can a small island carry so many unanswered deaths? Image Credit: 99esim.com

Anguilla is only 35 square miles, yet it has multiple unmonitored points of entry and exit, a reality that allows criminals to slip in and out undetected. Residents and expatriates alike say the island has become a place where crime is not only rising but often left unresolved. When All Angles UK asked the RAPF whether they had any message for families still waiting for justice, to date the Force remains silent. 

How RAPF’s Release of a 2025 Attempted‑Murder Suspect Led to a Double Killing and Raised Serious Questions Over Community Silence and Investigative Failures

Their concern was not that the crest could be easily generated by AI — but that we had used it. Perhaps the RAPF should instead contact AI platforms to secure copyright protection, because if anyone can generate the crest, will they email every creator who does?

But the deeper issue is not a crest. It is the culture of silence, the fear of speaking out, and the pattern of unresolved crimes that continue to haunt the island.


All Angles UK spoke to some Anguillians now living in the UK, many of whom told us plainly: “We lost faith in the system long ago.”

Some Anguillians now living in the UK shared their stories — each one a painful reminder of how the system has failed victims for decades.

One woman, now in London, recalled being raped at age 12 in 1998. She never reported it.
“I saw my rapist liming with police officers. How could I go to them? Who would believe me?”

SPONSORED: SHOP AVON UK

Show your skin some love in your 50s with Anew Platinum — the Protinol™ day cream that lifts, tightens and transforms. SHOP AVON UK NOW

Another, from Birmingham, survived domestic violence in 2017. Her abuser still walks free. “I got a restraining order. A police officer — his friend — called me and told me to drop it. That’s when I knew nothing would happen.”

A third described an attempted break‑in at her home in 2018.
“He broke my screen, left footprints, fell asleep in his car drunk. Police came and told me, ‘He wer just coming for some pu**y.’ Then they woke him up and let him drive home. Because they were friends.”

Life‑Shaping Sentences in Anguilla — But Does Cracking Down Matter If the Criminals Aren’t Being Caught?

These are not isolated stories. They are symptoms of a system where friendship, favouritism, and familiarity often outweigh justice. When asked whether any of the officers involved in these incidents are still serving in the RAPF today, the interviewees could not confirm, but each declined to offer names, citing fear and distrust that still linger decades later. One woman added, “All I know is I don’t live there anymore, but from wah I hear, not much change. The force need revamp for true boy.” Their words echo a sentiment shared by many Anguillians abroad: the belief that without structural reform, the cycle of silence and impunity will continue.


The Anguilla Cover‑Up: How Kenny Mitchel’s Death Was Buried, Not Solved

Silencing the Dead: The Case of Kenny Mitchell

Even in online spaces meant for locals, the silencing continues. In the Anguilla for Locals group, an administrator warned that posts about Kenny Mitchell , an Anguillian whose voice can no longer be heard , were “on the border” of acceptable content.

Yet Mitchell’s story is still being spoken about in Anguilla, St Maarten, St Martin, and Dominica. People across the region continue to demand answers.

Why, then, does Anguilla want this conversation silenced?

The answer, many believe, is simple: tourism.
Protect the image. Protect the brand. Protect the paradise.

Even when justice is at stake.

This group claims to be for locals and what’s happening in Anguilla — is murder not happening? Kenny Mitchell was a local too, now silenced. 

When a group for locals says Kenny Mitchell’s story is ‘on the border,’ what does that mean for free speech? Silencing a local’s voice isn’t protecting Anguilla — it’s erasing it.  Is this an attack on free speech?


In a political moment that has electrified conversations across the island, Leader of the Opposition Dr. Ellis Webster has delivered his most forceful critique yet of the Anguilla United Front.

Tourism: A 25‑Year Investment Priority — Youth: A 25‑Year Afterthought

Here is where the facts become impossible to ignore.

Tourism receives long‑term, structured, multi‑million‑dollar investment.

Anguilla has a 25‑year documented history of heavy government investment in tourism, including:

  • Tourism Sector Development Project (TSDP) — launched in 2008
  • Sustainable Tourism Master Plan (2010–2020) — a decade‑long strategy
  • Institutional development funding for the Ministry of Tourism
  • Monthly statistical tracking (Category 2.4.5 Tourism)
  • Continuous infrastructure, marketing, and regulatory investment

Tourism is treated as the island’s primary economic engine, with:

  • 30.7% increase in stopover visitors in March 2026
  • 9.6% increase in December 2025
  • Year‑over‑year growth in visitor spending

This growth is not accidental — it is the result of consistent, strategic, well‑funded government planning.

The Beach Enclave project signals strong investor confidence in Anguilla’s tourism future, yet many question why similar long‑term investment isn’t made in youth, safety, or community growth.

Port Nimara showcases Anguilla’s pride in tourism development — but as luxury projects rise, locals question when equal investment will reach the people who call the island home.

Now compare that to youth development.

There is:

  • No national youth development strategy
  • No mandatory post‑secondary trade programme
  • No long‑term youth investment plan
  • No youth‑focused development project equivalent to tourism’s TSDP
  • No decade‑long youth master plan
  • No dedicated statistical category tracking youth outcomes
  • No budget line for youth development in ECCB summaries

The absence of data is not a gap — it is evidence.

Anguilla has never invested in its youth the way it invests in tourism.


“Developing for tourists, but not developing its youth.”

Some Anguillians are asking:
Where is the money for youth programmes, trade skills, arts, sports, and innovation?
Where is the investment in healthcare that doesn’t require flying overseas?
Where is the funding for crime prevention, rehabilitation, and community safety?

People around the world know Anguilla. They visit yearly. They buy land. They migrate.
But the island’s own young people — its future — are left without structured support.

Even the new .ai domain revenue, many fear, will be funnelled into tourism rather than:

  • Youth development
  • Healthcare
  • Crime prevention
  • Local talent and innovation

Anguilla is developing for tourists, but not developing its youth.

And a nation that neglects its youth is a nation building its future on sand.


A Call for Change: From Looking Good to Being Good

From the Kenny Mitchell case — where a murderer was set free — to the recent double murders involving a suspect previously investigated for attempted murder, Anguilla appears reactive rather than proactive in its approach to crime.

The RAPF’s crest may shine, but symbols do not solve murders.
Tourism brochures do not protect victims.
Silence does not heal families.

Anguilla must shift its focus from looking good to the world to being good for its people.

That means:

  • Investing in youth
  • Strengthening healthcare
  • Reforming policing
  • Protecting victims
  • Ensuring justice
  • Supporting local talent
  • Building a future where Anguillians feel safe, valued, and heard

Until then, paradise will remain a postcard — beautiful on the surface, but shadowed by unanswered questions, unserved justice, and the quiet footsteps of murderers walking free among us.

📣 Share these stories from ALL ANGLES UK 📣

Follow Us on Socials

Instagram Facebook Bluesky