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Brother Lee: Anguilla Mourns a Gentle Giant Who Shaped Public Health and Culture

A beloved inspector, broadcaster and community pillar whose fairness and humility touched every corner of the island. Share Anguilla is mourning a man whose presence was so steady, so familiar, and so quietly influential that his passing feels like a break in the island’s rhythm. Leroy “Brother Lee” Richardson was more than a public health pioneer, more than a cultural contributor, more than a voice on Kool FM — he was one of those rare Anguillians who managed to touch every corner of community life with a spirit that was pleasant, professional, fair, and unfailingly reasonable. His loss has swept across the island like a firestorm because he was woven into the everyday fabric of Anguilla in ways people often didn’t realise until now. “An older photograph of Brother Lee captures the quiet strength he carried throughout his life — a man whose pleasant nature, professionalism and unwavering fairness shaped Anguilla far beyond the roles he held.” For...

Anguilla: Home of .Ai Caught in a Digital Storm After Fake Video Content Surfaced


The noise around AI has never been louder, and for once it isn’t coming from tech evangelists but from the people being burned by it. Paris Hilton has been one of the most vocal critics, calling deepfake pornography an epidemic and describing it as a new form of victimisation targeting women and girls at scale. 


Her warning lands at a moment when trust in AI tools is already wobbling, especially after the recent backlash against Grok X, whose safeguards against generating explicit deepfakes were reportedly easy to bypass. The conversation is no longer theoretical; it’s happening in real time, to real people, and the consequences are deeply personal.

Even the home of .ai hasn’t escaped the fallout. Anguilla’s own Farrah Banks recently revealed that a video of her had been doctored and circulated without her consent, a violation made worse by the speed and ease with which AI tools can fabricate convincing fakes. The site that posted the manipulated clip, diamondjackets.com, has since removed the video or gone offline entirely, but the damage was already done. 

In the comments beneath her post, Anguilla Focus Magazine added that their logo had been stolen and used by someone leveraging AI—another reminder that the technology doesn’t just target individuals; it erodes the integrity of brands, media, and public trust. So the question becomes unavoidable: is AI a hit or a miss? Right now, it feels like both. 

Editor Rebecca Bird, clear the air in the comments, over logo misuse

The technology itself isn’t inherently malicious—its misuse is. But that nuance doesn’t comfort the people whose faces, voices, or reputations are being hijacked. 

Commenter sharing her experience with deep fake video.

AI can be extraordinary when used responsibly, yet catastrophically harmful when placed in the wrong hands. The real issue isn’t the code; it’s the culture around it, the lack of accountability, and the speed at which bad actors can weaponise it. 

Commenter question whether AI is more harmful than good.

Until regulation catches up and platforms take responsibility, the victims will continue to outnumber the innovators. AI isn’t the villain—but the people misusing it are writing a story that makes it look like one.