Not a money-launderer in sight

John Grisham got it wrong of course. Grand Cayman is not a place where private aircraft land at night and men in dark glasses deliver bulging suitcases of banknotes to dummy banks sporting no more than brass nameplates.

John Grisham got it wrong of course. Grand Cayman is not a place where private aircraft land at night and men in dark glasses deliver bulging suitcases of banknotes to dummy banks sporting no more than brass nameplates.

No, this is an island of sun, sea and fun. Though the traffic jam from Seven-Mile Beach to George Town on a good day is a maximum of seven miles long. Those bankers, housewives, accountants, lawyers, hoteliers and diving instructors in their high-performance 4x4s can only rev their engines, turn up Superjam on Radio Cayman and empathize with their counterparts in the Brooklyn Tunnel or on the Hammersmith Flyover.

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