Bahamas senator accused in Travolta 'extortion plot' resigns
London, January 26: The Bahamas senator, who was taken into custody over an extortion plot targeting John Travolta, has quit her post, even as she vowed to clear her name.
Travolta was said to have become a victim of the extortion attempt over the death of his 16-year-old son Jett, who died from a seizure during a family holiday in the Bahamas on January 2.
The actor and his wife Kelly Preston had alleged that blackmailers threatened to publish a photo of their teenager as he lay struggling for his life unless they were paid "millions of dollars."
Officials had held two well-known Bahamian citizens, Pleasant Bridgewater, an island attorney and lawmaker, and Obie Wilchcombe, the island''''s ex-Minister of Tourism and a friend of the celebrity couple, for questioning.
An ambulance driver Tarino Lightbourne had also been quizzed by the police.
And now, Bridgewater has resigned from her post, insisting upon her innocence and claiming her involvement had been "misconstrued".
"How these innocent actions can be so misconstrued, so perversely twisted to mean something other than it was, is a mystery," the Daily Star quoted her as saying.
Meanwhile, Wilchcombe has also protested charges against him, telling Us Weekly: "This is ridiculous and absurd. The Travoltas are suffering, it''''s just outright foolish.
"Never did I ask for anything, no one can say that. We had a friend in my country who lost a son. It was one single individual (who tried to take advantage of the family), the Bahamian people have been very kind to the Travoltas." (ANI)