[5] In October 2006, angered by the police's handling of a murder case against Chayben Abou-Nehra, and with the Leader of the Opposition and the Bar Association of Belize aligned against him, Anderson agreed to resign.
[7] He had forgotten to pay his final tax bill of BZ$28,000, and so he was detained at the airport and missed his initially-scheduled flight.
[9] He also became a first-year associate course tutor at his alma mater, the Norman Manley Law School.
[10] In August 2011, he was named a judge of the Supreme Court of Jamaica, fulfilling one of his lifelong dreams.
at the University of the West Indies and his Legal Education Certificate at Norman Manley Law School.