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Guyana to drop charges against drunken Irish teen accused of threatening to kill president

The lawyer for Cillian James Crossan, a 17-year-old volunteer with an aid group, said his client was joking when he said he would shoot and kill President Donald Ramotar, shown here at the United Nations General Assembly on Sept. 27, 2012. Don Emmert (AFP)/Getty Images

GEORGETOWN, Guyana – Guyana’s government says it plans to drop charges against an Irish teenager who was accused earlier this year with threatening to shoot and kill the president of the South American country.

Public prosecutions director Shalimar Ali Hack wrote a letter stating he was dropping criminal proceedings against 17-year-old Cillian James Crossan.

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Police Chief Leroy Brummel said Thursday that he expects the charge will soon be dismissed.

Crossan’s lawyer has said the teen was having an alcohol-fueled conversation with two bodyguards of President Donald Ramotar at an international rodeo event in April. The president was not there at the time.

Crossan, who has pleaded not guilty, is in Guyana as a volunteer with the British aid group Project Trust.

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