Sir David Anthony Cathcart Simmons, KA, BCH, KC, LLM (born April 28, 1940) is a Caribbean jurist and politician: a former Chief Justice of Barbados, he also served as Attorney General.[1]
He has also served as Chairman of a number of national and international judicial bodies:
Chairman of the Caribbean Financial Action Task Force (1997/98);
Chairman of the EU/Caribbean Conference which developed the "Barbados Plan of Action" (1996);
Chairman of the Joint US/Caribbean Sub-Committee which developed a Plan of Action on Justice and Security issues, signed by President Clinton and Caribbean Heads (1997);
Chairman of the Regional Committee for the establishment of a Maritime Cooperation Against the Traffic in Illicit Narcotic Drugs in the Caribbean project (1999-2002);
Chairman of the Preparatory Committee to establish the Caribbean Court of Justice (1999-2001); first Chairman of the Regional Judicial and Legal Services Commission (2003-2004);
Chairman of the High Level Task Force to supervise the inauguration of the Caribbean Court of Justice (2004-2005).
In 2006, Simmons was elected as an Honorary Bencher of the Honorable Society of Lincoln's Inn.
Simmons chaired the 2013 CONCACAF investigation which found FIFA Vice President Jack Warner guilty of corruption.
In 2013, he was appointed Chairman of the Tivoli Inquiry into the violence surrounding the 2010 arrest of Christopher Coke.[6]