Lets Face Facts :We Made A Conscious Decision Not To Be A Country Of Laws..

We had two choices to deal with the ever emerging reign of terror in Jamaica for years and we made our choice.

(1) We could stop polit­i­cal med­dling in law enforce­ment. Take seri­ous­ly the rule of law by (a) Modernizing the police depart­ment. (b) Establishing the rule of law as the gov­ern­ing phi­los­o­phy as the bedrock on which our par­lia­men­tary democ­ra­cy is built. © Disentangling the two polit­i­cal par­ties from crime, cor­rup­tion and crim­i­nal con­duct and affil­i­a­tions and (d) Begin the metic­u­lous process of upgrad­ing and improv­ing the crim­i­nal jus­tice system.

(2) We could do the reverse of (1) by (a) Demonize the rule of law and its agents. (b) Allow the police depart­ment to dis­in­te­grate through attri­tion, lack of sup­port, chas­ing crime fight­ers from the force, direct­ly and indi­rect­ly, recruit­ing into the depart­ment and pro­mot­ing peo­ple with no love and ded­i­ca­tion to the job. © Continue polit­i­cal affil­i­a­tions, sup­port, and shield­ing of crim­i­nals. (d) Allow the jus­tice sys­tem to crum­ble to the point the aver­age per­son has no faith in it and as a result take mat­ters into their own hands.
Faced with the two choic­es Jamaica chose the latter.

As a child I was an avid read­er, I would read every­thing in sight. I had an insa­tiable appetite for books, the knowl­edge I derived from them was an accel­er­ant which fur­ther drove me to read even more.
My jour­ney, through those pages, made me real­ize that to a large extent our peo­ple were not exact­ly keen on obey­ing rules.
I gleaned that there was a sub-cul­ture which not so secret­ly rev­eled in the exploits of the most deranged killers in our country.
From Three fin­ger Jack, Rigen, Coppa, Natty Morgan and the list of oth­er mass mur­der­ers, these infa­mous can­cers on our nation’s psy­che became icons of our pop­u­lar culture.
In places con­sid­ered nor­mal, the mem­o­ry of these men would be reviled and shunned, not in Jamaica.
In a sick and dement­ed Orwellian way a cer­tain seg­ment of the peo­ple cheered the exploits of the mur­der­ers even as they ply their mor­bid trade and evade the rule of law.
Today the con­di­tions which bred those can­cers have mul­ti­plied and are ampli­fied cre­at­ing expo­nen­tial­ly more of the same degenerates.
Sadly as the num­ber of mur­der­ing degen­er­ates grows so too has the sup­port for them and their cause.

We nev­er had a real dis­cus­sion on how we were going to deal with the vilest killers our coun­try produced.
We sim­ply swept crime under the car­pet. On oth­er occa­sions we say there is crime every­where. Pressed even fur­ther with the stark­ness of the killings we get into a defen­sive pos­ture, like Porcupines we roll into balls, spikes pro­trud­ing out­ward ready to spike any­one who dares to speak out against Jamaica’s crime culture.
With a twist­ed inane log­ic which makes sense only to us, we pre­tend speak­ing out is tan­ta­mount to a lack of patriotism.

We nev­er dis­cussed or worked out the con­se­quences, not hang­ing mur­der­ers would have on our fledg­ling democ­ra­cy and ultra-vio­lent killers.
We sim­ply marched to Britain’s drum­beat, even though we did not have their infra­struc­ture or desire to lock up for life these dement­ed killers.
Rather than send them to prison for life where they belong we opt­ed instead for a lib­er­al per­spec­tive from the Island’s insti­tu­tions of high­er learn­ing which argues for redi­rec­tion for crim­i­nals over seri­ous puni­tive reme­dies which has both components.
As a con­se­quence, we end up with a lib­er­al inef­fec­tu­al sys­tem which pro­vides no deter­rent effect on crime and a hard­ened crim­i­nal under­world unde­terred by the prospect of being held accountable.

We nev­er quite dis­cussed the con­se­quences to the coun­try of mov­ing away from hard nosed polic­ing which though not a total panacea kept mur­ders to under five hun­dred each year for a long time.
We sim­ply acqui­esced to a mis­guid­ed egal­i­tar­i­an con­cept that if we pro­vide every­one with jobs crime would be a thing of the past.
This sil­ly notion ignores the fact that in gen­er­al, the pup­peteers behind the pup­pets who pull the trig­gers are indeed wealthy well to do peo­ple with more than aver­age finan­cial resources.

There was no nation­al dia­logue when INDECOM was cre­at­ed on the damp­en­ing effect it would have on actu­al real polic­ing (not the show­boat­ing which exist today).
Sure the police need­ed to be held accountable.
Sure per­cep­tion is impor­tant in the way cit­i­zens view the han­dling of police abuse complaints.
But was it nec­es­sary to cre­ate a state fund­ed adver­sary to the police?

Did it make sense to send home real crime fight­ers while merg­ing the JCF and ISCF with­out retrain­ing mem­bers of the ISCF or weed­ing out those who could not qualify?
Was it good pol­i­cy to cre­ate a top heavy high com­mand with lit­tle or no real com­mand and con­trol expe­ri­ence and in many cas­es with peo­ple who have no knowl­edge of crime fighting?
I believe we all know the answers to these questions.

Over and above the obsti­na­cy of our mis­guid­ed direc­tion we refuse to send pris­on­ers to pris­ons for the most heinous crimes.
Instead of send­ing a clear mes­sage when we do con­vict them, vio­lent mur­der­ers are being giv­en 7 and 10-year sentences.
Since we do not send them to the gal­lows why would we not send them to prison for life?

The sick per­vert­ed egal­i­tar­i­an poli­cies which fail to rec­og­nize that not all peo­ple are equal, that some peo­ple will kill no mat­ter the soci­ety in which they live, has done a tremen­dous dis­ser­vice to the Island’s crime fight­ing efforts.
Neither Obeah nor divine inter­ven­tion, nei­ther tears nor brava­do will bend the arc of crime in Jamaica.
What is required is a metic­u­lous well thought out pol­i­cy which ensures that crim­i­nals get the mes­sage that the rule of law is the gov­ern­ing prin­ci­ple, not gangsters.

Attitudinal Change Critical To Jamaica’s Response To Crime…

We are liv­ing in stress­ful times, whether the sky is falling or we are mere­ly inun­dat­ed with infor­ma­tion that it is falling may be a sub­ject for debate. What I do know is that grow­ing up in the 70’s was a lot sim­pler than life is today.

Nations grap­ple with myr­i­ad issues, from pover­ty to wars, from crime to cli­mate change, the issues are real and they demand imme­di­ate action.
In some cas­es, the issues some nations face are not of their own creation.

No coun­try is total­ly respon­si­ble no coun­try is total­ly blameless.
Factories and foundries of large indus­tri­al nations churn out the goods and spare parts we refuse to live with­out, poor impov­er­ished peo­ple in Africa and oth­er parts of the world dec­i­mate forests for fire­wood and char­coal. Ultimately we all con­tribute to the decline, just at dif­fer­ent levels.

Jamaican police rake in huge gun haul…

With the com­plex issues, we face it makes sense that we do not add to the prob­lems we are forced to deal with by cre­at­ing unnec­es­sary prob­lems and allow­ing oth­ers to devel­op into intractable and exis­ten­tial ones.
I have always har­bored an unhealthy dis­dain for politi­cians because I fun­da­men­tal­ly believe they are in most cas­es liars who will do and say any­thing to get elected.
Their rapa­cious desire to hold onto pow­er has been crit­i­cal in shap­ing the direc­tions of far too many countries.
Generally, the best inter­est of the larg­er pop­u­la­tion is sac­ri­ficed for the inter­est of small­er cliques with their own nar­row interests.

Nowhere is this more evi­dent than in my native Jamaica a once beau­ti­ful peace­ful place with prob­lems, like every­where else in 1962 when the British hand­ed over con­trol to the natives.
In the 55 years since we have accom­plished much but our accom­plish­ments pale in com­par­i­son to our tal­ents and abilities.
Rationally we must con­sid­er what might have been had we remained under colo­nial rule?
As unpalat­able as that thought is and as putrid as the taste is think­ing about this out loud it is inescapable in light of how things have turned out.

Jamaican flag

Truthfully my default dis­po­si­tion is to blame the polit­i­cal par­ties which must take respon­si­bil­i­ty for the envi­ron­ment they cre­at­ed since 1962.
Nevertheless, I can­not ignore that oth­er fac­tors have shaped our per­cep­tions and real­i­ties lead­ing to our present circumstances.
Our Schools and Colleges, busi­ness sec­tor, our church­es and NGO’s, our pri­vate and pub­lic insti­tu­tions and each and every home must share in the blame for the present predica­ment in which we find ourselves.

A recent report revealed that the vast major­i­ty of our edu­cat­ed young peo­ple would leave the coun­try if only they had the chance.
This is not new, in 2015 anoth­er such study revealed that most Jamaicans would pull up roots and move to anoth­er coun­try if only they could.
How then does that square with the Jamaica 55 cel­e­bra­tion and the brava­do about how great Jamaica is?
Both polar points can­not be true.

The intractable crime prob­lem del­ug­ing Jamaica should not be one of the prob­lems the small Island of 2.7 mil­lion be deal­ing with today.
Unfortunately, years of fail­ures at all lev­els have result­ed in a behe­moth that admin­is­tra­tions of both polit­i­cal par­ties are unwill­ing to deal with out of fear of the fallout.

Dozens of shells expend­ed from auto­mat­ic weapons is the rule rather than the exception.

The police are pro­ject­ing that mur­ders could spi­ral to as high as 1,526 by the end of this year if the cur­rent trend of 4.1 homi­cides per day continues.

A break­down of dai­ly mur­ders issued by the National Intelligence Bureau (NIB) on Monday showed that a total of 893 homi­cides have been report­ed since the start of this year, with the high­est num­ber, 157, com­mit­ted in June.

A total of 138 mur­ders were record­ed in May, while 136 were report­ed in July, 123 in January, 118 in March, 109 in April, and 86 in February. The August fig­ure stood at 26 up to the time of the NIB report.

According to the report, the year-to-date increase in mur­ders was 159 or 21.7 per cent com­pared to the same peri­od last year.

The mur­der fig­ure since the start of 2017 is show­ing an increase when com­pared to the cor­re­spond­ing peri­od in 2016,” the NIB report stat­ed. “Similarly, the cumu­la­tive fig­ure for the last three days (August 4 – August 6, 2017) shows an increase of 1 or 9.1 per cent when com­pared to the cor­re­spond­ing peri­od in 2016.”

Over the peri­od, the high­est num­ber of mur­ders – 117 – were report­ed in the St James divi­sion. This was fol­lowed by Westmoreland with 85; Clarendon with 84; St Andrew South, 76; St Catherine North, 75; Kingston West, 59; St Catherine South, 56; Hanover 40; St Andrew Central, 38; St Ann, 38; St Andrew North, 38; Kingston East, 29; Manchester, 26; Kingston Central 19; St Elizabeth, 14; St Thomas, 12; Trelawny, 12; St Mary, 11; and Portland, 4.

Commissioner of Police George Quallo

These num­bers though stun­ning and indeed fright­en­ing may not tell the full story.
They rep­re­sent the bod­ies which have been found and the reports which have been ver­i­fied by law enforcement.
There is a large amount of miss­ing per­sons who have not been account­ed for. Additionally, in many cas­es, peo­ple are seri­ous­ly wound­ed in attacks on their per­sons they do not die imme­di­ate­ly as a result of those injuries but suc­cumb to those injuries later.
Police blot­ters do not reflect those in the homi­cide data.

The Police can be more metic­u­lous in track­ing those lat­er deaths from their own inves­ti­ga­tions, bring­ing the data up to speed to reflect in a more com­pre­hen­sive way those delayed homi­cide cases.
The lat­est report released by police does not include the cas­es of felo­nious wound­ings and attempt­ed mur­ders which ought to be processed along­side and simul­ta­ne­ous­ly with the homi­cide num­bers as well, in order to ful­ly grasp the seri­ous­ness of the violence.

PM Andrew Holness

The most con­se­quen­tial issue influ­enc­ing crime on the Island and the way it is being respond­ed to is the fail­ure of the pop­u­la­tion to ful­ly appre­ci­ate that it is a clear and present danger.
The dan­ger­ous nar­ra­tive which has infect­ed the body politic is that there is crime every­where and that all peo­ple have to do is steer clear of cer­tain areas.
Tell that to Mr. Ramdial who was gunned down in his car as he drove on an uptown city street.
Tell that to the count­less peo­ple who were not involved in lot­to scam­ming yet they lost their lives at the hands of mind­less killers whose claim to fame is an auto­mat­ic weapon, bul­lets to spare and a desire to kill.

The idea that only peo­ple who engage in lot­to scam­ming or peo­ple who are mixed up in crime are get­ting killed is not cut­ting it anymore.
The notion that keep­ing one’s eyes closed and lips sealed is a way to avoid get­ting killed is insane in as much as it is retard­ed conceptually.
That kind of sur­ren­der to the worst ele­ments in soci­ety is a tes­ta­ment that as a coun­try Jamaicans have run out of ideas and are cry­ing out for help.
Nevertheless, the atti­tudes of Jamaicans as it relates to what is nec­es­sary to squash those who would dis­rupt the soci­ety is a large part of the rea­son the prob­lem per­sists and is get­ting worse.

The real truth of the mat­ter is that clos­er to 2555 Jamaicans are being mur­dered each year.
If that num­ber does­n’t ter­ri­fy you then mul­ti­ply that by ten. If the idea of over 25.000 dead peo­ple over a decade does not absolute­ly jolt you this arti­cle is not for you.

Patrick Powell Sentenced To 9 Months In Prison

KINGSTON, Jamaica — Businessman, Patrick Powell, who was last month found guilty of fail­ing to hand over his firearm to the police for inspec­tion, was today sen­tenced to nine months in prison.

Judge Vaugh Smith hand­ed down the sen­tence in the Kingston and St Andrew Parish Court in Half Way Tree.

The busi­ness­man was found guilty after pros­e­cu­tion led evi­dence that Powell, who was a licensed firearm hold­er in July 2011, failed to hand over his weapon to police offi­cer, Superintendent Clive Walker.

The police want­ed the weapon for inspec­tion in rela­tion to the July 2011 shoot­ing death of school­boy Khajeel Mais.

Powell, in his social inquiry report, told pro­ba­tion offi­cer that his gun was stolen from his safe while he was in police cus­tody. http://​www​.jamaicaob​serv​er​.com/​l​a​t​e​s​t​n​e​w​s​/​P​a​t​r​i​c​k​_​P​o​w​e​l​l​_​s​e​n​t​e​n​c​e​d​_​t​o​_​9​_​m​o​n​t​h​s​_​i​n​_​p​r​i​son

NAACP Missouri Issues Travel Advisory Over State’s ‘Jim Crow Bill’

The NAACP has issued a trav­el advi­so­ry to peo­ple of col­or, warn­ing them that trav­el­ing to Missouri might just be dan­ger­ous for their health.

Missouri’s NAACP con­fer­ence issued the advi­so­ry in June, and it was rec­og­nized by the NAACP’s annu­al con­ven­tion last week.

The advi­so­ry was issued in response to Missouri’s Senate Bill 43, which makes it more dif­fi­cult to prove that a pro­tect­ed class like race or gen­der is what direct­ly led to dis­crim­i­na­tion in lawsuits.

While Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens, who signed the bill into law short­ly after it was passed, and oth­ers have insist­ed that the bill sim­ply makes sure that Missouri’s law­suit laws line up with those in oth­er states, the NAACP has called it a “Jim Crow Bill.”

This does not fol­low the morals of Missouri,” Conference President Rod Chapel Jr. told CNN“I hate to see Missouri get dragged down deep past the notion of treat­ing peo­ple with dignity.”

Citing oth­er exam­ples of dis­crim­i­na­tion in the state as signs of “loom­ing dan­ger,” the NAACP urges trav­el­ers to “warn your fam­i­lies, cowork­ers and any­one vis­it­ing Missouri to beware of the safe­ty con­cerns with trav­el in Missouri.”

Chapel stat­ed that in order for the advi­so­ry to be lift­ed, not only would the law need to be repealed but also Missouri would have to make improve­ments in the way its police stop peo­ple of col­or and the way the state deals with hate crimes.

We need to have some basic ground rules for how human beings treat each oth­er,” Chapel said.(Grio​.com)

Some Common Sense Seeping Into The Body Politic,motives Aside…

In a refresh­ing yet sur­pris­ing twist of nation­al secu­ri­ty com­mon sense, a senior lec­tur­er in polit­i­cal psy­chol­o­gy in the Department of Government at the University of the West Indies told Jamaican media yes­ter­day he was pes­simistic about the suc­cess of the Government’s Special zones law.

Without seek­ing to assign motive I will sim­ply point to the salient points Dr. Christopher Charles made, even as I won­der at the rea­son that the media did not go to mem­bers of the secu­ri­ty forces for this information.

Special Zones Law A Sick Joke: We Aren’t Laughing..

Said Charles, “Nothing I have heard is about dis­man­tling the gangs and get­ting the guns. In fact, dur­ing the zones of spe­cial oper­a­tions, because the men know it is going to come, I sus­pect that they might move to com­mu­ni­ties that are poor, but where gangs are dormant”.

Hmm, It was on July 20th that I said this in this very medium.

Does any­one believe the killers are going to stay in an area sat­u­rat­ed with police?

What then will hap­pen if an area is sat­u­rat­ed, doesn’t crime invari­ably trend down there?
The killers will sim­ply move to oth­er areas as they did in 2010.

Charles went on: “They are not fools. They will go into those com­mu­ni­ties and wait. They lis­ten to the media, so they know that Rockfort, MoBay, Clarendon, and Trelawny, any­where we have killings, they are going to come so they would have moved. They can also lock away their guns and just easy.”

At the risk of blow­ing my own horn, I had this to say on July 20th.

The Prime Minister(Andrew Holness) retains the right to des­ig­nate an area, a zone which needs spe­cial atten­tion from the secu­ri­ty forces.
That area is flood­ed with secu­ri­ty per­son­nel. But God for­bid that mem­bers of the secu­ri­ty forces should have to rough up a shot­ta who gets caught up in the drag­net. God for­bid the secu­ri­ty forces are forced to shoot a fuck­ing mur­der­er point­ing a high pow­ered weapon at them.

We could go on and on but in sum­ma­riz­ing Charles argued thus.
“No pro­vi­sion has been made with­in the leg­is­la­tion for the dis­man­tling of gangs and the hunt for ille­gal guns, which is the island’s biggest problem”.
http://​jamaica​-glean​er​.com/​a​r​t​i​c​l​e​/​l​e​a​d​-​s​t​o​r​i​e​s​/​2​0​1​7​0​8​0​4​/​d​i​s​m​a​n​t​l​e​-​g​a​n​g​s​-​g​e​t​-​g​u​n​s​-​e​s​s​e​n​t​i​a​l​-​p​a​r​t​-​m​i​s​s​i​n​g​-​z​o​n​e​s​-​s​p​e​c​ial

I summed up my response to the spe­cial zones law this way.
The plan cre­ates an illu­sion which gives the appear­ance of suc­cess but will do absolute­ly noth­ing about the actu­al mur­der statistics.

Mark my words, it will be like putting a lit­tle water in and tieing the mouth of the bal­loon, squeeze one end of the bal­loon and the water rush­es to the oth­er end.
That is the effect this law will have. It is a façade which will pla­cate some, fool oth­ers and give sup­port­ers some­thing to wag their tongues at.

Notice that the Lame stream media had no prob­lem quot­ing a Ph.D. of polit­i­cal psy­chol­o­gy on a mat­ter in which he has absolute­ly no training.
It would be absolute­ly impos­si­ble for them to con­sult retired offi­cers who would be able to speak freely, unshack­led from the chains of gov­ern­ment employment.
The more things change the more they remain the same.

Expanding Government Will Not Solve Jamaica’s Corruption Problem…

As the say­ing goes “Houston we got a prob­lem”, who remem­ber when they said the police were sell­ing Passports (they were)?
I believe we all remem­ber that.
At the time it reached crit­i­cal mass, the gov­ern­ment of the day removed that func­tion from the hands of the cor­rupt police[sic].
They cre­at­ed a whole new bureau­cra­cy to han­dle that func­tion a resiz­ing of Government if you will.

Ok, now who remem­ber when they said police were sell­ing gun license(they were)?
We all do.
The gov­ern­ment removed that func­tion from the hands of the cor­rupt police[sic].
Another Government bureau­cra­cy was born.
The police force is still large­ly cor­rupt so INDECOM was born. Another Government bureau­cra­cy, big­ger Government yet the prob­lem persist.
Yes, folks, it was alleged dis­hon­esty of report­ing which neces­si­tat­ed the birth of INDECOM.
Oh, oh did I men­tion that a Public Defenders office has been estab­lished too?
Soooooo.…..

Anyway, the Motor vehi­cle Department has been sell­ing dri­vers licens­es from as long as, well forever.
The Customs Department has been rip­ping off Jamaicans bring­ing goods into the coun­try for as long as that depart­ment has been in existence.
Additionally, the loss of rev­enue to the state’s cof­fers is unimag­in­able, nev­er mind the neg­a­tive effects it has had on commerce.
So too has the Registrar Generals Department. If you want to get a birth cer­tifi­cate, or as we Jamaicans say, birth (cer-fi tik­it) you bet­ter have some mon­ey or be pre­pared to wait and wait and wait.

The Political class, they sim­ply steal every­thing that isn’t nailed down.
They bor­rowed, squan­dered and pil­fered so much mon­ey, that gen­er­a­tions of Jamaicans yet unborn are indebt­ed up to their eyeballs.
In an effort to place some sem­blance of con­trol on that the Contractor General’s Department was born.
Another expan­sion of Government.

By now you may have guessed where I am going with this drib­ble, you see it was nev­er about the tiefin police bway dem, as I have said repeat­ed­ly, at the risk of sound­ing biased, it is hard to make a case against the police alone, when we have a rather dirty pool to pull our pub­lic and pri­vate offi­cials from.

The inescapable fact is that we have a soci­ety which is inher­ent­ly corrupt.
Don’t get me wrong many of our peo­ple are decent God-fear­ing peo­ple. What is lack­ing in my esti­ma­tion is a lack is moral leadership.
When our polit­i­cal busi­ness and reli­gious lead­ers are viewed as cor­rupt it cre­ates a domi­no effect of” I’m gonna get mine too”.
The unde­ni­able fact is that most Jamaicans believe their pub­lic and pri­vate offi­cials are cor­rupt. As a con­se­quence, they feel jus­ti­fied in get­ting their’s by what­ev­er means necessary.
It is not out of the ordi­nary for peo­ple to turn down a job because quote” nu hus­tling nu de pan di wuk”.

In recent years the Berlin based Transparency International  the lead­ing glob­al non-gov­ern­men­tal orga­ni­za­tion devot­ed to com­bat­ing corruption
has ruled that the Jamaican soci­ety is inher­ent­ly cor­rupt. Out of a total of 176 coun­tries, Jamaica is rat­ed 83 not good.

Professor Trevor Munroe, author of a report pub­lished by Transparency International has argued that Legislative reform is need­ed to ensure “greater trans­paren­cy and account­abil­i­ty in polit­i­cal par­ties and in the pub­lic sector.
Professor Munroe said that it is an urgent require­ment for strength­en­ing nation­al integri­ty sys­tems, not just in Jamaica but the broad­er Caribbean.

We have an integri­ty prob­lem which will not be solved by cre­at­ing more agen­cies focused on corruption.
Larger Government does pre­cious lit­tle as we have seen from the mas­sive expan­sion of Government as a result of this malady.
We sim­ply can­not expand Government any fur­ther as we look to find­ing a solu­tion for this prob­lem. We need to look within.
We have become a peo­ple who mea­sure our suc­cess by our excess.

As a busi­ness own­er in the New York area, I have seen that excess in the pre­sump­tu­ous demands Jamaicans at home makes on their loved ones in America.
Every lap­top com­put­er, every cel­lu­lar device, even data cards must have opti­mum storage.
On the rare occa­sion, I ven­ture to inquire why peo­ple in Jamaica are demand­ing the most expen­sive elec­tron­ic devices which they are receiv­ing as gifts and the buy­er can hard­ly afford, peo­ple, open up detail­ing their dis­gust at this new lev­el of gall.

Greed is a huge dri­ver of the mur­der rate present­ly sweep­ing our coun­try, on the oth­er hand, greed of the white col­or vari­ety is eat­ing away at the social eco­nom­ic and moral struc­ture of our society.
How we arrest that can­cer is any­body’s guess.

Were The Commissioner Of Police To Accede To This Demand He Would Have Effectively Ceded His Authority Over Personnel Transfers To Outside Forces Hostile To The Rule Of Law.

One of the most con­se­quen­tial build­ing blocks on which a demo­c­ra­t­ic and pros­per­ous soci­ety is built is the rule of law.
The rule of a law is not com­plex it is sim­ply a set of rules that soci­ety sets for itself which if fol­lowed argues for a smooth run­ning society.
By exten­sion that soci­ety may then go on with its anoth­er busi­ness of pro­vid­ing edu­ca­tion, health­care, infra­struc­ture, and oth­er neces­si­ties which allow for the entre­pre­neur­ial spir­it of the peo­ple to then cre­ate wealth.

It is in that order that Western European nations, Some Asian coun­tries like Japan, Singapore, South Korea, the American soci­ety and oth­ers are built.

ORDER

It is naïve and mis­guid­ed to believe that any­thing out­side that social order will bear any fruit oth­er than chaos and con­fu­sion which result in pover­ty and ram­pant criminality.
To some extent that sim­ple mem­o­ran­dum has not found its way into the spaces of the Jamaican soci­ety where it matters.
As a result, what obtains there is a social order which relies on the man rather than the law. A social order which is any­thing but social or orderly.

There is a peck­ing order in which lit­tle sprats vie and com­pete to see who can speak the loud­est over oth­ers and who can demon­strate that he is bet­ter edu­cat­ed so he should be mas­ter over all things.
The end result is a tiny caul­dron of boil­ing bile in which a bunch of scald­ing min­nows strug­gles to out­ma­neu­ver each oth­er to get to the top in an end­less yet futile strug­gle which inevitably results in every­one get­ting scald­ed to death.

Arlene Harrison-Henry

It is in this vein that the state­ments com­ing from Jamaicans for Justice, the Nation’s most vis­cer­al anti-police group and the tax pay­er fund­ed Public Defenders office is so inher­ent­ly offensive.
Commissioner of Police George Quallo has a right, the sole right and respon­si­bil­i­ty to place his assets, includ­ing his human resources where he believes they will be of opti­mum effectiveness.

That per­og­a­tive should not be sub­ject to polit­i­cal inter­fer­ence or consultation.
It cer­tain­ly should not be influ­enced by out­side lob­by groups which have demon­strat­ed their vocal and sys­temic hatred for the rule of law and law enforce­ment officials.

Witter

On the part of the tax-pay­er fund­ed office of pub­lic defend­er, it is shock­ing that a gov­ern­ment office could exist in the coun­try which seem­ing­ly is ded­i­cat­ed to the destruc­tion of the rule of law.
It was from that very same office that for­mer pub­lic defend­er, at best mediocre attor­ney Earl Witter,said that in order for police accounts of fatal shoot­ings to be cred­i­ble there should be more dead cops.

Assistant Commissioner of Police Donovan Graham

Now it’s Arlene Harrison Henry turn. In response to Commissioner Quallo’s appro­pri­ate and right­ful trans­fer of senior per­son­nel under his com­mand which takes effect today Arlene Harrison Henry, in col­lu­sion with the ene­my of the state JFJ is demand­ing that Assistant Commissioner of Police Donavan Graham who head­ed Police Area Three, which com­pris­es Clarendon, Manchester, and St Elizabeth not be trans­ferred to head police Area One.

It should be put on hold, espe­cial­ly in light of the con­cerns and espe­cial­ly in light of the fact that he inevitably will be in charge of a spe­cial zone,” said John Clarke, JFJ’s legal officer.
“We are say­ing that in light of the find­ings and the rec­om­men­da­tions of the [West Kingston Commission of Enquiry], he ought nev­er to have been in charge of the Manchester area, and this trans­fer ought to stop.”

Were the Commissioner of Police to accede to this demand he would have effec­tive­ly ced­ed his author­i­ty over per­son­nel trans­fers to out­side forces hos­tile to the rule of law.
The non­sen­si­cal yet pre­sump­tu­ous argu­ment that an Assistant Commissioner who already heads a police Division should not be allowed to head anoth­er police Division in the same small coun­try of 4411 square miles is beyond ridicu­lous even with­out both­er­ing to pay atten­tion to the lack of stand­ing that the com­plain­ers have to make such demands.

Jamaica is a coun­try that is tee­ter­ing pre­cip­i­tous­ly on the brink of all out chaos con­trary to what the politi­cians and faux patri­ots tell you.
The coun­try is expe­ri­enc­ing civ­il war type homi­cide num­bers. No, not every killing is relat­ed to the illic­it Lotto-scam.
It is intel­lec­tu­al indo­lence and worse to sug­gest that the peo­ple dying are scammers.

It is a lazy and easy answer which is not sup­port­ed by the facts. If that asser­tion was true then each and every home­own­er should remove the iron grille for­ti­fi­ca­tions from their homes and sleep with their doors open at nights as the prime min­is­ter assured them would hap­pen were he elect­ed to office.
The stark real­i­ty is that con­trary to the plat­i­tudes and protes­ta­tions that crime is every­where, clos­er to seven(7) Jamaicans are slaugh­tered each and every day as opposed to the four they would have us believe.

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

Even if the num­ber was four peo­ple mur­dered each day, the year­ly num­ber of slaugh­tered Jamaicans would be 1460.
Those are the num­bers the so called human rights cru­saders should chew on for a while.
No greater right does a per­son have than the right to life. Without life, noth­ing else matters.
If they want to con­tribute to Nation build­ing what bet­ter place for them to direct their efforts than at help­ing to reduce murders?
Instead, like so many oth­er enti­ties in the tiny, fish­bowl they cozy up the worse ele­ments in the soci­ety and demo­nize the police.

Assistant Commissioner of Police Donavan Graham and oth­ers did their duty at a time when oth­ers were cow­er­ing in fear of the takeover of our coun­try by a transna­tion­al war­lord and his militiamen.
He was slimed by a Kangaroo court made up of three fee­ble legal pros­ti­tutes two from with­in and one from without.
Unless their find­ings were find­ings of crim­i­nal cul­pa­bil­i­ty which it weren’t, Jamaicans for Justice and the oth­er Slimers at the Public Defender’s office have no jus­ti­fi­ca­tion for their con­tin­ued besmirch­ing of this pub­lic ser­van­t’s character.

Their opin­ions and utter­ances should be col­lect­ed with the remain­der of Kingston’s garbage and dis­posed of in the Riverton Dump where they belong.

DEA Chief Chuck Rosenberg Slams Trump’s Endorsement Of Police Brutality

Rosenberg, an ally of James Comey, offered “a strong reaffirmation of the operating principles to which we, as law enforcement professionals, adhere.”

Blatant Biases In The Courts System A Driver Of Crime And Corruption…

Act #1 scene #1

1 According to Jamaican media, Former police con­sta­ble Mark Russell wept open­ly after he was sen­tenced to life in prison for assist­ing in the exe­cu­tion-style killing of a 17-year-old boy in 2007.

He will have to serve 24 years in prison before he is eli­gi­ble for parole.

The 34-year-old ex-con­sta­ble, who was assigned to the Hunts Bay Police Station in St Andrew, was sen­tenced by Justice David Fraser. The judge said that he (Russell) would not have been eli­gi­ble for parole until after 30 years if he had not already spent six years in cus­tody — one year in the United States, where he had fled, and the remain­ing years in Jamaica after he was extradited.

Act #2 scene #2

A Westmoreland man who admit­ted his involve­ment in the 2012 exe­cu­tion-style killing of three per­sons employed to Guardsman Security Company today thanked the judge after he was told he could regain his free­dom in 15 years. Twenty-sev­en-year-old Jason Buckland was today sen­tenced to life in prison for the gris­ly mur­ders, but pre­sid­ing judge Justice Bertram Morrison stip­u­lat­ed that he must serve 15 years before he is eli­gi­ble for parole.

Morrison said that was the best he could do after announc­ing the sen­tence in the Home Circuit Court in down­town Kingston. He said he took into con­sid­er­a­tion the fact that Buckland plead­ed guilty and coop­er­at­ed with the police and has been in cus­tody for five years. Buckland whis­pered “thank you” to Morrison and glanced over at a rel­a­tive before he was led out in handcuffs.

♥ ♥ ♥

I hold no brief for mur­der­ers, so let me say I am thrilled that the jus­tice sys­tem worked, at least against these two alleged murderers.
What I would like to briefly respond to, is the appar­ent glar­ing dif­fer­ence in the sen­tenc­ing of the two sus­pects after they were found guilty of mur­der in the same small coun­try in two sep­a­rate court­rooms and by two dif­fer­ent judges.

♦In the one case, there is a cop who alleged­ly betrayed his oath and assist­ed in what has been char­ac­ter­ized as an exe­cu­tion of a young man they say shot at a joint police mil­i­tary patrol.
I was not there so I can only speak to what has been report­ed and ten­dered in evidence.
Verdict, 30 years!

♦On the oth­er, there is a sce­nario in which the defen­dant Jason Buckwald plead guilty to assist­ing in tak­ing the lives of not one, not two but three inno­cent Jamaicans who had done noth­ing wrong.
Verdict, 20 years.

In both cas­es, the defen­dants are being allowed dis­cre­tion for time served.
Notwithstanding, the ten years dif­fer­ence can­not be ignored when one con­sid­ers that the mur­der­er who helped to take sev­er­al lives was sen­tenced to a short­er time in prison than the law enforce­ment offi­cial who went out to enforce the laws and is alleged to have tak­en a sin­gle life…
The mes­sage inher­ent here it seems is that if you must kill, kill sev­er­al people.
Based on this the­o­ry the mass killer will be out of jail in 10-years while the cop who assist­ed in the killing of a sin­gle per­son will not get out for anoth­er 24-years.
What is the ratio­nale for the vast­ly dis­parate dif­fer­ence in the two sentences?
As for­mer police offi­cers those of us who spent time in the court­rooms under­stand all too well the bla­tant bias­es which has exist­ed in these halls for decades against police officers.

If this for­mer police offi­cer did what he was accused of doing there is noth­ing that I would per­son­al­ly say in his defense.
Regardless of what an offend­er does, once he is cap­tured the police can­not under any cir­cum­stances begin to phys­i­cal­ly abuse that offend­er, much less kill that offender.

Once an offend­er is cap­tured and is placed in hand­cuffs, even if he was just try­ing to kill the offi­cer that offi­cer has a duty to ensure safe cus­tody of that pris­on­er to a pre­scribed place.
The prospect of killing an offend­er who has been cap­tured and as per the alle­ga­tions, was already shot, is out­side of any­thing I can envisage.
There is absolute­ly no place in a civ­i­lized soci­ety in which that kind of bar­bar­ic behav­ior can be tolerated.

With that said the fact that an offend­er con­fess­es to being a part of tak­ing three lives is mon­u­men­tal­ly significant.
It is for that rea­son that I have con­sis­tent­ly called for manda­to­ry min­i­mum sen­tences for murder.
There has to be uni­for­mi­ty in the sen­tences which are met­ed out for the most heinous crimes.
This must be removed from the hands of judges. Once a per­son takes anoth­er per­son­’s life he or she must know what the con­se­quences are going to be on conviction.

There are instances where pros­e­cu­tors may ask for a lighter sen­tence for a con­fessed offend­er who has been instru­men­tal in assist­ing law enforcement.
That should stop at manslaugh­ter. Giving a triple mur­der­er a 15-year sen­tence then telling him “this is the best I can do” reeks of empa­thy, some­thing a tri­al judge should nev­er express for a con­vict­ed mass mur­der­er.
On the con­trary, the judge over­see­ing the tri­al of the errant cop was quick to point out that had he not already served 6‑years in jail he would have to serve 30 ‑years before he could expect to be paroled, even though he only assist­ed in one killing.

Outside of the fact that the cop ought to have known bet­ter there seem to have been an inher­ent bias against the cop, some­thing we have not seen dis­played against the mass mur­der­ers who on occa­sion do pass through the court’s system.

Time For Autos With Cameras Inside And Outside…

With the con­stant, he said, he said, he said-she said between police and motorists when offi­cers ini­ti­ate traf­fic stops and the ensu­ing prob­lems which emanate from these encoun­ters there must be a bet­ter way for­ward oth­er than offi­cers body cams, which they can choose to turn on and off at their discretion.

Motorists can use their cell phones to record encoun­ters with police.
Of course, police can always say the cell phone use pre­cip­i­tat­ed the stop in the first place.
See what hap­pens when we can­not trust the peo­ple we should be able to trust?

AUTO-CAM

It is now time for auto mak­ers to place cam­eras in every auto­mo­bile, both inside, and outside.
Motorist should have the option of acti­vat­ing those record­ing devices not just in encoun­ters with law enforce­ment but under nor­mal conditions.
This will go a long way in help­ing police in the inves­ti­ga­tions of traf­fic accidents.
The poten­tial for this kind of tech­nol­o­gy is endless.
Imagine hav­ing this tech­nol­o­gy in your car and you are able to press a but­ton which not only alerts police of your where­abouts in the event of a car­jack­ing, it gives them a play by play account of events as they happen.

We should expect and demand this from automak­ers in light of some of the gad­gets they have crammed into auto­mo­biles to date.
Nevertheless, we should not hold our breath for this to hap­pen any­time soon.
If it will clear up some of the ambi­gu­i­ties in the cit­i­zen to police encoun­ters there may not be any action on it.
Recording devices which actu­al­ly cap­ture and store the speed one was trav­el­ing at the time he was pulled over will go a long way in light­en­ing the cof­fers of munic­i­pal­i­ties which depend on traf­fic fines as a form of tax­a­tion to fund their budgets.
So this may be a non-starter for automak­ers as this idea is cer­tain­ly not a nov­el idea.

In the mean­time in places like Jamaica motorists who are con­stant­ly being approached by traf­fic cops for bribes should take steps like acti­vat­ing a record­ing device as a means of elim­i­nat­ing corruption.
In States with­in the United States, it is always a good idea to record encoun­ters with law enforcement.
Even so, as we have seen with the killing of Philando Castille it may not be enough to save your life.

Trump Replaces Priebus As Chief Of Staff With DHS Chief Kelly

John Kelly Photographer: Andrew Harrer/​Bloomberg

Donald Trump replaced his chief of staff on Friday, announc­ing on Twitter that he had appoint­ed Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly to the job.

He did not say whether the for­mer chief of staff, Reince Priebus, had resigned or was fired. Priebus has been embroiled in a pub­lic feud with Trump’s new com­mu­ni­ca­tions direc­tor, Anthony Scaramucci, who has accused him of leak­ing infor­ma­tion to news reporters.  https://​www​.bloomberg​.com/​n​e​w​s​/​a​r​t​i​c​l​e​s​/​2​017 – 07-28/trump-replaces-priebus-as-chief-of-staff-with-dhs-chief-kel­ly

Arkansas Cop Kills 16-Year-Old Aries Clark Outside Youth Center

I never expected not to see my son again.”

A 16-year-old black teen in Arkansas was fatal­ly shot by a cop while out­side a youth treat­ment center.

Aries Clark was at East Arkansas Youth Services on Tuesday ― an emer­gency shel­ter for youths that his par­ents had sent him to for behav­ioral issues ― when the shoot­ing occurred.

I nev­er expect­ed not to see my son again,” the boy’s moth­er, Vicky Clark, told WMC. “I saw him that Thursday, and we were try­ing to fig­ure out how we were going to do ther­a­py to get help for him.”

Arkansas State Police told the pub­li­ca­tion that an offi­cer with the Marion Police Department shot Clark at 7 p.m., moments after arriv­ing. The boy was tak­en to a hos­pi­tal where he lat­er died.

Marion Police Chief Gary Kelley declined to release infor­ma­tion relat­ed to the shoot­ing, say­ing only that two offi­cers have been placed on paid admin­is­tra­tive leave, accord­ing to KATV.

The Arkansas State Police declined to release more infor­ma­tion when asked by HuffPost, cit­ing the ongo­ing investigation.

Clark’s grand­moth­er, Vickie Burks, said she was in the process of try­ing to get full cus­tody of her grandson.

Indiana Police Officer Fatally Shot While Responding To One-car Wreck By Gunman Who Was Upside Down

An Indiana police offi­cer was fatal­ly shot while respond­ing to a car wreck by a gun­man who repeat­ed­ly fired his weapon despite being upside down in his vehicle.

Lt. Aaron Allan of the Southport Police Department was respond­ing to a call Thursday regard­ing peo­ple trapped inside a car that had flipped over in Indianapolis. As he approached the vehi­cle, Allan was shot mul­ti­ple times and lat­er died at a near­by hospital.

Two oth­er offi­cers at the scene — includ­ing one who was off-duty — returned fire, wound­ing the shoot­er, iden­ti­fied by the Indianapolis Star as Jason Brown.

Brown has been arrest­ed on a pre­lim­i­nary charge of mur­der, accord­ing to the news­pa­per. Brown and a sec­ond per­son injured in the crash were hos­pi­tal­ized and in cus­tody with non-life-threat­en­ing injuries.

You show up to a vehi­cle acci­dent and I don’t want to say we let our guard down, but that’s not what we are look­ing for,” Southport Police Chief Thomas Vaughn said, accord­ing to WISH.

We are look­ing to help that per­son in the car. It is hard to imag­ine why this inci­dent hap­pened when he was there to help that per­son who was in that accident.”

Allan, 38, had near­ly 20 years of law enforce­ment expe­ri­ence, accord­ing to Vaughn. He was a six-year vet­er­an of the department.

Lt. Aaron Allan displays an award he won during his law enforcement career.

Lt. Aaron Allan displays an award he won during his law enforcement career.

(SOCIAL MEDIA/​REUTERS)

Lieutenant Allan was a hard work­er, and today was no dif­fer­ent. He respond­ed to a crash with urgency to pre­serve life. Tragically, his was lost,” Vaughn said at Thursday’s press conference.

Indianapolis Mayor Joe Hogsett called Allan’s death “a shock­ing and trag­ic reminder of the dif­fi­cult, often dan­ger­ous work of police officers.”

Allan had pre­vi­ous­ly told a local news­pa­per that he want­ed to be an offi­cer ever since he was a child, accord­ing to the Star. Vaughn said Allan’s nick­name was “Teddy Bear.”

NARCH/NARCH30 3TP MNDTY

Allan’s nickname was “Teddy Bear.”

(SOCIAL MEDIA/​REUTERS)

That’s because he tried to act real macho, but when a cit­i­zen or some­one need­ed help, he was one of the first guys that were there,” Vaughn said, accord­ing to the Star. “He didn’t always like that nick­name, but it fits him.”

Local res­i­dent Bryan McGary told WXIN that the shoot­ing was unusu­al for the area.

It’s just hard to believe that this would hap­pen here,” McGary told the sta­tion. “I mean I’ve lived here since 1976 and we real­ly haven’t had much … We do have a lot of police­men in our area that lives here so it’s just one of those things.”

Southport is an enclave with­in the city lim­its of Indianapolis. http://www.nydailynews.com/news/crime/indiana-police-officer-killed-responding-car-wreck-article‑1.3364596

Calls To Invest At Home Without Guarantees On Crime…

The Caribbean Policy Research Institute (CaPRI) has esti­mat­ed that Jamaica is los­ing US$12.8 bil­lion annu­al­ly in unex­ploit­ed rev­enue from the dias­po­ra, the Jamaica Stock Exchange (JSE) hopes to dou­ble the num­ber of Jamaicans invest­ing on the stock mar­ket by 2019.

You have a choice as to where you put your mon­ey — Wall Street or Harbour Street.” attor­ney-at-law Marlon Hill told mem­bers of the dias­po­ra who gath­ered at the JSE for a clos­ing bell ring­ing cer­e­mo­ny on Wednesday. The event formed part of the week-long Jamaica 55 Diaspora Conference held at the Jamaica Conference Centre, which focused on issues affect­ing Jamaicans liv­ing over­seas while explor­ing how the pub­lic and pri­vate sec­tor could cre­ate a more effi­cient sys­tem to cap­i­tal­ize on untapped rev­enues from the diaspora.
“If you love GraceKennedy prod­ucts, why not invest in the com­pa­ny? The bread, bis­cuits, logis­tics — all of them are list­ed on the Jamaica Stock Exchange and its only US$100 to open an account with the JSE. (JamaicaObserver)

Isn’t it remark­able just how much Jamaicans at home val­ue the dias­po­ra when the issue of mon­ey comes up?
Don’t get me wrong invest­ing in our home­land is noble, invest­ing for the future a no-brain­er. Where much of the Jamaican com­mu­ni­ty los­es me is in their staunch pos­tur­ing by link­ing the fact that they live on the Island with patriotism.
I mean lis­ten­ing to some of them I some­times have to pinch myself and rehearse my Jamaica accent in the mir­ror, just to con­vince myself that I am still Jamaican.
Never mind my ser­vice to my coun­try or the fact that I took a bul­let in the process.
It appears the sin­gle defin­ing char­ac­ter­is­tic for being a worth­while red-blood­ed gen­uine Jamaican is hav­ing nev­er left or hav­ing left and was uncer­e­mo­ni­ous­ly returned on a one-way flight.

That said, the call to invest in the local stock exchange will not gar­ner the result it should when the coun­try is viewed in the dim cor­rup­tion light in which many Jamaicans abroad view the Island.
The cor­rup­tion and malfea­sance which flows from the top of the stream are cer­tain­ly not lost on any­one, cer­tain­ly not mem­bers of the diaspora.
In fact, it was the cor­rup­tion and lack of oppor­tu­ni­ties which cre­at­ed a dias­po­ra com­mu­ni­ty which is now larg­er than the 2.7 mil­lion peo­ple liv­ing on the Island.

I wish to make it clear that no dias­po­ra group speaks on my behalf and I know a bunch of peo­ple for whom they do not speak either.
Generally, these groups are the same bunch of elit­ist who runs the Island they just don’t live there anymore.
If this gov­ern­ment and busi­ness sec­tor would like to get our mon­ey what it, must do is stop cod­dling criminals.
I speak for myself and a lot of real Jamaicans when we say hell no, we will con­tin­ue to invest in places where we are assured that crim­i­nals will not over­throw the state or that our invest­ments won’t sim­ply disappear.
At the moment we don’t have that assurance.
The Jamaican dias­po­ra has suf­fered immense­ly at the hands of Patriots back home whose sole func­tion is to fig­ure out ways to bilk them of the pro­ceeds of their hard work.
Much the same way the grudge-full­ness and envy are caus­ing the killings on the Island.

Bunch Of Smoke On Crime, No Fire: Cops Must Get A Clue As Well…

Dealing effec­tive­ly with ter­ror­ists and oth­er crim­i­nal offend­ers demand that those whose tasks it is to keep them in check are con­stant­ly think­ing and devel­op­ing new strategies.

There is no com­fort zone for law enforce­ment, crim­i­nals only have to be right once while those who uphold the laws are required to get it right a hun­dred per­cent of the time.
Vigilance and dogged atten­tion to detail are just a few of the qual­i­ties cops and inves­ti­ga­tors must learn if they are to have a chance at hav­ing any suc­cess against crim­i­nals who are incred­i­bly savvy and for­ward leaning.

Commissioner of Police George Quallo

The Jamaica Constabulary Force needs resources, moti­va­tion, and remu­ner­a­tions, but most of all it needs sup­port leg­isla­tive­ly, cit­i­zens sup­port and gov­ern­ment sup­port to effec­tive­ly car­ry out its tasks..

With that said, despite the sup­posed large infu­sion of more edu­cat­ed peo­ple to the top, the agency has not demon­strat­ed that it under­stands how to get around some very basic impediments.

As such, even when the depart­ment releas­es infor­ma­tion on crim­i­nals, the infor­ma­tion serves only to absolve the depart­ment of crit­i­cisms that it isn’t doing any­thing about crime, rather than gar­ner help in remov­ing dan­ger­ous killers from the streets.

If the police releas­es names and alias­es of mur­der­ers and oth­er crim­i­nals it helps a lit­tle. Some peo­ple may know who these offend­ers are. However, the larg­er com­mu­ni­ty will have no idea who these peo­ple are.
Those who know who they are, are usu­al­ly the peo­ple to whom they are clos­est, those peo­ple are the least like­ly to give infor­ma­tion to the police about them.

Egbert Parkins (file photo)

Which brings us to the recent­ly released list of the most want­ed issued by the Westmoreland police under the lead­er­ship of my batch­mate SSP Egbert Parkin.
In address­ing the Media, which the police seem to have become experts at of late, Parkins released the names of the Parish’s 10 most wanted.

According to Parkins, the men are all from the Parish of Westmoreland.
They are…
 — Dushane Allen (Nigel)
 — Glenroy Roach (Eye)
 — Burton Shearer (Bap)
 — O’Brian Ellis (Joe Grine)
 — Kenroy Clarke (Max)
 — Jermaine Gordon (Dangles/​Ding Dong)
 — Orlando Jarrett (Andre)
 — Steve Vassell (Buss Mi Strength)
 — Dwayne Clarke (Buju)
 — Ashwayne Campbell (Cappy).

Roach is want­ed for a quadru­ple mur­der while Allen is want­ed for two oth­er killings com­mit­ted in the parish.

Senior Superintendent Parkins also released the names of oth­ers he says are per­sons of inter­est who may assist the police in their investigations.
They are .
Lundy Whyte (SK)
 — Wellesly Cunninham (Junior of Zeeks)
 — Garnett Burch
 — Odane Taylor (Reno Man)
 — A man known only as Mobay Man
 — Rohan Black (Thickman)
 — Tallone Thompson (Poison)
 — Frank Nelson (Duguy)
 — Ronald Hall (Dwayne or Fago).

Of these ten per­sons of inter­est, who are also from the parish, six are being sought for ques­tion­ing in rela­tion to mur­ders, two for shoot­ings and two for rape. 

Absent from the release were pho­tographs, address­es, known hang­outs, known asso­ciates, etc.
So, for the peo­ple in Westmoreland who want to rid their parish of crim­i­nals, short of walk­ing up to men on the streets list of names in hand and request­ing their names, then match­ing the respons­es with whats on the list, there is pre­cious lit­tle recourse for them.

Minister of nation­al secu­ri­ty Robert Montague

How then does the police get around prob­lems like this con­sid­er­ing that there is pre­cious lit­tle to no help com­ing from Government as it relates to a nation­al Identification data base?
The first order of busi­ness is good intel­li­gence, detec­tives and uni­formed cops alike have a respon­si­bil­i­ty to gath­er intelligence.
Intelligence gath­er­ing should not be left up to just detec­tives as some uni­formed cops seem to believe. That mind­set belongs in the dust­bin, it is outdated.
Good intel­li­gence gath­er­ing is rather sim­ple, each cop on the beat devel­op and nur­ture con­tacts. Each and every per­son a cop comes in con­tact with knows some­thing that is going on.
It is up to that offi­cer, whether on foot or mobile patrol to cul­ti­vate con­tacts. Once rela­tion­ships are devel­oped the ben­e­fits derived are invalu­able as long as offi­cers are pro­fes­sion­al, hon­est and devoid of corruption.

Long before I ever donned civil­ian clothes and pre­tend­ed to be a detec­tive, I was get­ting cru­cial infor­ma­tion which was pro­duc­ing action­able results.
That includ­ed infor­ma­tion which yield­ed an M16 assault rifle hid­den in the ceil­ing of a house in Greenwich Farm, even though I was sta­tioned at the Mobile Reserve.

In the age of smart phones and cheap cam­eras, offi­cers must do a bet­ter job of get­ting the names of crim­i­nals they come across and pho­tograph­ing them as well. This has to be the focus of all cops but it must be taught them by the kha­ki clad peo­ple if they can drag them­selves from behind their desks or ignore the request for inter­views long enough to do so.

That, of course, is all pred­i­cat­ed on whether the senior offi­cers them­selves even under­stand how to cap­ture peo­ples’ pro­files in pub­lic spaces.
Or when they are scooped up on raids. The police have got to be more crime focused, again it is up to the senior staff of the Gazzetted Ranks to estab­lish account­abil­i­ty standards.
They must lead, espe­cial­ly in the CIB offices. There must be bet­ter tar­get­ing of crim­i­nals through intel­li­gence dri­ven data.
The police must know who heads each and every gang. They must know the peck­ing order. Who is in the line of suc­ces­sion. Who each and every mem­ber is. Whom they are relat­ed to.
If the police are ever to achieve some suc­cess against gang­sters they must begin by show­ing some com­mon sense and leadership.

Gangs of Jamaica

This polit­i­cal admin­is­tra­tion says it wants to do some­thing about crime. If that is to be believed the Government needs to begin with a nation­al iden­ti­fi­ca­tion database.
We can pay lip ser­vice to crime or we can get down to the seri­ous busi­ness of doing some­thing about this scourge.
The gov­ern­ment must get seri­ous and the police must get a clue.

Trial lawyers sit down and shut your mouths you are some of the worst sup­port­ers of crim­i­nal­i­ty in the country.Just shut up.

Police Face Long Gun-battles With Heavily Armed Gangs: Oh By The Way Lets Give Gangsters We’ve Locked Away Conjugal Visits…

You need a lit­tle rest and relax­ation in Jamaica just take a life, no big deal you will not be seen as a dan­ger to soci­ety, every­one will vouch for your char­ac­ter and you get a tiny slap on the wrist.
Oh did I men­tion that- that is in the event you are caught?
Right, because the vast major­i­ty of mur­ders on the Island are nev­er solved and those which are solved if not over­turned in the court of appeals the defen­dants are giv­en a slight slap on the wrist.

Diandra Jarrett was sen­tenced by Justice Nicole Simmonds in the Gun Court at the Supreme Court after she was found guilty of the mur­der of Damian Bowen. The 27-year-old ven­dor will be eli­gi­ble for parole after serv­ing 10 years. Bowen, a 34-year-old welder, died after he was stabbed in his neck and chest dur­ing an alter­ca­tion at a par­ty on Montpelier Road in Hanover, on June 1, 2013.

Bowen’s baby moth­er and Jarrett were involved in a fight. He tried to sep­a­rate them but was stabbed twice with a knife. Bowen’s baby moth­er was also stabbed in her chest, leg, arm, breast, and chin. The dis­pute between the women alleged­ly stemmed from an ear­li­er argument.

Jarrett’s lawyer, Martin Thomas, also begged for lenien­cy and urged the judge to treat her as some­one who had made a mistake.He told the judge to bear in mind that his client was not an aggres­sive per­son and that the inci­dent was com­plete­ly out­side of her usu­al behavior.Martin also told the judge that mem­bers of Jarrett’s com­mu­ni­ty have attest­ed to the fact that she was not a trou­ble­mak­er, and have also asked for mer­cy for her as she did not pose a threat to the com­mu­ni­ty.http://​www​.jamaicaob​serv​er​.com/​n​e​w​s​/​t​e​a​r​s​-​f​l​o​w​-​a​f​t​e​r​-​w​o​m​a​n​-​g​e​t​s​-​l​i​f​e​-​s​e​n​t​e​n​c​e​-​f​o​r​-​k​i​l​l​i​n​g​-​f​r​i​e​n​d​_​1​0​5​8​1​6​?​p​r​o​f​i​l​e​=​1​373

Here is a sit­u­a­tion in which a vio­lent per­son com­mits mur­der and attempt­ed mur­der and the defense lawyer argues that she is not vio­lent and that she pos­es no threat to the society.
In what world is that ratio­nal think­ing, tell us please what would qual­i­fy as a dan­ger to the Jamaican pub­lic now that we know a homi­cide and the attempt to kill anoth­er per­son does not qual­i­fy as dangerous?
Now I do under­stand the num­bers game, in a coun­try as vio­lent as Jamaica I do under­stand that mur­der and attempt­ed mur­der does­n’t real­ly cre­ate a stir, after all, there are so many mass mur­der­ers walk­ing around with­out con­se­quence I do get the arguments.
Tell that to the deceased man and the seri­ous­ly injured woman whom she intend­ed to kill as well.
Jamaica does not have one of the high­est mur­der rates in the world in the abstract. The char­ac­ter­is­tics which foment mur­der are all there in a per­fect storm of acqui­es­cence and complicity.

She left the scene then returned to com­mit mur­der and felo­nious wound­ing. Now every­one says this is not her char­ac­ter. It is exact­ly her char­ac­ter, this is exact­ly who she is, she had ade­quate time to cool off.
I once again call for min­i­mum sen­tences in the law which remove from the hands of judges the abil­i­ty to issue sen­tences like these. The sen­tence in this regard ought not be in the hands of any judge. The sen­tence should have been manda­to­ry 25 to life mean­ing you do not get out until you have served 25 years and have demon­strat­ed that you have adjust­ed enough to be allowed back into soci­ety. Mandatory min­i­mums of 25 years to life or life with­out the pos­si­bil­i­ty of parole is to pun­ish offend­ers and pre­vent would be offend­ers. This cav­al­cade of mur­der will con­tin­ue in this mur­der incu­ba­tor as all of the com­po­nents of mur­der growth are encour­aged in this country.

As if this was not enough the Minister of National Security Robert Montague announced that pris­on­ers will be receiv­ing con­ju­gal visits.

Minister of nation­al secu­ri­ty Robert Montague

Montague said he believes that allow­ing inmates to have sex­u­al rela­tions with their part­ners will be ben­e­fi­cial. On the mat­ter of prison reform, the nation­al secu­ri­ty min­is­ter indi­cat­ed that the Government con­tin­ues to intro­duce more ini­tia­tives to reha­bil­i­tate inmates. He not­ed that the coun­try has a recidi­vism rate of 47 per cent.

With almost half of the peo­ple con­vict­ed and jailed return­ing to prison, it seems to me that prison is not serv­ing the pur­pose for which it was intend­ed. Prisoners have cell phones, drugs, are allowed out to vis­it their girls and men, are allowed to make music and now to reg­u­lar­ize sex while they live at tax­pay­ers expense is a bridge too far.

But this is what the peo­ple vot­ed for when they vot­ed for Andrew Holness.
Don’t get me wrong if I was reg­is­tered to vote in Jamaica and was there I would have vot­ed for him as the PNP is not an option for me based on its policies.
Our coun­try is on a col­li­sion course with real­i­ty and it’s all because the lame rum head peo­ple in posi­tions of lead­er­ship ought not to have been giv­en those posi­tions of trust. Simply put the dis­tance between the lead­ers and the crim­i­nals on the streets are a mighty short hop.
That explains the absolute lack of desire on their part to leg­is­late and sup­port a pol­i­cy which seri­ous­ly says to crim­i­nals “no more”.

Oh Don’t Worry The Gangsters Will Hit Uptown Soon Enough..

Think whats hap­pen­ing in Jamaica is a joke?
Think again!
The small Island of 4411 square miles is just a hop skip and a jump from Morant Point to Negril. With new­ly built Highways it’s now only a breeze to skip from one point to the other.
I mean that not as an encour­age­ment to the dan­ger­ous and reck­less lunatics who dri­ve on the roads at break­neck speeds.
Neither do I want to make it seem like it’s okay to over­take long lines of vehi­cles going in the same direc­tion on dual car­riage­ways forc­ing traf­fic going in the oppo­site direc­tion to take eva­sive action or end up in a head on collision.

A dai­ly occurrence

Now we all know how Jamaicans are focused on whats impor­tant we nev­er miss an oppor­tu­ni­ty to be extra or to show just how dif­fer­ent we are.
In fact, we are so intent on being dif­fer­ent we sel­dom rec­og­nize that we offend the hell out of others.
And why not, if you don’t agree with us putting our phone on speak­er as we walk into the bank or office while we chat at the top of our voic­es as every­one looks on in hor­ror, then that’s your fault, who cares that you are offended?

Why should we care about any­thing any­one says, we are the peo­ple who place John in front of Crow then change it to Jankru. We are the peo­ple who make a moun­tain of diss­ing a live and beau­ti­ful Ishawna over a harm­less com­ment as we res­ur­rect an icon­ic yet long deceased Louise Bennett-Coverly, lav­ish praise on her, all because we con­clude Ishawna dissed the clothes she wore decades ago. Never mind that the idi­ot­ic argu­ments are cen­tered around ban­dana a type of fab­ric miss Lou wore as a cos­tume. Ishawna dress­es skimpi­ly, it’s a cos­tume, Miss Lou dressed in ban­dana, it was a costume.
Cultural diss, what baloney?
What stupidity!
Truly miss Lou would have won­dered whether we have lost our damn minds.

There is no won­der we always seem to place the cart before the horse. We nev­er lis­ten to rea­son because we whole­heart­ed­ly con­vince our­selves that the deviances inher­ent in our behav­iors are worth­while pros rather than cringe-wor­thy cons.

We need a fresh new start, if we do not make a turn, it won’t be long before the stu­pid­i­ty we allow to per­sist will be our ulti­mate demise.
Shielding a cow­ard­ly punk who have just gunned down three peo­ple while blam­ing the police for exter­mi­nat­ing the piece of excre­ment is not call­ing for justice.
It demon­strates beyond a shad­ow of a doubt that every jack one of you on that demon­stra­tion line is no dif­fer­ent than the scum lying dead on the sidewalk.

What I will nev­er do under any con­di­tion is to pre­tend that the ridicu­lous­ly neg­a­tive things we do are some­how praise-wor­thy things to be emu­lat­ed or be proud of.
If your son shoots some­one and is in turn shot by the police or any­one else that does not make the police or any­one else wor­thy of your ire it makes you com­plic­it if you blame the process of his demise rather than his actions which caused his demise in the first instance.

The coun­try is awash in guns, guns are every­where AK47’s M16’s and all kinds of assault weapons which were designed to exact mass casualties.
The secu­ri­ty forces are strug­gling might­i­ly to remove some of the weapons and ammu­ni­tion from the streets.
Something tells me though that the weapons and ammu­ni­tion are com­ing in a torrent.Meanwhile, the secu­ri­ty forces are tak­ing some back in a trickle.

The bond­ing togeth­er of JLPNP gang­sters in 2010 in com­mon uni­ty to defend Tivoli Gardens and Christopher Duddus Coke from extra­di­tion would have awak­ened smart peo­ple that this mon­ster must be stamped out once and for all.
Instead, the par­ty in pow­er the JLP took all kinds of actions, includ­ing using tax­pay­ers funds to pay a lob­by­ing firm to defend a com­mon thug they had cre­at­ed and nurtured.

Tivoli pan­el..
Hazel Harris, David Simmons, and Anthony Harriott

Not to be out­done, as soon as they took office instead of secur­ing the nation the PNP decid­ed to play pol­i­tics by shoring up their gar­risons while rev­el­ing in the destruc­tion of Tivoli Gardens as the quin­tes­sen­tial polit­i­cal stronghold.
But that was­n’t all, in an effort to score polit­i­cal points the PNP went ahead with a Kangaroo pan­el which decid­ed that the valiant secu­ri­ty forces who went to that war were to be chas­tised and admon­ished for risk­ing their lives to annex Tivoli to Jamaica.”
Truth be told the PNP admin­is­tra­tion which was nev­er a law and order par­ty, real­ly want­ed mem­bers of the secu­ri­ty forces jailed for doing exact­ly what they were sworn and asked to do.
Not only were the secu­ri­ty forces demo­nized by the pros­ti­tutes who made up the pan­el they also rec­om­mend­ed that a for­mal apol­o­gy is made to the community.
You sim­ply can­not make this up.

You can rest assured that if you sow the wind you will reap the whirlwind.
The com­ing togeth­er of dozens pos­si­bly hun­dreds of heav­i­ly armed thugs for a com­mon cause is now not out of the realm of possibility.
They have demon­strat­ed that mon­ey or the lure of it trumps pret­ty much all else.
In 2010 thugs loy­al to both par­ties came togeth­er, set­ting pol­i­tics and oth­er con­sid­er­a­tions aside to lend their mus­cle to Coke, all for the almighty dollar.

Mark my words this bull­shit pussy­foot­ing by this admin­is­tra­tion as it was the one before it is play­ing with fire.
You fight fire with fire sup­pres­sant. Some fires are fought with water oth­ers sand and oth­ers foam, it all depends on the accel­er­ant fuel­ing the fire.

scenes from 2010, this will be a cake­walk com­pared to whats to come.

I’m actu­al­ly smil­ing because I know as sure as night fol­lows the day that the day will come when they will rise up and take out ele­ments of the pow­er struc­ture in the coun­try and every­one will be left with mouths agape, won­der­ing how in the hell did this happen.
Don’t look at me you pre­ten­tious bas­tards want to pre­tend that these ter­ror­ists should be treat­ed as choir boys?
Deal with the consequences!

There is one solu­tion to what is hap­pen­ing, unleash the full pow­er of the law on these scum and let the chips fall where they may.
Then rebuild.

Crime: Like The Little Pig Leaders Continue To Build House Of Straw

Over the last cou­ple of weeks, I received a cou­ple of text mes­sages from my eye doc­tor’s office say­ing their records indi­cat­ed that I am due for an inspec­tion. Mind you this is in addi­tion to my Doctor insist­ing that my sweet tooth may cause me to end up with diabetes.
Oh, I almost for­got that my Dentist insists I need to come in for a deep­er clean­ing than the one I had not too long ago.

The rea­son all of these pro­fes­sion­als are call­ing me in, well that’s the way they make mon­ey. They have my infor­ma­tion because when I need to have my eyes checked I went to see an eye Doctor. When I need­ed gen­er­al check up I went to see a gen­er­al prac­ti­tion­er and of course a gen­er­al prac­ti­tion­er though immi­nent­ly qual­i­fied as a Medical Doctor would not be the best choice to give den­tal advice so I went to see a Dentist.

WHERE AMGOING WITH THIS?

It’s incred­i­ble to me that those tasked with the secu­ri­ty of an enti­ty, any enti­ty, much less a coun­try would devise crime strate­gies with­out com­pe­tent law enforce­ment exper­tise and seri­ous input.
Education: “The process of receiv­ing or giv­ing sys­tem­at­ic instruc­tion, espe­cial­ly at a school or university”.

There is a kind of ill-informed mind­set in Jamaica which gives rise to the view that a per­son with some edu­ca­tion, regard­less of the dis­ci­pline in which he/​she may have done their stud­ies, the per­son is then qual­i­fied in all things.
Using that inane log­ic makes a lot of sense to go to a Ph.D. to have your heart surgery done.[sic]

I hear the argu­ments of those who say, well maybe they can­not depend on the Jamaican police offi­cers past and present to craft crime reduc­tion strate­gies because they were the ones tasked with the job of crime reduc­tion and that has not worked out quite so well.
I’ve always said nine plus one is ten but the qual­i­ty of the 10 may be taint­ed if the nine and or the one was arrived at improperly.
The end result may seem right even though the method­ol­o­gy used to arrive at the answer is fun­da­men­tal­ly flawed.

Sure the Police in Jamaica could have done a way bet­ter job over the decades.
Nevertheless they have had to deal with hov­er­ing polit­i­cal inter­fer­ence from both active polit­i­cal par­ties and even the defunct ones.
I recall see­ing my face and a cou­ple of my col­leagues, on the cov­er of the com­mu­nist pub­li­ca­tion The Struggle years ago, to the best of my rec­ol­lec­tion the head­line blared “Terrorist cops”.

Our sin was to appro­pri­ate­ly ensure that WPJ thugs did not breach the fence at Jamaica house dur­ing one of their demon­stra­tion against the Seaga Government.
At the time they want­ed to breach the perime­ter fence to get on the grounds of the premis­es the Prime Minister Edward Seaga was in the building.
To Trevor Monroe’s cred­it, he apol­o­gized to me in front of my col­league Jerry Wallace and his sis­ter Mrs. White over lunch at his sis­ter’s restau­rant on Dunrobin Avenue some­time later.

Political inter­fer­ence is crip­pling to effec­tive law enforce­ment. It can­not be fun to be account­able to the pub­lic to keep crime under con­trol while deal­ing with sab­o­tage from your civil­ian boss­es who sys­tem­at­i­cal­ly engage in sub­ver­sion using myr­i­ad tac­tics and strategies.
As dif­fi­cult as that is polit­i­cal admin­is­tra­tions of both the JLP and the PNP have engaged in pro­mot­ing a cul­ture of crime through the insti­tu­tion­al­iza­tion of the gun and bad-man cul­ture in order to ensure their polit­i­cal survival.

Additionally, over the decades oper­a­tives of both major polit­i­cal par­ties have active­ly engaged in crim­i­nal con­duct from the theft of pub­lic funds, sys­tem­at­ic cor­rup­tive prac­tices and even issu­ing guns to the Island’s poor unem­ployed youths to kill oth­ers from the oppos­ing party.
On the oth­er hand, they have col­lud­ed with crim­i­nals, used their polit­i­cal clout to remove from police cus­tody dan­ger­ous mur­der­ers and in oth­er cas­es facil­i­tat­ed the flight from jus­tice of oth­er crim­i­nals includ­ing cop killers.

Jamaica’s Laborites and Kumreds have sys­tem­at­i­cal­ly dis­man­tled our coun­try over the years since 1962 with a few bright spots here and there in between. A coun­try’s direc­tion is set by its lead­ers not the oth­er way around.
As a con­se­quence we do not fire the team (the peo­ple), we seek new lead­er­ship by fir­ing the coach­es the(political leaders).

As the Island’s homi­cide rates con­tin­ue to gal­lop away from author­i­ties, St James the Tourism mec­ca of the west­ern part of the coun­try and the West Indies has seen a record 158 mur­ders since the start of the year and Sunday, July 24th.
There were 140 homi­cides report­ed to police for the same peri­od last year.
But the high mur­der rate is not con­fined to just the west­ern parish­es. Across the coun­try, the blood-let­ting and gen­er­al sense of law­less­ness con­tin­ue to dom­i­nate the news.

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

The police have done an admirable job recov­er­ing hun­dreds of guns and thou­sands of rounds of ammu­ni­tion in their encoun­ters with law­less elements.
Working with the Island’s Customs they have man­aged to con­fis­cate sev­er­al con­tra­band ship­ments of guns, ammu­ni­tion, bal­lis­tic vests and even grenade launch­ers which indi­cate that we are not play­ing small ball anymore.
What is mys­ti­fy­ing to this writer is the rea­son behind the seem­ing lack of inves­tiga­tive pro­bity which would lead to pros­e­cu­tion, and ulti­mate­ly the jail­ing of prin­ci­pals behind the guns and ammu­ni­tion smug­gling into the country.

Despite the suc­cess­es of the secu­ri­ty forces, I am left with a sick­en­ing feel­ing in the pit of my stom­ach that what the secu­ri­ty forces are recov­er­ing at the wharves are “gim­mies” gifts to author­i­ties, while big­ger ship­ments pass through unimpeded.
The inabil­i­ty of the police to inves­ti­gate and bring to jus­tice a sin­gle gun smug­gler should be a cause for con­cern for the coun­try and is a seri­ous indict­ment on the capa­bil­i­ties and I dare­say the integri­ty of the secu­ri­ty forces.

The bur­geon­ing mur­der num­bers and the gen­er­al law­less­ness is fright­en­ing in and of them­selves as such the Prime Minister’s new ini­tia­tive the Special zones law may seem like a panacea to some, much the same way the INDECOM act was seen by those appalled at police cor­rup­tion and yes the police haters too.
What we have seen is that in real terms INDECOM is a suc­cess only in the eyes of the head of that agency and his sup­port­ers. The ter­ri­fy­ing increase in crime as a result of that non­sen­si­cal leg shack­le of a law is cold com­fort to those whose loved ones have been tak­en from them.

The spe­cial zones law is the brain child of politi­cians, and peo­ple intent on the reten­tion of the sta­tus quo, not the police. In the mean­time, heav­i­ly armed gangs of ter­ror­ists con­tin­ue to rule the streets while the gov­ern­ment wor­ries about infring­ing on their rights.
Before a beau­ti­ful build­ing is con­struct­ed the process of ground clear­ing and foun­da­tion lay­ing is important.
Failing to lay the appro­pri­ate foun­da­tion means that like two out of three of the lit­tle pigs the Government is build­ing a house of straws and sticks.
Next time the big bad wolves come they may not be as eas­i­ly rout­ed as those in 2010 were.