African-American Man Fighting For His Life After Unprovoked Racist ‘rage’ Attack In Auburn

Seattle Times staff reporter
The man accused of attacking DaShawn Horne with a baseball bat became enraged when he learned his sister had spent the night with the young African-American man, Auburn police said. He has been charged with malicious harassment, the state’s hate-crime statute.

LaDonna Horne still can’t quite believe an alleged hate crime land­ed her 26-year-old son in the inten­sive-care unit at Harborview Medical Center with a trau­mat­ic brain injury.

You just nev­er think it’s going to hap­pen to you or so close to home. I was just telling some­one, ‘It’s dif­fer­ent out here. Everybody gets along. It’s so diverse,’ ” Horne, who is African American, said Tuesday.

It was the 11th day Horne, oth­er fam­i­ly mem­bers and her son’s large cir­cle of friends have kept vig­il at the hos­pi­tal while they wait for DaShawn Horne to wake up from injuries sus­tained in what police are call­ing an unpro­voked attack with a base­ball bat.

As his uncles, we taught him to pro­tect him­self,” said Ray Jenkins, who is con­sid­ered fam­i­ly even though he isn’t relat­ed to Horne. “But to be attacked from behind because of the col­or of his skin …”

Who can be pre­pared for that?” said LaDonna Horne’s broth­er, Rodney King, fin­ish­ing his best friend’s sentence.

Auburn police and King County pros­e­cu­tors say Horne is the vic­tim of a bru­tal assault and hate crime, per­pe­trat­ed by the 18-year-old broth­er of a young woman with whom Horne spent a night.

Julian Tuimauga, of Auburn, was charged last week with first-degree assault and mali­cious harass­ment — the state’s hate-crime statute — and remains in the King County Jail in lieu of $500,000 bail, jail and court records show.

From what his fam­i­ly has been able to piece togeth­er, Horne, a mail han­dler for the U.S. Postal Service who lives in Kent, had a rare Friday night off Jan. 19. He want­ed to go to a par­tic­u­lar night­club in Seattle’s Pioneer Square but couldn’t get in, so he went to anoth­er near­by club instead. There, he met a woman in her 20s and the two “hit it off,” LaDonna Horne said.

At the end of the night, she invit­ed him back to her place in Auburn.

The next morn­ing, the woman called a Lyft car to dri­ve Horne home, accord­ing to his rel­a­tives and charg­ing papers.

It was the Lyft dri­ver — who had backed into the dri­ve­way of a home in the 600 block of 27th Street Southeast — who wit­nessed the assault and called 911 just before 10:30 a.m. on Jan. 20, the charges say.

According to charg­ing papers:

Tuimauga was car­ry­ing an alu­minum base­ball bat when he approached the Lyft dri­ver and asked who the dri­ver was there to pick up. The dri­ver gave Tuimauga’s sister’s name as the per­son who had request­ed the ride, then watched as Tuimauga walked to a cor­ner of the fenced yard.

A short time lat­er, the dri­ver saw Horne walk along the side of the house toward the dri­ve­way and heard him argue with Tuimauga, the charges say. He “then heard a thump sound like a bat had struck some­thing,” accord­ing to charg­ing papers.

The dri­ver looked back and saw Tuimauga strike Horne in the head twice with the bat and watched him fall to the ground, the charges say.

At that point, the dri­ver heard Tuimauga say, “This is what hap­pens when you bring black peo­ple around here,” the charges say.

The Lyft dri­ver drove away and parked two hous­es down, where he saw Tuimauga hit Horne three more times with the bat while he was lying uncon­scious on the ground, the charges say.

Part of the attack was cap­tured by a neighbor’s video-sur­veil­lance cam­era, and the footage shows Tuimauga armed with the bat and Horne “falling into the frame” already uncon­scious, charg­ing papers say.

While Horne was lying bloody in the front yard, Tuimauga used his cell­phone to video-record the injured man while yelling racial slurs at him, the charges say.

According to the charges, Tuimauga repeat­ed­ly used the N‑word.

State law defines mali­cious harass­ment — a felony com­mon­ly referred to as a hate crime — as inten­tion­al­ly injur­ing, dam­ag­ing prop­er­ty or threat­en­ing some­one because of his or her per­cep­tion of the victim’s race, col­or, reli­gion, ances­try, nation­al ori­gin, gen­der, sex­u­al ori­en­ta­tion, or men­tal, phys­i­cal or sen­so­ry handicap.

Tuimauga’s father and sis­ter were inside the home and did not wit­ness the attack, the charges say. But the sis­ter told police her broth­er lat­er broke down her bed­room door and called her a “whore,” charg­ing papers say.

Police say Tuimauga lat­er told detec­tives he was “in a rage” because he believed his sis­ter and Horne had sex, the charges say.

At Harborview, doc­tors removed parts of Horne’s skull to relieve swelling in his brain, the charges say.

His broth­er, Obediyah Israel, set up a GoFundMe page on Friday to help cov­er his brother’s med­ical bills, lost wages and child sup­port for his 16-month-old son, Deion. So far, the cam­paign has raised more than $3,800 of a $25,000 goal.

Horne was a star foot­ball play­er at Federal Way High School and stud­ied crim­i­nal jus­tice at Eastern Washington University for three years before drop­ping out when his for­mer girl­friend got pregnant.

His fam­i­ly remains hope­ful he will recov­er but know he’s got a long road ahead. Horne — who under­went surgery on his tra­chea Monday — will remain in the hos­pi­tal for at least the next six months, and his prog­no­sis is unknown, King said. The fam­i­ly con­sent­ed to Horne’s being pho­tographed in his hos­pi­tal bed because they want­ed peo­ple to see what a hate crime looks like.

LaDonna Horne said her faith is keep­ing her strong. “As hard as this is, I for­give the young man who did this. But I won’t for­get,” she said. “Vengeance is for the Lord. It’s in God’s hands, and so is my son.”https://​www​.seat​tle​times​.com/​s​e​a​t​t​l​e​-​n​e​w​s​/​c​r​i​m​e​/​a​f​r​i​c​a​n​-​a​m​e​r​i​c​a​n​-​m​a​n​-​f​i​g​h​t​i​n​g​-​f​o​r​-​h​i​s​-​l​i​f​e​-​a​f​t​e​r​-​u​n​p​r​o​v​o​k​e​d​-​r​a​c​i​s​t​-​r​a​g​e​-​a​t​t​a​c​k​-​i​n​-​a​u​b​u​rn/

How Do They Get Some Control Back Without Upsetting The People In Washington DC?

According to police sta­tis­tics, 14’868 Jamaicans have been mur­dered between the decade which spawned the year 2007 and 2017.
Those num­bers do not include miss­ing per­sons who have not been heard from again or those killed who haven’t been report­ed to author­i­ties. Missing from the equa­tion also, are those who have been shot or oth­er­wise injured who did not die immediately.

Those num­bers reflect law enforce­ment offi­cers and ordi­nary Jamaicans, not the type of Jamaicans which would real­ly jog the con­sciences of those in power.
No Member of Parliament, no University Professors, no Minister of Government. In oth­er words hard­ly any­one from the gild­ed elites but for an out­lier or two.

2007 1574
2008 1601
2009 1680
2010 1428
2011 1125
2012 1097
2013 1200
2014 1005
2015 1192
2016 1350

2017.….….….….….….….….….….….1616.….….

Police on Parade..

So the 14’868 Jamaicans who lost their lives in the unde­clared decades-long civ­il war have become mere sta­tis­tics, throw-aways, col­lat­er­al dam­age and life con­tin­ue as if noth­ing happens.
How have our lead­ers dealt with the issue? A quick look at the num­bers year over year, gives a pret­ty good indi­ca­tion that what­ev­er has been tried clear­ly has not been working.

SO WHAT EXACTLY HAS THE GOVERNMENT BEEN DOING

From my van­tage point both the pre­vi­ous PNP Administration and the Governing JLP Administration, either mis­un­der­stand the impor­tance of the rule of law to a demo­c­ra­t­ic soci­ety or they have col­lab­o­ra­tive­ly made the deci­sion that pol­i­tics and the trap­pings of pow­er are more impor­tant than country.

Additionally, the oner­ous over-reach of for­eign-fund­ed, local­ly based crim­i­nal rights lob­by groups, have vir­tu­al­ly tied the hands and sealed the lips of politi­cians on both sides of the polit­i­cal divide with the excep­tion of a few.
Groups like Jamaicans For Justice has com­piled Police fatal shoot­ing data and have pre­sent­ed those data to their han­dlers in Washington DC in con­texts which have been dis­fa­vor­able to both the Government and the Jamaica Constabulary Force.

The crit­i­cal sup­port which nor­mal­ly comes from the United States to assist in the fight against Gangsters and Terrorists are sum­mar­i­ly dis­con­tin­ued when alle­ga­tions of extra­ju­di­cial killings are made against law enforce­ment enti­ties like the JCF as per the Leahy Law.
The Leahy Law is the col­lo­qui­al term for a pro­vi­sion of the Foreign Assistance Act (sec­tion 620M) and its twin pro­vi­sion in the National Defense Authorization Act. See Act here: https://​www​.just​se​cu​ri​ty​.org/​4​2​5​7​8​/​l​e​a​h​y​-​l​a​w​-​p​r​o​h​i​b​i​t​i​n​g​-​a​s​s​i​s​t​a​n​c​e​-​h​u​m​a​n​-​r​i​g​h​t​s​-​a​b​u​s​e​r​s​-​p​u​l​l​i​n​g​-​c​u​r​t​a​in/

The shock­ing truth is that agen­cies may not tech­ni­cal­ly be in breach of Human rights pro­to­cols to be penal­ized and for assis­tance to be cut off.
“Credible Information”: Although meet­ing the thresh­old of cred­i­bil­i­ty is less for “infor­ma­tion” than it is for “evi­dence,” the bar is still sur­pris­ing­ly hard to meet, con­trary to com­mon per­cep­tion. The State Department’s Office of the Legal Advisor, appro­pri­ate­ly in my view, coun­seled that infor­ma­tion need only be cred­i­ble to a “rea­son­able” per­son in order to com­pel a restric­tion of assis­tance. And in the­o­ry, accord­ing to State Department Guidance, “the stan­dard should gen­er­al­ly be regard­ed as low.”

No one except the elites is immune…

It is this law which has been used to penal­ize mem­bers of the JCF and the insti­tu­tion itself on the flim­si­est of evi­dence sub­mit­ted to the Inter American Commission on human rights by JFJ under the lead­er­ship of pedi­atric doc­tor and then head of JFJ Carolyn Gomes.
It is that mis­use and duplic­i­tous manip­u­la­tion of data which has changed the par­a­digm in how the JCF address­es crime, a small detail which has elud­ed the ordi­nary Jamaican.

We can no longer hide the images and jump on an air­plane to give speech­es.
This is real.

It is that law which is behind the expan­sion, growth, and pow­er of the lob­by which has hov­ered over law enforce­ment, influ­enced leg­is­la­tion and has ter­ri­fied the Island’s lead­ers into submission.
The prospect of not receiv­ing grants, being cut off from loans, is ter­ri­fy­ing just on the face of it.
Losing visas and not being allowed into the United States as some mem­bers of the JCF has been sub­ject­ed has been more than enough to get the police to back off from aggres­sive­ly enforc­ing our laws.

The bor­row­er is a slave to the lender accord­ing to the Bible, (accord­ing to com­mon sense).Simply put it’s economic.
When Law enforce­ment is afraid to engage because of the con­se­quences of that engage­ment crim­i­nals are embold­ened. When mur­der­ers are embold­ened peo­ple die, peo­ple are raped, chil­dren are abused.
The lev­el of law­less­ness in the coun­try has gone up dra­mat­i­cal­ly over the years, so it’s not just homi­cides, there is a gen­er­al sense that the rule of law does not exist anymore.

Illegal guns flood­ing into Jamaica report­ed­ly being paid for with lot­to scam­ming money.

Are there some cor­rupt cops you bet, so too are there cor­rupt judges, politi­cians, lawyers, doc­tors, busi­ness­men, Pastors and in every sin­gle discipline.
The hem and haw about police cor­rup­tion is mere­ly an attempt to dis­tract from the real rea­sons crime has been going up and up each year.
The chal­lenge for the lead­ers now is how do they get some sem­blance of con­trol with­out upset­ting the peo­ple in Washington DC?
Remember their Rottweilers, Pugs, and Mongrels are there watch­ing and wait­ing to file their fraud­u­lent reports.

If Only I Could Hire Away The Good Police And Leave Them To The Criminals..

My great­est wish is that I could hire the entire police depart­ment, [save for some of course] and give them jobs they love and pay them what they are worth. I would hire them so that Jamaicans may have their wish to have the crim­i­nal par­adise they want with­out any­one or any­thing stand­ing in the way.
I was raised believ­ing famil­iar­i­ty breeds con­tempt, at least that’s one of the things my elders taught me. The police depart­ment is expe­ri­enc­ing this famil­iar­i­ty first hand.

Adapted..

I would hire them away so these fool­ish Israelites could have their king Saul.
And for the record, I would move them and their fam­i­lies out of the country.
Sure I know this is a pipe dream, a sil­ly unat­tain­able dream, but I am enti­tled to have my own utopi­an escape. A moment of bliss at the prospect of such a pos­si­bil­i­ty, and it’s real time con­se­quences on these fool­ish deceit­ful peo­ple called Jamaicans.

Illegal guns flood­ing into Jamaica report­ed­ly being paid for with lot­to scam­ming mone

On a bat­tle­field, if you are sus­tain­ing heavy loss­es the thing to do is to change strat­e­gy. Throwing large amounts of man­pow­er at the ene­my does not com­pen­sate for poor strategizing.
Jamaica is at war with the heav­i­ly armed gangs which have been empow­ered since the police have been pre­vent­ed from going after them. The Islands bor­ders have become gap­ing gate­ways for the pour­ing in of weapon­ry and ammu­ni­tion of all kinds.

Police in the Parish of Saint Ann had grenades lobbed at them last year, for­tu­nate­ly for those offi­cers only one mem­ber of the par­ty sus­tained minor injuries. On a dai­ly basis, the police all across the Island remove weapons and ammu­ni­tion of all kinds from the streets. Yet the num­ber of ille­gal weapons in the hands of gang­sters seem numberless.
I can­not recall a cir­cum­stance in which grenades have been used against law-enforce­ment in any west­ern coun­try so I stand to be cor­rect­ed on that.
The point of the mat­ter how­ev­er, is that the coun­try is engaged in a war that the Government is unwill­ing to acknowl­edge and the Opposition par­ty is all too will­ing to see continue.

How can the lead­ers fix a prob­lem they are wont to admit exist. Does any­one believe 10 peo­ple mur­dered over a 12 hour peri­od is just crime?
In what nor­mal soci­ety of 2.8 mil­lion would 1616 mur­dered peo­ple over the course of a sin­gle year be acceptable?
The very peo­ple who are respon­si­ble for the predica­ment in which the nation finds itself are the very peo­ple point­ing fin­gers at the peo­ple with the least to do with those problems.

Guns seem to come into the coun­try with­out much effort.

Police offi­cers do not make policy.
In some devel­oped coun­tries which respect their law enforce­ment offi­cials their laws are draft­ed with detailed input from their law enforce­ment officers.
The crime sit­u­a­tion in a country[any coun­try] is hard­ly ever whol­ly the fault of the police. Whether or not some mem­bers of the police department[any depart­ment are cor­rupt] is nei­ther here nor there.

If there is cor­rup­tion in the[a] police depart­ment it is up to the polit­i­cal lead­er­ship to fix it. The con­cept of fir­ing the team is only a thing in a coun­try like Jamaica. In oth­er coun­tries polit­i­cal lead­er­ship iron out prob­lems in Government agen­cies police depart­ments being no exception.
When the rub­ber meets the road I don’t see any [hifa­lutin bull­shit-talk­ing, non-facts-get­ting, elit­ist] chas­ing down a sin­gle lit­tle boy with a sling-shot, much less remov­ing one gun from the streets.

Two AK 47 rifles, 15 oth­er guns, ammo found in cargo .

At the end of the day, none of the gob­bly­gook writ­ten on paper pur­port­ing to know how to deal with Jamaican crim­i­nals from the rel­a­tive safe­ty of ivory tow­ers can com­pen­sate for good intel­li­gence-based policing.
Let me go a lit­tle fur­ther by say­ing we need ana­lysts for ana­lyz­ing sci­en­tif­ic sam­ples, we need pro­fil­ers, we need peo­ple who are super edu­cat­ed to for­mu­late for­ward-lean­ing poli­cies, we even need psy­chol­o­gists to help us to under­stand why peo­ple some­times do the things they do.
But all of that must be done as part of a com­pre­hen­sive strat­e­gy geared toward effec­tive­ly deal­ing with crime which is an ever-chang­ing phenomenon.

Just some of the weapon­ry which have flood­ed the Island and are in the hands of gangsters.

None of those oth­er dis­ci­plines com­pen­sate or replaces policing.[Do you hear me, Professor Harriot and the brain­dead PSOJ].
The sad con­clu­sion is that the Jamaican pub­lic rich and poor and in between does not under­stand the val­ue of polic­ing to their lives.
Not kid gloves, not beg­ging crim­i­nals to behave, not wor­ried about how many of them end up dead if they refuse to hand over the guns, or worse yet, shoot at our police officers.

Brazen images many Jamaicans do not see.

It will be accom­plished by the same old strate­gies being employed in every oth­er coun­try in which some quar­ters decide that they are above the laws.
You go after them with over­whelm­ing force and squish them like bugs.
A peo­ple too stu­pid, too crim­i­nal­ly com­plic­it or too damn pre­ten­tious to under­stand that con­cept deserves what it getting.

Challenged The Cops And Died..

An uniden­ti­fied male was shot and killed by mem­bers of the secu­ri­ty forces dur­ing a con­fronta­tion with mem­bers of a joint police /​military team on patrol in New Market St Elizabeth yes­ter­day at around 3.30pm.

The secu­ri­ty team was fired on by a group of men who then ran, the fire was returned and one man was shot and killed.
An Uzi sub-machine gun and two mag­a­zines and a Browning pis­tol with one 9 mm round was also dis­cov­ered in close prox­im­i­ty to the body

Harriott’s Hypocrisy

Contributor Richard Porter.

Criminology is an area of Sociology that focus­es on the study of crimes and their caus­es, effects, and social impact. A crim­i­nol­o­gist’s job respon­si­bil­i­ties involve ana­lyz­ing data to deter­mine why the crime was com­mit­ted and to find ways to pre­dict, deter, and pre­vent fur­ther crim­i­nal behavior.

With regards to Professor Anthony Harriott’s com­ments about the Jamaica Constabulary Force being tox­ic, my views are as follows.

If the Professor is what the paper says he is and I have stat­ed clear­ly & con­cise­ly what he does then he being head of the Police Civilian Oversight Authority then it is fair to say then that has­n’t done his civic duty.

The so-called “Toxic cul­ture” does­n’t exist only in the Jamaica Constabulary Force but much of our cit­i­zen­ry as well.The soci­ety at large has been the bedrock, pil­lars, and cor­ner­stone of corruption.
I would nev­er argue that there aren’t cor­rupt police offi­cers. They do exist and they must be iden­ti­fied, alle­ga­tions against them proven upon which they are either sent to prison or dismissed.

A soci­ety can nev­er be seen as tak­ing crime and cor­rup­tion seri­ous­ly when peo­ple point fin­gers at one orga­ni­za­tion and turn a blind eye to the cor­rup­tion in oth­er seg­ments of the society.…corruption comes in many forms but the Professor either refused to accept that fact. or is sim­ply disingenuous

The peo­ple of this coun­try should also demand that the Minister of National Security also be sent pack­ing. We won’t hold our breaths though because crony­ism and nepo­tism are the order of the day.

This Professor won’t talk about that because it is eas­i­er for him to blame oth­ers and not his friends. Sir there are near­ly (3) mil­lion peo­ple liv­ing on this rock [and give or take a few ]about twelve thou­sand 12,000 police officers.
Do you real­ly believe that they can be every where at the same time!

So even if one idler decides to go against force pol­i­cy and stop for a drink how is he to blame for a mur­der com­mit­ted 80 miles away?
It seems to me that your anti police stance /​rhetoric is seep­ing through your pores and your think it is civility.

It is your fail­ure to real­ize that you are also a part of the prob­lem con­ve­nient­ly for­get­ting facts. I hate crim­i­nals, I hate cor­rupt politi­cians, I hate cor­rupt cops. I also hate those that poss­es the know how to help to make this bet­ter but choose to find a media house to high­light the fault in others.

Pointing fin­gers, solves noth­ing, We have a prob­lem sir and we need to rid the coun­try of this scourge, the police aren’t the ones killing people.

Encourage your fam­i­ly and friends to tell what they know. Encourage your friends to speak with their con­stituents to give infor­ma­tion on who the crim­i­nals are. The police need the resources to fight this monster.

Police offi­cers fight each day to uphold the image and poli­cies of the JCF. Most are hon­est peo­ple who sac­ri­fice their time, fam­i­ly and them­selves to fight crime and to pre­vent it…they need all the help they can get. Richard Porter

Anthony Harriot Comments About JCF A Cowardly Hatchet Job By A Deceitful Hack…

Like a snow­ball cas­cad­ing down a moun­tain­side, increas­ing in mass with each rev­o­lu­tion it tum­bles on until it trig­gers a humon­gous avalanche dev­as­tat­ing and con­sum­ing every­thing in its wake. So has the assault on the JCF con­tin­ued over sev­er­al decades until it is now on life support.
But that’s what the polit­i­cal class want­ed all along.The trag­ic irony now, how­ev­er, is that they are shit­ting them­selves because they are com­ing to the real­iza­tion that the shit is about to hit their doorsteps and they are pan­ick­ing, so nat­u­ral­ly, they berate the police some more.

Anthony Harriot

How iron­ic that the rul­ing class most of whom have passed through the left­ist University of the West Indies (UWI), or more appro­pri­ate­ly, the intel­lec­tu­al ghet­to, accord­ing to the late Wilmott Perkins, have destroyed the Police force only to have one of their own head of the Police Civilian Oversight Authority, some Professor Anthony Harriot describe the Department as “Toxic”.
I’ll tell you what’s tox­ic. It is that shit­hole of a left­ist University which indoc­tri­nates idiots like this into think­ing they are [the] author­i­ty on National Security and crime.

The Police depart­ment cer­tain­ly could have done a bet­ter job of com­port­ing itself over the decades, there is no doubt about that. We all know that the salary is no good the man­age­ment is shit­ty and the lack of real and real­is­tic goal set­ting and attain­ment in its oper­a­tional pro­ce­dures have been woe­ful­ly lacking.
As such despite the tire­less work of most of the young men and women who self­less­ly join the depart­ment, the police depart­ment has been unable to seri­ous­ly impact crime in a mean­ing­ful way as a com­pa­ny would be able to show a prof­it as a result of a tar­get­ed growth agenda.

This is a result of the failed lead­er­ship of the depart­ment by those who have been ele­vat­ed for the wrong rea­sons forc­ing out oth­ers more moti­vat­ed and bet­ter suit­ed to serve. This is cer­tain­ly not unique to the JCF it cuts across all stra­ta of the pub­lic sector.
The Jamaican pub­lic sec­tor is inher­ent­ly cor­rupt and flawed.
The almost 600 mem­bers who leave the depart­ment each year, not through retire­ment is tes­ta­ment to the fact that they are unhap­py with their leadership.

Notwithstanding the fore­gone, the two polit­i­cal par­ties which have ruined (ruled)the Island since it’s so-called inde­pen­dence from Britain have done a bril­liant job of divid­ing the coun­try into two war­ring factions.
Additionally, they have set up the Police to stand between both fac­tions in an unen­vi­able and unwinnable task of ref­er­ee­ing which could only end in dis­as­ter on the field of play.
For any­one to talk about Toxicity with­in the JCF with­out first detail­ing who did the poi­son­ing or to lie about how the poi­son was ingest­ed is vast­ly dis­hon­est, and at the very min­i­mum is intel­lec­tu­al dishonesty.

To hear that kind of lan­guage from some­one who heads a body which has Police Civilian Oversight respon­si­bil­i­ty is shock­ing­ly illu­mi­nat­ing at the lev­el of unmit­i­gat­ed bias the police face form these Machiavellian frauds.
In mak­ing the argu­ments that the Major Organised Crime and Anti-Corruption Agency (MOCA) should be sep­a­rat­ed from the JCF Harriot said quote:

(“The occu­pa­tion­al cul­ture of the JCF is one where you take the car and you go off and drink rum and do no inves­ti­ga­tion. You are not called to account, and when the mur­der rate goes through the roof, you squeal that you don’t have enough of this or that.
It is crit­i­cal that it is removed. The JCF is tox­ic. And there is no point in spend­ing a lot of mon­ey, giv­ing peo­ple high-lev­el train­ing for them to become part of the JCF’s occu­pa­tion­al culture.”)

A shock­ing and igno­rant broad-brush stroke of tar­ring which makes no dis­tinc­tion for any of the chal­lenges the depart­ment faces logis­ti­cal­ly, oper­a­tional­ly. tech­ni­cal­ly, mon­e­tar­i­ly, polit­i­cal­ly, leg­isla­tive­ly, or otherwise.
Yet he went on to say the following.

(“That is the root of the prob­lem, and that is why this inves­tiga­tive police (unit), the core of which is in MOCA, must be tak­en off the JCF — split from the JCF imme­di­ate­ly. There has real­ly been an effort to have MOCA oper­ate sep­a­rate­ly, and it must be encour­aged.”
With 1,616 per­sons killed across the island last year and more than 100 already killed in 2018, the Government must move quick­ly.”)

Well, there you have it.
Despite the fail­ings of the two polit­i­cal par­ties, the prob­lems fac­ing the coun­try accord­ing to some­one who occu­pies a posi­tion which is sup­posed to be patent­ly objec­tive and fair the prob­lems are all root­ed in the police.

This is the most igno­rant, deceit­ful, piece of garbage I have ever read. Imagine though that this moron heads the Police Civilian Oversight.
What chance does the Island’s police offi­cers have when these are the insects which have a say over them?
Is there any won­der that many of our police offi­cers have sim­ply dropped their hands?

With Transparency International assess­ing that the Government struc­ture is 84 % cor­rupt the immoral, elit­ists have decid­ed to lay it all at the feet of the Constabulary.
So I will sim­ply ask this of you, Professor. What have you done for Jamaica com­pa­ra­ble to the sac­ri­fices of the last joined con­sta­ble who risk life and limb every day, so that imbe­ciles like you can spout off at the mouth the garbage and bile you spew?

The fact that Harriot would car­ry out a hatch­et job on the over ten thou­sand men and women of the JCF with­out first at least acknowl­edge the fail­ings of the polit­i­cal sys­tems or the Judicial sys­tem demon­strates that he is a cheap hack car­ry­ing out the bid­ding of the polit­i­cal class to fur­ther blame the police for the dan­ger­ous mur­der statistics.
The com­ments in and of them­selves are designed to fur­ther erode what­ev­er good­will the cit­i­zen­ry may have toward the police mak­ing the police fur­ther irrel­e­vant and endan­gers the lives of offi­cers in the process.
Citizens who see the police as lack­ing in author­i­ty, cred­i­bil­i­ty, sup­port are inclined to resist and attack those offi­cers. No won­der attacks on our police offi­cers have gone up as the Andrew Holness Government and their cohorts step up their attack on our police in an effort to deliv­er a coup de grâce to it as an agency..
A dis­gust­ing, class­less, cow­ard­ly yet trans­par­ent act?

Like and share if you sup­port the good hard­work­ing men and women of the JCF

This Publication Endorses, And Challenges The Govt To Appoint Trinity ) Next Commissioner Of Police…

As we cred­i­bly report­ed two weeks ago, Commissioner of Police George Quallo will, in fact, be step­ping aside in a mat­ter of days.
At the time of our report­ing that was indeed what we report­ed, that he would not be clean­ing out his desk the very day he met with National Security Minister Robert Montague, but his future was already decid­ed for him.

Commissioner Quallo could have added some degree of cred­i­bil­i­ty to his name and show just a wee bit of balls as he was head­ing out the door by telling the nation that he was indeed asked to look at his options, which real­ly meant you are fired.
Of course, the Minister does not have the Constitutional author­i­ty to fire the Police Commissioner but he cer­tain­ly has the pow­er to con­vey to the Police Services Commission that the Government has lost con­fi­dence in Mister Quallo’s leadership.
So there’s that.

The nation’s mur­der rate is gal­lop­ing away and the Administration is panicking.
I say that with a heavy heart because I was real­ly bank­ing on the long­shot pos­si­bil­i­ty that Andrew Holness would be a trans­for­ma­tion­al Prime Minister who under­stood what is need­ed to set our coun­try on the right path.

Commissioner George Quallo

Yet I heard the Prime Minister tell cit­i­zens in Montego Bay dur­ing the flood of police offi­cers and Soldiers into their com­mu­ni­ties that he had promised them that they would sleep with their win­dows and doors open and now they can. Of course, it was only so because the entire com­mu­ni­ty was flood­ed with mem­bers of the secu­ri­ty forces.
The fact that the Prime Minister would be so trans­par­ent­ly cyn­i­cal on such a seri­ous issue dis­qual­i­fies him sub­stan­tive­ly as part of the solution.
It makes a mock­ery of his Administration’s asser­tions that it ful­ly under­stands what needs to be done about crime in our country.

What is obvi­ous is that the Administration has made the deci­sion to make the police force the scape­goat as oth­ers had done before him.
I don’t think there are many peo­ple who har­bor any pre­con­ceived notions that Holness has any love for, or loy­al­ty to, the Police offi­cers who risk their lives to secure the nation as well as to pro­tect him and his family.

So it’s real­ly not out­side the realm of any­one’s imag­i­na­tion that he would throw Commissioner Quallo to the Wolves and have a lack­ey like Clifford Blake or any oth­er lap dog which will give the Administration cov­er on crime.
The fact of the mat­ter is that the Administration talks a good game about crime but its poli­cies are anti­thet­i­cal to solv­ing the nations seri­ous and dete­ri­o­rat­ing mur­der situation.

The exit of Commissioner Quallo is a dis­trac­tion designed to focus the nation on the police and who­ev­er emerges next. Naturally, the next per­son to take the job will require a bit of time to demon­strate what he/​she can do, that’s time for the Administration.
I want to make it clear that my crit­i­cism of the Administration should nev­er be con­strued to be sup­port for the Opposition par­ty, which I believe should be banned from rep­re­sen­ta­tion­al pol­i­tics on the Island. I hope that — that clar­i­fies my dis­dain for that polit­i­cal par­ty as a legit­i­mate enti­ty in this debate in which we are engaged.

The prob­lem affect­ing our coun­try as it relates to crime is not a Police Problem, it is a pol­i­cy problem.
The Government and the Despicable crim­i­nal sup­port­ing Political Opposition have essen­tial­ly pros­ti­tut­ed them­selves to out­side Criminal Rights lob­by so much so that before they address the mas­sive blood­shed in the coun­try they have to pay homage and recite their def­er­ence to human rights.
I chal­lenge the Administration to buck the pup­peteers abroad and sub­mit the name of for­mer Assistant Commissioner of Police Keith Trinity Gardiner to the PSC to be the next Commissioner of police.
I ful­ly under­stand that his appoint­ment will not stop the blood­shed but it will at least guar­an­tee that at the very least there is an actu­al crime fight­er at the helm who under­stands what to do.

Former Assistant Commissioner of Police Keith Trinity Gardner

Developed Nations do not cater to, nei­ther do the allow human rights lob­by to influ­ence, much less dic­tate crime-fight­ing strategies.
Developing Nations wish­ing to extri­cate them­selves from the crip­pling ten­ta­cles of crime and ter­ror­ism do not allow human rights lob­by to dic­tate to them on the ways to deal with their ter­ror­ists, a‑la Colombia, Mexico, The Philippines, Cuba, et al.

Pretentious coun­tries like Jamaica will always be mired in the quick­sand of failed state sta­tus, while it con­vinces itself it is emerg­ing toward first world status.
The best and the bright­est, are run­ning away. Those who lack the means to do so along with the most enter­pris­ing and inno­v­a­tive are being killed in alarm­ing numbers.
In the mean­time, the Administration con­tin­ues to arrange the deck chairs on the sink­ing Titanic. While the despi­ca­ble polit­i­cal Opposition sits there sali­vat­ing, await­ing the total sub­mer­gence of the gov­ern­ment so it can present its own leaky old buck­et as a solution.
And on and on we go like a dog chas­ing its tail.

New Report Commissioner To Leave In Weeks.

On the occa­sion that Commissioner of Police George Quallo was sum­moned to(MNS) Robert Montague’s his offices to explain the trun­cat­ed report he had sub­mit­ted to the min­is­ter regard­ing the traf­fic snarl on the Palisadoes road, we report­ed he was going to be fired.

Credible sources informed this writer that it was only a mat­ter of weeks before Commissioner George Quallo would make his exit.
Friday’s (JamaicaObserver) is report­ing that Commissioner Quallo has been in con­sul­ta­tion with the Police ser­vices Commission and that he will be gone in a mat­ter of weeks.

According to the Observer at that meet­ing, Commissioner Quallo was accom­pa­nied by some mem­bers of the exec­u­tive of the Police Officers’ Association (POA) who came out as a show of sup­port for the com­mis­sion­er. The POA mem­bers did not actu­al­ly par­tic­i­pate in the meet­ing. Sources in the National Security Ministry had told the OBSERVER ONLINE that the com­mis­sion­er was told that it was time to exam­ine his options dur­ing the meet­ing, which last­ed for approx­i­mate­ly 10 min­utes.

Quallo and Holness

When sum­moned to the boss­es office in a meet­ing which lasts only 10 min­utes in that con­text, I believe we know that was not a good meet­ing for Commissioner Quallo.
It seemed he was fired before he attend­ed the meet­ing with Montague and the meet­ing with the ser­vices Commission was a sham designed to save face for the Commissioner of Police.

This pub­li­ca­tion wish­es Commissioner Quallo well, you have noth­ing to be ashamed about.
You were giv­en straws to spin into Gold. It dif­fi­cult to con­vince the Emperor that he is naked while he is strut­ting around wear­ing no clothes.

Govt. Terrified Of Rights Lobby And For Good Reasons: It’s Economic Sabotage.….

Crime is only a prob­lem if it is affect­ing rich people.….
Before you think I have gone com­plete­ly berserk it was a tongue in cheek com­ment designed to get you to pay attention.

With the num­ber of mur­ders and a gen­er­al rise in seri­ous felonies, I want­ed to bring a few facts to the atten­tion of our people.
Recently a woman who hap­pened to be a lawyer and a sup­posed crim­i­nal rights advo­cate was report­ed­ly killed by a crim­i­nal she alleged­ly took into her home.
No tears here, there are hun­dreds of thou­sands of Jamaicans who have been vic­tim­ized by crime, if any per­son wants to be of help, those per­sons could use some sup­port, not know and con­vict­ed criminals.
That is the rea­son I will not rec­og­nize them as human rights activists, they are crim­i­nal rights activists.

I learned also that the father of for­mer PNP Politician Kern Spencer was shot and injured. I am relieved that the elder Spencer sur­vived the ordeal and was able to get off a few shots at his assailants, sor­ry he was unable to lay them out.
His son took to social media to berate the police for not answer­ing the phone at the Balaclava Police sta­tion. [Under what sce­nario would the police not answer the damn phone], that is indefensible?

Kern Spencer alleged that the 911 oh sor­ry 119 oper­a­tor took too much time col­lect­ing the infor­ma­tion after they called to report that his father was shot.
Sorry to break it to the [enti­tled] younger mis­ter Spencer but that is what emer­gency oper­a­tors do they try to get all of the salient infor­ma­tion possible.
What is told them is relayed to respond­ing offi­cers enabling them to make good deci­sions on their arrival at the inci­dent scene.

Information giv­en to emer­gency oper­a­tors also some­times becomes crit­i­cal evi­dence for court pro­ceed­ings later.
So unless Kern expect­ed that the oper­a­tor should have changed the rules at the mere men­tion of his fam­i­ly name his crit­i­cism of the police is.… oh well.
Here’s the thing Kern issued an impas­sioned plea about the gun crime in our coun­try and how it needs to end. Commendable but crime is crime Kern, white col­lar, blue col­lar, it’s all crime you know what I mean right?

As a state Minister in the for­mer PNP Administration, you could have kept your nose clean but you did­n’t. No crime is good, the crim­i­nal­ly com­plic­it court threw out the case but that does not mean you were innocent.
When we get on our high horse about crime we bet­ter make sure that we don’t have skele­tons in our own closets.
Criminals are no respecter of per­sons, it may seem like they are for a minute but soon­er or lat­er there will be a clear recog­ni­tion that these hood­lums do not respect life, they do not care who they kill.

CRIMINAL RIGHTS SILENCE

Young unem­ployed youths who nev­er got their voic­es heard, nev­er had pow­er, are nev­er going to give back the pow­er the gun gives them.
They com­man­deer women to have sex with them. They take the prop­er­ty of oth­ers when­ev­er they chose to, they are feared, revered, they become infa­mous, and they have the pow­er of life and death.
That’s pow­er they will not give back only to return to the shad­ows of incon­se­quen­tial and unknown.
Those weapons will have to be plucked from their cold life­less fingers.

We are a coun­try at war but there is a trag­ic irony which needs report­ing on so we will attempt to bring it to the atten­tion of you my read­ers once again today.
Have you noticed the blan­ket yet pal­pa­ble silence of the many crim­i­nal rights lob­by oper­at­ing in Jamaica despite the hor­ren­dous nature and vol­ume of mur­ders occur­ring daily?
The silence is deafening.

We just thought it would be inter­est­ing to point out to the Jamaican peo­ple the incon­sis­ten­cy of these groups who com­plain about so-called abus­es by the secu­ri­ty forces. Yet they are death­ly silent when inno­cent Jamaicans are slaugh­tered by thugs. So we will name but a few of the groups we have labeled .….
[ENEMIES OF THE STATE]

Want To Stop The Killings In Jamaica/​Here’s How…

Independent Jamaica Council For Human Rights.
Jamaicans For Justice.
Amnesty International.
Jamaica Forum for Lesbians All-sexuals and gays.
INDECOM.
Families Against State Terrorism(FAST).
Citizens Advocacy Group International (CAGI).

Litany Of Anti-police Groups Silent On Homicides/​JFJ/​FAST/​PMI/​IACHR /​etal Hypocrites And Frauds

These are but a few of the groups sup­pos­ed­ly advo­cat­ing for rights on the Island, crim­i­nal rights that is.
These groups oper­ate inde­pen­dent­ly of each oth­er but declare that they Constantly cam­paign against any denial of Human Rights and civ­il lib­er­ties in Jamaica and to under­take or spon­sor all actions nec­es­sary and pos­si­ble to secure redress and pub­lic dis­ap­proval for all infringe­ments of these rights. To coöper­ate and asso­ciate with oth­er groups and orga­ni­za­tions which have sim­i­lar aims.

In 2014, (CAGI) blast­ed the Jamaica Observer in a scathing let­ter under the sig­na­ture of Jeremy Soutar, who is the admin­is­tra­tor of Citizens Advocacy Group International. CAGI’s attack on the pub­li­ca­tion was for dar­ing to praise the then Administration for act­ing proac­tive­ly in the han­dling of the Mario Deane case.
Even though the Government act­ed expe­di­tious­ly to deal with the alle­ga­tions in the case as they were pre­sent­ed to it (CAGI) want­ed the Government to jump high­er and was angered that any­one would dare side with the Government instead of pil­ing onto the entire police force.

Nations Not Hamstrung By Over-reach­ing Human Rights Advocacy Are Economic Models For The World…

Being proac­tive is also demon­strat­ed in the fol­low­ing cir­cum­stances: (CAGI) claimed.

- When a gov­ern­ment impress­es upon its secu­ri­ty forces that the con­sti­tu­tion­al rights of cit­i­zens are uncon­di­tion­al­ly guar­an­teed and that any act or omis­sion which infringes upon those rights could land offend­ing offi­cers in prison and/​or defend­ing civ­il suits for con­sti­tu­tion­al contraventions.

- When a gov­ern­ment aggres­sive­ly mon­i­tors the con­duct of its ser­vants to ensure adher­ence to pol­i­cy guide­lines and force orders.

- When a gov­ern­ment puts mea­sures in place to ensure those police offi­cers pay all or part of the mon­ey dam­ages award­ed by the Supreme Court to vic­tims when they abuse the rights of citizens.

It was CAGI that was first to take action on August 7, 2014, by demand­ing the Government of Jamaica act, forth­with, to remove all the on-duty police offi­cers from the Barnett Street Police Station who breached the duty of care owed to the civil­ian vic­tim, Mario Deane.

Other actions of the group against the Government in rela­tion to the unfor­tu­nate and untime­ly demise of Mario Deane were:

1) rec­om­men­da­tions to the direc­tors of the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labour in the US State Department to cut aid in the area of nation­al secu­ri­ty because we felt that “such aid is only fuelling abuse by the high-hand­ed, reck­less, mali­cious and unpro­fes­sion­al mem­bers of the Jamaica Constabulary Force”.

Selective Human Rights Vigilance By Amnesty & Others…

2) urged INDECOM to con­duct a speedy and thor­ough inves­ti­ga­tion into the matter

3) called for inter­ven­tion from the International Society for Human Rights (ISHR), Human Rights Watch (HRW), Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) and Amnesty International

The first response and/​or inter­ven­tion by Citizens Action for Principle and Integrity (CAPI), the Government, and oth­er local human rights inter­ests were made sub­se­quent to the actions tak­en by CAGI which we, nonethe­less, ful­ly support.

CAGI is com­mit­ted to pro­mot­ing uni­ver­sal respect for human rights for all cit­i­zens of Jamaica and, by exten­sion, the world, and will endeav­or to demand that the Government of Jamaica respect the inter­na­tion­al treaties to which it is bound.

We will also endeav­or to uti­lize the pow­er of our inter­na­tion­al part­ners and affil­i­ates to enforce our demands.

Human rights orga­ni­za­tions like CAGl can nev­er be “put out of busi­ness”. We are as rel­e­vant today as we will be tomor­row, so long as there are rights to pro­tect and promote.

Unless the Government of Jamaica acts deci­sive­ly and proac­tive­ly in respect­ing the rights of cit­i­zens in pre­vent­ing abuse and loss of life by the actions and omis­sions of its ser­vants, then the Mario Deane tragedy of 2014 will become the Mario Deane tragedy of the future.

The Jamaica Human Rights Gravy Train.……

These are the groups which are hold­ing our coun­try hostage. These are the for­eign-fund­ed groups which I have writ­ten about year after year with their Jamaican counterparts[house slaves] which have dri­ven fear in Portia and her band of thieves and has Andrew Holness shit­ting his pants.
So it is clear that in order to fix the crime sit­u­a­tion in our coun­try we have to acknowl­edge that these groups are an imped­i­ment to any solution.

Every year thou­sands of Americans are killed by police all across the coun­try under dubi­ous and often­times bla­tant­ly crim­i­nal ways. In addi­tion to that, the wide dis­par­i­ty in the dis­pen­sa­tion of jus­tice between blacks and whites is well doc­u­ment­ed and vast­ly wor­thy of human rights vigilance.
Immigrants are round­ed up and herd­ed into con­cen­tra­tion camps and moved around the coun­try so that they may not have con­tact with attor­neys who wish to lit­i­gate on their behalf.
Yet these groups are silent…
There is nev­er a whim­per from either of these groups in any way that would be con­se­quen­tial to these bla­tant and obvi­ous vio­la­tions of human rights and human dig­ni­ty by the most pow­er­ful coun­try on the plan­et with the resources to do the right thing.

Why then are they all in Jamaica and oth­er poor nations which are strug­gling with crime and vio­lence, mak­ing demands they know the Governments can­not hon­or and which will lead to even greater desta­bi­liza­tion of their societies?

We Intend To Let Our Voices Be Heard Loud And Clear Against The Trial Lawyers And Rights Lobbyists Who Want Criminals To Continue To Kill Innocent People…

MONEY.…

There is no doubt that these groups have small impov­er­ished nations by the balls, I fun­da­men­tal­ly under­stand that the Prime Minister has to con­sid­er the real and present threats expressed by Jeremy Soutar, in 2014.
The Government changed hands but the threat against the nation’s sov­er­eign­ty remains. In fair­ness to Prime Minister Holness who cam­paigned on a plat­form of “Prosperity,” he is dealt a bad hand.
I don’t know whether Holness would have had the balls to tack­le crime head-on were he not con­strained by the specter of the eco­nom­ic guil­lo­tine and sab­o­tage hang­ing over our country.
But I do under­stand his pan­der­ing even though I give him no respect for not stand­ing up against them.

I will attempt to explain what is at play here.
Poor coun­tries which are unable to deal deci­sive­ly with crime are unable to attract or keep invest­ment oppor­tu­ni­ties. Governments with the best inten­tions are still unable to hire more than just so many work­ers because they depend on tax­a­tion and levies to pay their oper­a­tional expenses.
So the true dri­vers of eco­nom­ic activ­i­ty can­not be Government [as is believed in Jamaica] it is the pri­vate sec­tor which is the true cre­ator of eco­nom­ic growth, not Government.

Since WW11 the world’s pop­u­la­tion has more than dou­bled, Jamaica’s pop­u­la­tion is not exempt from those growth trends. Governments have to find new ways to attract employ­ment oppor­tu­ni­ties for their populations.
If they are unable to because of crime the prob­lem tends to self-mul­ti­ply as we have seen in Jamaica’s case.
And so it con­tin­ues when crime is in the news no one wants to invest and few­er peo­ple want to visit.

If there are no new eco­nom­ic activ­i­ty coun­tries become slaves to lend­ing Institutions a- la the World Bank, International Monetary Fund, Paris Club et al.
These mega mon­e­tary insti­tu­tions are all head­quar­tered in pow­er­ful Industrialized countries.
Rich nations do not bor­row mon­ey from these insti­tu­tions, poor nations do.
Why would these insti­tu­tions and their share­hold­ers want the nations which are slaves to them to find their way out of pover­ty and dependency?
Who would they lend to if poor African, Asian, Latin and South American and Caribbean nations were to sud­den­ly become rich?

The world bank

If you are unable to see why the con­nec­tions between the groups oper­at­ing in our coun­try and crime are so intri­cate­ly linked then I can­not help you under­stand it.
Michael Manley’s phi­los­o­phy [not his actions] was ahead of his time and so he had to go .……
They were not going to have it. They are not going to have it today. It’s just slav­ery of a dif­fer­ent kind and we are way too blind to see it.
Nations which ben­e­fit from the fleec­ing of poor­er nations lit­er­al­ly wor­ship their secu­ri­ty forces[not sug­gest­ing we do].
They under­stand that they must keep crime and ter­ror­ism at bay, they also know how to do it and they do.

Westmoreland Businessman Murdered In Hail Of Bullets: Wife Injured…

A mor­tal­ly wound­ed Devon Paltie.
After the attack.

The shoot­ing sent work­ers and patrons alike scam­per­ing for cov­er. Since the start of the year, over 130 Jamaicans have report­ed­ly been mur­dered by the nations hoodlums.
The Prime Minister obvi­ous­ly in a state of pan­ic has declared a lim­it­ed state of emer­gency in St James Parish which record­ed well over 330 homi­cides last year alone.

Despite the state of emer­gency the Country’s Prime Minister seems to care more about the pow­er­ful lob­by which sup­ports the rights of crim­i­nals on the Island than to deal deci­sive­ly with the nation’s run­away mur­der rate which stood at a report­ed 1616 last year alone.

Holness Should Support The Security Forces Stop Pandering To Rights Lobby.…

Prime Minister Andrew Holness told mem­bers of the secu­ri­ty forces that there are ele­ments in the coun­try work­ing to dri­ve a wedge between the Police and Military.
I laugh at this because if what he says is true, that infor­ma­tion would most like­ly have come from .….….… well the mem­bers of the secu­ri­ty forces themselves.
If the Prime Minister has cred­i­ble infor­ma­tion as he asserts, he should make that infor­ma­tion pub­lic as soon as possible.

Holness main­tained that there was a con­spir­a­cy involv­ing both mem­bers of the secu­ri­ty forces and crim­i­nals, who are threat­ened by the oper­a­tions and who fear the lev­el of coöper­a­tion between both arms of the secu­ri­ty forces — the Jamaica Constabulary Force and the Jamaica Defence Force.

What non­sense, the police, and mil­i­tary have been work­ing togeth­er from as far back as I can remem­ber and beyond. There is noth­ing new about this so I would guess that if there are any plans to cre­ate dis­rup­tion between the forces it is not because they are collaborating.
The Prime Minister would be bet­ter served by look­ing at his friends in the Media and over at INDECOM there he will see the vile demoguges who are fight­ing valiant­ly to dri­ve a wedge between the two forces.
It is the vile divi­sive enti­ty which pass­es for Media which is and has been doing the dam­age cut­ting the police out of pic­tures and sow­ing dis­cord, no one else.

Commissioner of Police George Quallo was in this frame but delib­er­ate­ly cut out.
Look no fur­ther than the media who have no love for the police…

A friend asked me recent­ly why I thought peo­ple hat­ed the police?
First of all Soldiers are not on the streets dai­ly lock­ing up peo­ple for the crimes they com­mit, so nat­u­ral­ly when a joint force par­ty of police and sol­diers attempt to arrest an offend­er, of course, that offend­er will appeal to the sol­dier whom they see as the last line of help before they are cart­ed off to jail.
But I also thought the ques­tion required a deep­er look and a more com­pre­hen­sive response.

My response to him.
Police offi­cers are the peo­ple autho­rized to take people’s free­dom away.
Even when those actions are car­ried out by the mil­i­tary as in some total­i­tar­i­an states, those actions are gen­er­al­ly char­ac­ter­ized as secret police actions.

For the most part in the con­text of Jamaica over the decades since inde­pen­dence, we have had an inter­est­ing paradox.
After gov­er­nance of the coun­try was hand­ed over to the natives, both polit­i­cal par­ties saw an oppor­tu­ni­ty to enrich them­selves at the expense of the poor.
This was not con­fined to Jamaica or the wider Caribbean region alone.

Oh well

It was also the norm in post-Colonial Africa, Latin and South America where cor­rup­tion after col­o­niza­tion became a seri­ous problem.
In Jamaica, the strat­e­gy was to keep the peo­ple igno­rant and inex­orably loy­al to the two polit­i­cal par­ties with the police as the scape­goat in the middle.
They had to have the police, but their sup­port was with their bases of oper­a­tions, the areas we call con­stituen­cies. O/​C [GARRISONS]
That is the rea­son politi­cians always show up to their bases of oper­a­tions when­ev­er the police take action against crim­i­nals in those areas.
As such the police are seen as vil­lains and the politi­cians are seen as saviors.

Welcome to the law­less Serengeti knows as Jamaica where law­less­ness rule as the police are forced by politi­cians to stand and watch.

My friend dis­agrees, he argues that the fact that the JCF was formed as a response to the Morant Bay Rebellion and was seen inevitably as a force in sup­port of the Powerful monied elites against the peas­antry are the rea­sons behind the hatred.
I don’t deny him the his­to­ry of the for­ma­tion of the JCF but the 11th of October 1865 and the Morant Bay rebel­lion is a long way away.

There is a non­sen­si­cal nar­ra­tive preva­lent in Jamaica that if some­how you were to place sol­diers to patrol the streets there would be few­er shoot­ings and more coöper­a­tion between the peo­ple and mem­bers of the military.
I would laugh if that asser­tion was­n’t so incred­i­bly sophomoric.
First of all, tell that to the fam­i­ly of Mister Keith Clarke who was gunned down in his home by mem­bers of the JDF.

My state­ments are not designed to impugn the integri­ty or the efforts of mem­bers of the military.They are the com­ments of some­one con­ver­sant with the dif­fer­ences between the roles the two agen­cies serve.
It is incred­i­bly dif­fi­cult to con­vince Jamaicans that peo­ple are peo­ple and not police offi­cers or sol­diers. Police offi­cers are not from Mars and sol­diers from Pluto.
Most, if not all of the young peo­ple who step for­ward to serve, do so out of love for their agency of choice and a sense of how they want to be seen when they vol­un­teer for either force.
What dif­fer­en­ti­ates them is their dis­ci­pline of choice.

The Prime Minister and his Minister of National Security would be bet­ter served by using their air­time to edu­cate the peo­ple on their respon­si­bil­i­ties as citizens.
The Prime Minister speaks with forked tongue about cit­i­zens rights while he igno­rant­ly and duplic­i­tous­ly ignores their respon­si­bil­i­ty to obey the laws and respect of our law enforce­ment officers.

He should be ashamed to keep talk­ing about mon­i­tor­ing reports for alle­ga­tions of abuse while he has already con­vened a pan­el [as I warned he would do] of his elit­ist friends, to sit in judg­ment of the secu­ri­ty forces.[remem­ber Tivoli Gardens].
He should be ashamed to keep talk­ing about rights with­out a sin­gle word of charge to the vira­gos and hood­lums who tear off their cloth­ing, reveal­ing their most pri­vate parts when the forces attempt to do their jobs.

YouTube player

This is the embar­rass­ment and dis­gust­ing affront to their dig­ni­ty that Andrew Holness wants mem­bers of the secu­ri­ty forces to endure while car­ry­ing out their duties with­out upset­ting the sen­si­bil­i­ties of these hoodlums.
In oth­er words, he wants them to place their lives on the line to save his polit­i­cal back­side with­out cre­at­ing a stir, with­out mak­ing waves, and that should include stop­ping the high­ly doped-up and hal­lu­ci­nat­ed killers and bring them in with their weapon­ry with­out fir­ing a shot.

What Andrew needs to do is to ask the Rights lob­by he so obe­di­ent­ly fol­lows and Terrence Willams and tell them to go do that job. Jamaica will indeed owe them a great debt of grat­i­tude if they can pull that off.
Failing which Andrew Holness should take sev­er­al seats and shut up. Clearly, he has no idea what it takes to stop these grue­some killings and his lack of sup­port for the secu­ri­ty forces is caus­ing more harm than good.

Jamaica needs a state of emer­gency not a par­tial state of emer­gency or a lim­it­ed state of emer­gency. There needs to be a sense of awak­en­ing. An awak­en­ing which rec­og­nizes that the coun­try is rapid­ly slid­ing into anarchy.
Talk and plat­i­tudes will not stop the slide.
Most impor­tant­ly keep­ing up appear­ances instead of doing the dirty work is apply­ing paint to a bro­ken down and dilap­i­dat­ed struc­ture which inevitably will collapse.

Govt : 6 Months Notice Or Prison: Oh You Here Long, You Corrupt , Bye…

THE GOVERNMENT IS FLAILING AWAY AT CRIME, DEMONSTRATING THAT IT HAS NO BALLS TO SERIOUSLY TACKLE CRIME, SO IT’S STRATEGY IS TO DESTROY & DISCREDIT THE POLICE FORCE.

Jamaican Politicians are large­ly pig-head­ed fools, we all know that. Well, Member of Parliament Horace Dalley from Clarendon con­firmed it recent­ly in a sub­mis­sion to the parliament.
Expressing him­self in the house Dalley demand­ed that the Government cre­ate a spe­cial squad to inves­ti­gate what he said was approx­i­mate­ly six behead­ings in the parish over the course of about a year.

Seemingly angry the mem­ber of par­lia­ment berat­ed the admin­is­tra­tion for not being [“jerked”] into recog­ni­tion that some­thing is wrong. He demand­ed over and over that a spe­cial squad be formed to inves­ti­gate behead­ings, a clear reminder that peo­ple with no idea what they are talk­ing about should leave secu­ri­ty mat­ters alone, even though I under­stand what appears to be gen­uine con­cerns on Dalley’s part.

Then he said it, “call in the FBI “the mem­ber demanded!
Whoa, there mis­ter mem­ber, when did Jamaica become a state of the United States? I mean,I total­ly get that because of you guys the JCF has become a total­ly inef­fec­tive and almost use­less agency.
I also under­stand why you guys did it, why would you all want an effec­tive police force that can actu­al­ly inves­ti­gate and lock up politicians?
That would be peo­ple like you mem­ber Dalley , but what author­i­ty does the FBI have to inves­ti­gate crimes in Jamaica?

What mis­ter Dalley’s state­ment revealed was anoth­er truth which I have spo­ken to repeat­ed­ly, whether PNP or JLP nei­ther par­ty under­stands the com­plex­i­ty of the prob­lem and nei­ther par­ty has the answers.
Ain’t this a bitch though, that Jamaicans love to talk about sov­er­eign­ty and human rights but as soon as shit begins to hit the fan they want oth­ers to clean up their filth?

I mean the only time Jamaican crim­i­nals real­ly face jus­tice is when they are cart­ed off to America. Sorry, mis­ter Dalley you are one of the mem­bers of Parliament who rep­re­sent the parish, don’t tell me you don’t have action­able intel­li­gence which may help the police?
I do know that the police leaves a lot to be desired but come on/.

.….….….….….….….….….….….….….…..

Montague

So Minister of National Security Robert Montague is kind of at it again, reveal­ing that the Administration has revamped the ear­ly retire­ment pol­i­cy that was once in effect.
Montague indi­cat­ed that bad cops had to go[wonder when all the bad politi­cians are going to leave[?
Anyway, The Minister insist­ed that “ a minor­i­ty” of JCF mem­bers has remained a sig­nif­i­cant chal­lenge in an atmos­phere in which “there is an inher­ent desire from cit­i­zens of the coun­try to sup­port the police in their efforts”.

That same cit­i­zen­ry, in addi­tion to var­i­ous civ­il soci­ety groups, have been very vocal in their call for the force to be rid of cor­rupt elements.
As a Government, we have been respon­sive to the demands made by the pub­lic and oth­er groups
.
As such, last year we pro­vid­ed a mech­a­nism, in the form of a revamped Early Retirement Scheme for police offi­cers, that would help achieve this objective”.

So let me get this straight, old­er mem­bers are by virtue of their age cor­rupt?
Maybe I’m miss­ing some­thing here but if the intent of the pol­i­cy is to send home mem­bers who are cor­rupt, why have these so-called cor­rupt mem­bers not being pros­e­cut­ed, using the very same infor­ma­tion that the Government intends to use to send them home?
So now every mem­ber who takes the ear­ly retire­ment option will leave the force with a cloud over their heads” see he was one of the crooked ones”.
Not cool…

Someone needs to remind this troll about the Patterson slander…

These announce­ments and the ensu­ing on air chat­ting from the likes of Cliff Hughes of Nationwide Radio the pro­pa­gan­da arm of the gov­ern­ment demon­strates when dish tow­el tun tablecloth.
This is a clear demon­stra­tion of what hap­pens when lit­tle boys are giv­en grown men’s jobs and they can­not cope.
Separate and apart from Montague’s inart­ful and mis­lead­ing state­ments on the Government’s new pol­i­cy, why could­n’t this be han­dled in-house?
I don’t think this is good pol­i­cy, at best I know it’s bad pol­i­tics to sug­gest that mem­bers who take advan­tage of the option to leave ear­ly are by virtue of their deci­sions, corrupt.

What will the nar­ra­tive be when these peo­ple leave and there is more [not less] cor­rup­tion in the force, what then?
Why would the Administration sul­ly the char­ac­ter of mem­bers even as it cod­i­fied into law mak­ing it a crim­i­nal offense for offi­cers to leave the force with­out giv­ing a pri­or six months notice to the Commissioner?
It’s hard to imag­ine how the Government is mak­ing it dif­fi­cult for offi­cers to leave freely, going to the extent of cod­i­fy­ing impris­on­ment into the law while pur­port­ing to be plan­ning to cut some loose?

Is this real pol­i­cy or just fod­der for Cliff Hughes to chat about?

We Know The Who, And When But Won’t Accept The What…

How can we solve problems when there is no longer the decency character and honesty to concede truth?

The idea that going aggres­sive­ly after crim­i­nals is equal to abus­ing cit­i­zens rights is a red her­ring fed the Jamaican peo­ple by those who want the sta­tus quo. Crime in Jamaica is high­ly ben­e­fi­cial to a small group of peo­ple. Less or no crime ben­e­fits all peo­ple and enrich­es the lives of everyone.
Unfortunately, most peo­ple do not under­stand this and so they are forced deep­er and deep­er into an unholy alliance with crim­i­nals against their own self-inter­est, which serves the inter­est of the minor­i­ty just fine.

Does it mean then that because we can­not agree even on indis­putable fact that those who speak truth should sim­ply throw up their hands and give way to fake news? If we do that where do we go from here, what kind of world are we leav­ing our chil­dren, as President Barack Obama says “we can­not even estab­lish a com­mon base­line of facts”?

Two events have occurred in Jamaica over the last sev­er­al decades as a mat­ter of fact (a) The dis­in­te­gra­tion of the rule of law and (b) The resul­tant impov­er­ish­ment of the peo­ple, large­ly as a con­se­quence of (a).

mur­der-rate-jamaica

Year # of Murders
1970 152
1971 145
1972 170
1973 227
1974 195
1975 266
1976 367
1977 409
1978 381
1979 351
1980 899
1981 490
1982 405
1983 424
1984 484
1986 449
1987 442
1988 414
1989 439
1990 543
1991 561
1992 629
1994 690
1995 780
1998 953
1999 849
2000 887
2002 1045
2003 975
2004 1471
2005 1674
2006 1340
2007 1574
2008 1601
2009 1680
2010 1428
2011 1125
2012 1097
2013 1200
2014 1005
2015 1192
2016 1350

FACT
Crime and mur­ders have steadi­ly climbed since the earl 70’s with a cou­ple of instances in which con­crete actions have stunt­ed its growth.
Nevertheless, despite this clear and unequiv­o­cal evi­dence Jamaica’s polit­i­cal lead­ers of both polit­i­cal par­ties have sys­tem­at­i­cal­ly ignored the data and have respond­ed to the nation’s esca­lat­ing mur­der sta­tis­tics by focus­ing on for­eign treaties rather than on their sworn con­sti­tu­tion­al respon­si­bil­i­ty to secure the nation.

FACT
As a con­se­quence of the esca­lat­ing mur­ders, the long­stand­ing stream of return­ing res­i­dents who worked and saved to return to the land of their birth has lit­er­al­ly dried up.
In some cas­es some have actu­al­ly returned to their adopt­ed homes abroad, hav­ing decid­ed that the Island is no longer a safe place to live. Those, of course, are the ones who haven’t fall­en vic­tim to crime and are count­ed among the statistics.

Additionally, investors are cer­tain­ly not invest­ing in Jamaica as they nor­mal­ly would despite the hyper­bole and hype which tend to dom­i­nate the local publications.

Using the fig­ures above, between the peri­od 1970 to the year 2000, homi­cides was a seri­ous issue. Yet homi­cides nev­er offi­cial­ly topped 1000.
During the same peri­od the year, 1980 was an anom­aly as it relat­ed to homi­cides, 1980 was the crit­i­cal mass for polit­i­cal killings on the Island 899 Jamaicans were mur­dered. The num­ber was out of char­ac­ter with pre­vi­ous years and for sev­er­al suc­ceed­ing years as well.

In the year 1982 when I joined the Constabulary Force, there were 405 homi­cides by the end of 1991 when I exit­ed the Constabulary there were a record­ed 561 record­ed homicides.
What that means is that in the peri­od between 1982 and 1991 a 9 year peri­od mur­ders had only increased by 156. Now one mur­der is one too many but you get the picture.

The peri­od below is rep­re­sen­ta­tive of the Michael Manley years, though the mur­der num­bers were high, those homi­cides were large­ly con­cen­trat­ed in the most depressed com­mu­ni­ties and away from the rest of the society.

Michael Manley
Year # of Murders
1970 152
1971 145
1972 170
1973 227
1974 195
1975 266
1976 367
1977 409
1978 381
1979 351
1980 899

The com­mon denom­i­na­tor which informed the homi­cide sta­tis­tics in the peri­od 1981 to 1988 [1985 miss­ing] is the lead­er­ship of Edward Seaga.

Edward Seaga

1981 490
1982 405
1983 424
1984 484
1986 449
1987 442
1988 414

The peri­od after Seaga was the peri­od of Manley again.

Michael Manley intro­duced Democratic Socialism to Jamaica, social engi­neer­ing which ruined the once thriv­ing Island.
Today Manley’s fol­low­ers trum­pet his achieve­ments which are large­ly feel-good plat­i­tudes. To his detrac­tors, he ruined a beau­ti­ful country.

1989 439
1990 543
1991 561
1992 629


Then came the stew­ard­ship of Percival James Patterson, a peri­od of any­thing goes, no sup­port for the rule of law and a total den­i­gra­tion of our cul­ture and coun​try​.Here are the num­bers under Patterson.

Patterson ruled for an unprece­dent­ed 14 years.The peri­od in which we lost the soul of our coun­try and he did not lift a fin­ger to stop it.
In fact, Patterson’s tenure may be bet­ter seen as the peri­od in which Government abdi­cat­ed it’s respon­si­bil­i­ties and ced­ed the streets to com­mon thugs.
For almost ten (10) years not a sin­gle dol­lar was pro­vid­ed to train a sin­gle police detective.
Patterson’s tenure was marred by graft cor­rup­tion and the most bla­tant abuse of tax­pay­ers funds in our nation’s history.

Percival James Patterson for­mer PM presided over years of cor­rup­tion and failed leadership
1992 629
1994 690
1995 780
1998 953
1999 849
2000 887
2002 1045
2003 975
2004 1471
2005 1674

[ 1993 ‚1996,1997,2001] missing.

Then there was Portia Simpson Miller.…

Portia Simpson Miller.

2006 1340
2007 1574


Bruce Golding’s tenure.

Bruce Golding gave the nation INDECOM and all its side effects, as well as the Tivoli affair and God knows what else?

2007 1574
2008 1601
2009 1680
2010 1428
2011 1125


Andrew Holness Prime Minister from October 2011 to January 5, 2012

PM Andrew Holness

2011 1125

Miller again, January 5th, 2012 to 3 March 2016.

Portia Simpson Miller

2012 1097
2013 1200
2014 1005
2015 1192
2016 1350

Under Percival Patterson the coun­try lost its way, I have stat­ed my opin­ions as to what I believed occurred and why. It is up to oth­ers to make up their minds as to when and what accel­er­at­ed the mur­der rate in our country.
To my mind, there is no ques­tion as to the when and why.

Hugh Shearer

Edward Seaga

What the coun­try is strug­gling with is the “what” which is the for­mu­la for fix­ing what ails the coun­try crime wise. Since Hugh Lawson Shearer is no longer around to offer the solu­tion Andrew Holness would be well advised to tap the shoul­der of Edward Seaga and ask for advice before we reach the point of no return/
Edward Seaga is good for more than just being parad­ed around when they need to win by-elec­tions at all cost.

A Bloviating Narcissist Who Simply Cannot Shut Up

The Definition of Government is char­ac­ter­ized in sev­er­al dif­fer­ent ways but is gen­er­al­ly under­stood to be the polit­i­cal direc­tion and con­trol exer­cised over the actions of the mem­bers, cit­i­zens, or inhab­i­tants of com­mu­ni­ties, soci­eties, and states; the direc­tion of the affairs of a state, com­mu­ni­ty, etc.
Government is made up of var­i­ous branch­es geared at deal­ing with dif­fer­ent inter­ests areas of a soci­ety, much the same way there are can be many dif­fer­ent roads and avenues lead­ing to the same place, or the many branch­es on the same tree.

With that in mind, I find it curi­ous that the Commissioner of INDECOM found it nec­es­sary to issue a release sur­round­ing the recent­ly declared lim­it­ed state of emer­gency in St James Parish.
In the release, Terrence Williams the com­mis­sion­er said INDECOM ful­ly sup­ports the recent deci­sion by the Government of Jamaica to declare a state of emer­gency in the parish of St James.
We are con­fi­dent that the secu­ri­ty forces will per­form their duties with­in their own use of force policies.
“We are par­tic­u­lar­ly pleased that as a part of the strate­gic approach to the state of emer­gency, mem­bers of the secu­ri­ty forces have received refresh­er train­ing in human rights and pub­lic engagement.” 
The com­mis­sion added that ded­i­cat­ed staff mem­bers of the Western Regional Office, locat­ed in Montego Bay, will con­tin­ue to serve the region and mutu­al coöper­a­tion with the mem­bers of the secu­ri­ty forces is antic­i­pat­ed as they work to restore order and pub­lic safe­ty in St James.

It is under­stand­able that self-serv­ing nar­cis­sism is a thing in today’s world, not just in Jamaica but in oth­er coun­tries as it is in America at the high­est perch­es of gov­ern­ment. Yet it is gross­ly unat­trac­tive to oth­ers who are exposed to it.
Sometimes just stay­ing in the shad­ows sends a far more impor­tant mes­sage that jump­ing in front of a bunch of cameras.

Whether Terrence Williams believes it or not INDECOM is a part of the Government. Issuing a state­ment declar­ing his sup­port for a legit­i­mate act by the gov­ern­ment is out­side the scope of what is required by Williams and indeed INDECOM.
Simply put, as an arm of the gov­ern­ment INDECOM need not issue a declar­a­tive state­ment of sup­port for the legit­i­mate actions of the said Government, unless the com­mis­sion­er believes his role is to super­vise the Government.
Which would fit into what we have been say­ing all along, that the [Frankenstein] agency cre­at­ed by the JLP with the bless­ings of the PNP, is actu­al­ly the tail wag­ging the Dog and as a con­se­quence is one of the rea­sons the law should be repealed?

I will await declar­a­tive state­ments from the com­mis­sion­er of Taxes, Customs, and oth­er Commissioners of the Government. It is extreme­ly impor­tant that as a country[all of Government ]is behind the actions of the[said Government].[sic]
Terrence Williams has stepped for­ward to val­i­date the Government’s actions by issu­ing a thin­ly veiled warn­ing to the mem­bers of the secu­ri­ty forces who are active­ly exposed in what is essen­tial­ly a war zone. The coun­try now owes a debt of grat­i­tude to Terrence Williams for giv­ing his seal of approval fail­ing which none of this would have had legitimacy[sic]

Uganda’s Museveni Regrets Halting Death Penalty

Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni said Monday he regret­ted stop­ping exe­cu­tions in his “pre-indus­tri­al” coun­try, just days after his vow to resume death sen­tences alarmed rights groups. Museveni last signed a death war­rant in 1999 to exe­cute 28 con­victs, while exe­cu­tion under mil­i­tary law was last car­ried out in 2002. “I saw some NGOs oppos­ing the death sen­tence. In a pre-indus­tri­al soci­ety like ours remov­ing death sen­tence is a recipe for chaos. We believe in the law of Moses; an eye for an eye”, Museveni told the annu­al judges con­fer­ence in Kampala accord­ing to his senior press sec­re­tary, Don Wanyama.

I have been mak­ing the mis­take of not sanc­tion­ing these death sen­tences, I am repent­ing,” said Museveni. “As you are aspir­ing for best inter­na­tion­al prac­tices, you must be aware that soci­eties like the United Kingdom went through the indus­tri­al rev­o­lu­tion 200 years ago. Here in Uganda and Africa, we are deal­ing with pre-indus­tri­al soci­eties,” Museveni told the judges.

On Friday, dur­ing the pass­ing out of prison war­dens in Kampala, Museveni said: “Criminals think they have a right to kill peo­ple and keep their heads … I am going to revise a bit and hang a few.”

According to pris­ons ser­vice spokesman, Frank Mbaine, over 250 con­victs are on death row in Uganda. Amnesty International said Museveni’s threat to resume exe­cu­tions was “mis­guid­ed since there is no cred­i­ble evi­dence that the death penal­ty is a deter­rent to crime”. The rights watch­dog said that Museveni should instead lead Uganda to ful­ly abol­ish the death penal­ty like 19 oth­er African coun­tries have done.

Uganda’s refusal to car­ry out exe­cu­tions in recent years has been a cred­it to pres­i­dent Museveni, but resum­ing them now would destroy more than a decade of progress, not to men­tion buck the glob­al trend towards abolition”.

Museveni, 73, has been in pow­er for three decades, and could poten­tial­ly seek a sixth term in office in 2021 if a bill to remove pres­i­den­tial age lim­its is passed: https://​www​.mod​erng​hana​.com/​n​e​w​s​/​8​3​0​2​0​2​/​u​g​a​n​d​as-Museveni-regrets-halting-death-penalty.html

Good move mis­ter President. Your first job is to pro­tect your peo­ple from killers. The idea that cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment is not a deter­rent is stu­pid and deceptive.

No one who has ever been giv­en the death penal­ty has ever returned to kill. Those opposed to the death penal­ty have no data to sup­port the neg­a­tive. They can­not show how many peo­ple who nor­mal­ly would have killed, did not because they knew they will be killed in turn.

What we do know is that we see the upward trend of vio­lent crimes in coun­tries where there is no death penal­ty. It’s time for that lie to be shred­ded and exposed.

This writer has long argued that the nations who have reached Industrialized sta­tus did not do so by ignor­ing the crim­i­nals in their midst. In fact Canada Britain, most of west­ern Europe and the United States have had very strict laws and poli­cies in place which got them to where they are today.

Now that they have fixed their soci­eties they are able to finesse the broad­er issues of rights because they have estab­lished their jus­tice sys­tems, estab­lished effec­tive law enforce­ment struc­tures and estab­lished appro­pri­ate leg­isla­tive frame­works which inter­dict, indicts and incar­cer­ate felons and keep them in jail where they belong.

All of these infra­struc­tur­al frame­works did not occur overnight they hap­pened after deci­sive actions have been tak­en by their secu­ri­ty ser­vices to clear out those who would destroy life and property.
It is instruc­tive to rec­og­nize that in none of these coun­tries does Amnesty International or any oth­er so-called rights lob­by get to tell west­ern democ­ra­cies how to run their countries.

Neither have they both­ered with the inci­dents of human rights abus­es in pow­er­ful west­ern nations.
So we are left to con­tend with the glar­ing facts, poor coun­tries with peo­ple of col­or are best kept in the sta­tus quo of crime and pover­ty which results in more crime and pover­ty so that they may con­tin­ue being slaves to the rich lenders in the pow­er­ful indus­tri­al nations which just hap­pen to be large­ly white-dom­i­nat­ed nations.

Small nations lead­ers like those in Jamaica can con­tin­ue on their path to failed state sta­tus by pre­tend­ing Jamaica has arrived while hid­ing behind grill fortifications.
We will see how long those grill for­ti­fi­ca­tions will hold.

Solution Readily Available Yet Jamaican Leaders Dither While Citizens Are Slaughtered Daily.…

I have read wide­ly on coun­tries across the globe in which ter­ror­ism and vio­lent crime have been an issue.
Mexico. Guatemala. Honduras. South Africa. The Dominican Republic. Colombia. You name it even in coun­tries in which the polit­i­cal direc­torate are less than right­eous they give full auton­o­my and sup­port to their secu­ri­ty forces.
I have not seen a sin­gle coun­try in which gov­ern­ing author­i­ties spend their time chastis­ing their brave secu­ri­ty forces who risk their lives, about observ­ing human rights.As for the suc­cess­ful Industrialized nations in which vio­lent crimes are rare, mem­bers of their secu­ri­ty forces, police offi­cers and mem­bers of their mil­i­tary, are giv­en the hon­or and respect they deserve.
Not so in Jamaica!
The polit­i­cal oppo­si­tion in Jamaica is a rapa­cious vul­ture wait­ing to pick at the car­cass of what is left of Jamaica when crime top­ples the present admin­is­tra­tion as sure­ly it will.
For its part, the Administration of Andrew Holness is some­thing of an Elitist Cosmopolitan par­ty which caters to the desires of the pow­er­ful crim­i­nal rights lob­by, as well as the tri­al lawyers who by the way are quite hap­py with the sta­tus quo.
And so every time the Prime Minister steps in front of a bank of micro­phones to speak on mea­sures his admin­is­tra­tion is under­tak­ing to stem the blood­shed, he leads by talk­ing about human rights.
When the Prime Minister leads a news con­fer­ence on crit­i­cal crime lev­els by talk­ing about human rights[though there are built-in safe­guards] it sends a mes­sage to the armed gang­sters that he is there sup­port­ing them not the mem­bers of the secu­ri­ty forces.
And so he ends up with a sce­nario which is tan­ta­mount to find­ing one­self in quick­sand. The more you strug­gle the deep­er and quick­er you sink.
The more Holness deliv­ers a mealy-mouthed address the more empow­ered the thugs are.
The inci­dent of the shoot­ing up of a funer­al pro­ces­sion in St James over the week­end, while there were secu­ri­ty forces mem­bers all around, is a tes­ta­ment to that fact.
Unfortunately when you do that you unwit­ting­ly send the mes­sage to crim­i­nals that the secu­ri­ty forces are going to be tentative.
You tac­it­ly encour­age aggres­sion and a lack of coöper­a­tion towards the secu­ri­ty forces.
You cre­ate a pause in the secu­ri­ty forces, they become afraid to act, risk­ing their free­doms as they risk their lives, a ‑la Tivoli Gardens.
It is going to get much worse, a lot worse.
Why?
It’s not that the secu­ri­ty forces are inca­pable of han­dling these scum­bags who are killing peo­ple indis­crim­i­nate­ly. They absolute­ly can.
The issue is that both polit­i­cal par­ties have con­nec­tions to the Gangs, both polit­i­cal par­ties have ganged up against the secu­ri­ty forces and as such the secu­ri­ty forces have stood down.
The solu­tions are in the hand of both polit­i­cal par­ties, it is not the remit of any­one else. They get to decide when they will put pol­i­tics aside and stand up for Jamaica.
At this junc­ture, nei­ther polit­i­cal par­ty has indi­cat­ed it is will­ing to place coun­try over pol­i­tics and so in the mean­time, the blood­shed will con­tin­ue and more and more nations will issue trav­el advi­sories until tourists stop coming.
After which the whole shit will come tum­bling down.
It bears remem­ber­ing that these killers have no com­punc­tion about killing even those who feed and shel­ter them. So to you crim­i­nal rights func­tionar­ies if you believe you are san­i­tized or immune from death guess again.

Chuck’s About Face Attempt To Deride Empirical Data.…

You have seen me crit­i­cize Jamaican politi­cians PNP and JLP alike where war­rant­ed and to be frank, it’s gen­er­al­ly always warranted.
Some of the Island’s Politicians do mean well [ a small and shrink­ing minor­i­ty if you will].
It’s dif­fi­cult to imag­ine that Tourism Minister Edmund Bartlett does not mean well for Tourism even though he is a long­time politi­cian who has to bear some respon­si­bil­i­ty for the con­di­tion of the coun­try to some minute degree.
The same may be said of Christopher Tufton the Health Minister who has not been dirt­ied by the stains of Garrison Politics.

On both sides of the polit­i­cal divide, there may only be a few good men and women who are not sul­lied, one way or the oth­er by graft, cor­rup­tion, and deceit of some kind.
Even those who may not have com­mit­ted crim­i­nal acts [or rather have not been held account­able], deceit and com­plic­i­ty even by their very silence are omnipresent. This, when they should have spo­ken up and out against the wrong­do­ings of their col­leagues in a non-polit­i­cal way.
Deceit and com­plic­i­ty endure in oth­ers when they do speak up and out when they should have remained silent.‘

Chuck

In no oth­er Politician prac­tic­ing today have I seen more deceit and com­plic­i­ty than in the Minister of Justice Delroy Chuck.
In him I see a hyp­ocrite extra­or­di­naire who speaks with forked tongue, as native Americans once char­ac­ter­ized the white men who nev­er signed a treaty they did not break.

Chuck’s dis­dain for offi­cers of the law and his pro­cliv­i­ty to appease the local aris­to­crat­ic rab­ble which dwells in the enclaves of upper Saint Andrew rivals only his forked tongue on issues of relevance.
I have writ­ten expan­sive­ly on Delroy Chucks harm­ful imprint on the rule of law in our coun­try but by and large in the Orwellian uni­verse in which our coun­try oper­ates Chuck will inevitably go down as a hero who has advanced Jamaica’s jus­tice system.

Just days ago police released a report they com­piled in which they out­lined extra­or­di­nar­i­ly light sen­tences being met­ed out by the courts in the west­er­ly parts of the country.
The law-enforce­ment report detailed a com­pre­hen­sive case by case analy­sis of indi­vid­ual cas­es in which Judges in the same cir­cuit have inex­plic­a­bly giv­en felons what could only be char­ac­ter­ized as tiny slaps on the wrist.

Court Management Services Response Weak And Demonstrative Of Deeper Scars.

Delroy Chuck, expe­ri­enc­ing what could eas­i­ly pass for a pang of decen­cy and dare I say real­i­ty and duty to coun­try, if not hon­esty, declared that he has con­cerns about the dis­par­i­ty in the sen­tences being imposed by judges. “There needs to be greater con­sis­ten­cy by judges,” he said, adding that sen­tences should send a strong sig­nal to soci­ety about the repug­nance of crim­i­nal activities.

I was stunned at that state­ment from Chuck so much so that I wrote the above arti­cle on the CVM’s response but did not men­tion Chuck’s response.
I thought his state­ment was self-serv­ing, and could only have been giv­en because he thought there was lever­age there for himself.
It did not take long for my sus­pi­cions to be con­firmed Sunday Gleaner of January 21st.
Justice Minister Delroy Chuck has hit back at the police and oth­er crit­ics who have tak­en issue with per­ceived light sen­tences being imposed by judges for ille­gal pos­ses­sion of firearm and ammu­ni­tion.

It was not just this writer who found Chuck’s about-face duplic­i­tous and self-serv­ing, the glean­er admit­ted as much stating.
Days after pub­licly admit­ting that he also has con­cerns about the dis­par­i­ty between some of the sen­tences being imposed, Mr. Chuck says crit­ics should under­stand that sen­tenc­ing is not a sci­ence and that every case can be explained.

But this is vin­tage Delroy Chuck, the very man who paid homage to a deceased crim­i­nal area” don” on the occa­sion of his demise but has noth­ing pos­i­tive to say about valiant police offi­cers who give their lives for their country.
Chuck stu­pid­ly crit­i­cised the police, for what he char­ac­ter­izes as a sin­gling out of cas­es with light sen­tences, to make the argu­ment that the jus­tice sys­tem should be blamed for the esca­la­tion in crime.
When fac­tu­al­ly what pass­es as a jus­tice sys­tem in the coun­try is objec­tive­ly and demon­stra­bly part­ly to be blamed for the esca­la­tion in seri­ous crimes.
The catch and release of mur­der­ers back onto the streets on a dai­ly basis only so that they may kill again is a good place to start if Chuck in an edu­ca­tion on basic indis­putable facts.

The very same Delroy Chuck who just last week agreed with the sober assess­ment of the police doc­u­men­tary report­ing flips and makes the scur­rilous claim that empir­i­cal data should not be used to form objec­tive conclusions.
The shock­ing trav­es­ty in Delroy Chuck’s shame­less about-face may only be attrib­uted to a weak yet trans­par­ent attempt to cur­ry favor and run defen­sive cov­er­age for his crim­i­nal lov­ing cohorts on the bench who are sub­vert­ing the rule of law.

A shame­less dis­play of col­lu­sion by the rul­ing class as it clos­es ranks even as the peas­antry eats itself alive and the streets run red with the blood shed by the very demons they release back onto them.

White Evangelicals Continue To Distort Christ Teachings To Justify Racism And Hypocrisy…

Asked by MSNBC’s Alex Witt, about Donald Trump’s alleged infi­deli­ties and dal­liances, the head of Samaritan’s Purse and son of renowned tel­e­van­ge­list Billy Graham, Franklyn Graham said the following.

He said he didn’t say it,” Graham said. “I don’t think any of those sen­a­tors if he did use that lan­guage, have heard that word for the first time. I’m sure that’s a word they’ve used before, I think there’s a lit­tle hypocrisy here.”
“We have a busi­ness­man who is a pres­i­dent, not a politi­cian, but a busi­ness­man,” Graham said. “We should all be grate­ful that he’s brought his knowl­edge to Washington and he’s help­ing to turn this econ­o­my around.”

For the record Donald Trump the sup­posed busi­ness­man filed for chap­ter 11 bank­rupt­cy a stag­ger­ing six (6) times and backed up by PolitiFact.May esti­mates have cir­cu­lat­ed which stat­ed that Trump had filed for chap­ter 11 bank­rupt­cy pro­tec­tion a total of four (4) times which con­flicts with Politifact’s find­ing of six.
Questioned, Trump told Washington Post reporters that he count­ed the first three bank­rupt­cies as just one.

Reverend, you just told me that this coun­try has a sin prob­lem and I know you’ve no doubt heard that the pres­i­dent is accused of hav­ing his lawyer pay $130,000 to a for­mer porn star alleged­ly for her silence about his sex­u­al encounter while he’s mar­ried,” Witt said. “The pre­vi­ous alle­ga­tions as well, that access “Access Hollywood” tape, does that chal­lenge your faith in the president?”

Does the pres­i­dent have a sin prob­lem?” Witt asked. “I can promise you he is not President Perfect,” Graham shot back.
“But, sir, can you under­stand how there are those that are cry­ing hypocrisy? When for exam­ple, the New York Daily Newsedi­to­r­i­al on Thursday accus­es some Christian lead­ers, like Gary Bauer who sup­ports the pres­i­dent for being hyp­ocrites, for say­ing absolute­ly noth­ing about the Stormy Daniels mat­ter,” Witt said. “When peo­ple cry there are hyp­ocrites there with­in the evan­gel­i­cal com­mu­ni­ty, can you under­stand that criticism?”

Well, first of all, President Trump I don’t think has admit­ted to hav­ing an affair with this per­son and so, this is just a news sto­ry, I don’t know if it’s accu­rate.”
“Now did he have an affair with this woman? I have no clue, but I believe that 70 years of age, the pres­i­dent is a much dif­fer­ent per­son today than he was four years ago, five years ago, ten years ago or what­ev­er and we just have to give the man the ben­e­fit of the doubt,” Graham con­tin­ued. “He said he didn’t do it, so okay, let’s say he didn’t do it.”
“I don’t think it’s hyp­o­crit­i­cal because he’s a flawed man, for me to try to sup­port him and help him and pray for him,” Graham said. “I’m a flawed per­son. and I would hate for peo­ple to see all the bag­gage I have in my life, but the fact is that God has for­giv­en me and I’ve asked for his for­give­ness, and I think the pres­i­dent has, too.”

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Well, there you have it no mat­ter what the charge is against you if you deny it you are absolved from cul­pa­bil­i­ty and respon­si­bil­i­ty accord­ing to the Gospel of Franklyn Graham.
About then President Barack Obama in 2012 Franklyn Graham said he believes President Barack Obama may or may not be Christian while express­ing his belief that GOP pres­i­den­tial hope­ful Rick Santorum’s moral stances show him to be a “man of faith.”

Many peo­ple have been aghast at the bla­tant hypocrisy of not just Republican Politicians but at the Evangelical move­ment which has ignored the divorces, accu­sa­tions of infi­deli­ty and sex­u­al abuse charges lev­eled against him and the con­fir­ma­tion of those abuse from his own mouth, on that Hollywood extra bus.
Many jux­ta­pose his behav­ior and the mul­ti­plic­i­ty of hor­ri­ble things which comes out of his mouth dai­ly against the alle­ga­tions of infi­deli­ty lev­eled against President Bill Clinton in the 90’s and they come away con­vinced that the white Evangelical move­ment is at best filled with hypocrites.

Their treat­ment of President Barack Obama and his fam­i­ly, despite the gra­cious­ness and class with which the Obama’s con­duct­ed them­selves, could only be char­ac­ter­ized as bla­tant­ly and dis­gust­ing­ly igno­rant and racist.

However not every white Evangelical feels that Trump should be giv­en a free pass.
Andy Crouch, exec­u­tive edi­tor of Christianity Today, an evan­gel­i­cal mag­a­zine found­ed by Billy Graham, wrote “Enthusiasm for a can­di­date like Trump gives our neigh­bors ample rea­son to doubt that we believe Jesus is Lord.”” “They see that some of us are so self-inter­est­ed and so self-pro­tec­tive, that we will ally our­selves with some­one who vio­lates all that is sacred to us — in hope, almost cer­tain­ly a vain hope giv­en his men­dac­i­ty and record of betray­al, that his rule will save us.

Don’t won­der about the fact that young col­lege edu­cat­ed peo­ple are not fol­low­ing in the foot­steps of their par­ents in adher­ing to Religious teachings.
When the words of those who set them­selves up as anoint­ed voic­es for the word of God, yet what drips from their lips are lies, racist and hyp­o­crit­i­cal dog­ma the edu­cat­ed and dis­cern­ing can see straight through them.