Brazen St James Criminals Preying On Good, Innocent People — SSP Nesbeth

Head of the St James Police, Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP) Marlon Nesbeth, is lament­ing the avail­abil­i­ty of guns in the parish, which he says crim­i­nals fire with­out dis­cre­tion when com­mit­ting crimes. 

His com­ment fol­lows last night’s killing of four peo­ple in the parish. Speaking with The Gleaner/​Power 106 News Centre this after­noon SSP Nesbeth said crim­i­nals are get­ting bolder.

Head of the St James Police Senior Superintendent of Police Marlon Nesbeth Two peo­ple were killed about 10 o’clock last night after men over­took and opened fire at the vehi­cle they where trav­el­ling in. The men who opened fire also injured two oth­er peo­ple who SSP Nesbeth says are now in sta­ble con­di­tion in hos­pi­tal. There were two oth­er shoot­ings, one in Flanker where one man was killed and anoth­er in the Green Pond area where a woman died. SSP Nesbeth is urg­ing Jamaicans to assist the police in their inves­ti­ga­tions. http://​jamaica​glean​er​.com/​a​r​t​i​c​l​e​/​n​e​w​s​/​2​0​1​6​0​6​2​9​/​b​r​a​z​e​n​-​s​t​-​j​a​m​e​s​-​c​r​i​m​i​n​a​l​s​-​p​r​e​y​i​n​g​-​g​o​o​d​-​i​n​n​o​c​e​n​t​-​p​e​o​p​l​e​-​s​s​p​-​n​e​s​b​eth

Those Who Care Prepare And Help In Their Own Security..others Foolishly Live In Denial And Vulnerability…

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Back in the 70’s and 80’s when the issue of International terrorism came up it was largely viewed through the prism of hijackings and abductions. In many cases the victims would encounter the nerve racking ordeal of not knowing what their fate would be when hijackers commandeered airplanes and forced pilots to fly to countries friendly to them. Not all hijackings ended without loss of life but many did.

Today ter­ror­ism has tak­en on a much more dead­ly turn.
Generally if you are unlucky to be any­where around the epic cen­ter of a ter­ror attack you are like­ly to be dead or at best seri­ous­ly maimed. Those are the real­i­ties of present day ter­ror­ism. As a con­se­quence those who are tasked with pro­tect­ing the pub­lic must adopt new think­ing as they do their very best to pro­tect the inno­cent from those who would vis­it mas­sive casu­al­ty and death on non-combatants.
Most intel­li­gent pop­u­la­tions across the globe have already come to the real­iza­tion that there is a new normal .
That nor­mal is that the days of open bor­ders, and the sta­tus quo lais­sez-faire which once exist­ed may very well be a thing of the past.

Across the Globe secu­ri­ty experts are scram­bling to get ahead of the game as it relates to ter­ror­ism and in gen­er­al keep­ing pop­u­la­tion cen­ters free from mas­sive ter­ror­ist attacks . Regardless of the progress they make the game has changed when it comes to soft tar­gets. Despite the best efforts of police agen­cies the best they can hope for is to min­i­mize the poten­tial loss of life dur­ing an attack.
Terrorists only have to get it right once,police and intel­li­gence agen­cies have to be right a hun­dred per­cent of the time . On that basis we must rec­og­nize that we prob­a­bly will not be going back to the days when some indi­vid­ual guar­an­tees were in place.

There is a gen­er­al con­sen­sus it seem these days that all dis­putes must be set­tled with dead and man­gled corpses lit­ter­ing land­scapes. In this no one has clean hands, what we hear are jus­ti­fi­ca­tions for why peo­ple who kill do so, each believ­ing in the jus­ti­fi­ca­tion of their actions.
Whether the killings are done using high tech drones or through crude explo­sive devices the pol­i­tics of jus­ti­fi­ca­tion is an age old one which will not be set­tled any­time soon. What emanates from their ash­es are young minds cal­loused and seared in hatred and deter­mi­na­tion to exact death and destruc­tion on those to whom they are opposed.
Whether it be in the slums of Gaza the west bank, or cities across Europe , the man­gled ghost-like ruins of what was once Syria , Libya , or whether it is New York City, Orlando , or the count­less oth­er instances across the globe vio­lence is the way peo­ple iron out their differences.

We can argue all we want that this will not hap­pen where we are, guess what It won’t hap­pen until it actu­al­ly does. Yesterdays attack in Istanbul Turkey hap­pened despite incred­i­ble under­stand­ing and prepa­ra­tion by Turkish offi­cials which includ­ed check­points away from the inside of ter­mi­nal build­ings. Nevertheless the death and destruc­tion was mas­sive. Single shoot­ers with the right kind of weapon­ry and ammu­ni­tion has demon­strat­ed the extent of the death and destruc­tion they can inflict in the week­ly shoot­ings across America the lat­est being the Orlando night club massacre.

With infor­ma­tion eas­i­ly and read­i­ly avail­able across the web peo­ple are able to find com­mon cause with oth­ers across vast expans­es of oceans . They are able to com­mu­ni­cate, share ideas and in the process radicalize.
Mass killings or the quest to engage in killing as many peo­ple as pos­si­ble as a polit­i­cal state­ment seem to be on the rise. I do not want to blame any one reli­gious group as some do in the west with­out seek­ing to see things through the prism with which peo­ple in oth­er parts of the world do.

What we can­not ignore are the loom­ing clouds of rad­i­cal Islam and what it means for safe­ty of peo­ple in places once thought of as secure havens . Conversely many in the Middle East argue that they are mere­ly respond­ing to the aggres­sion of west­ern pow­ers and the state of Israel . For many in that part of the world they wit­nessed west­ern and Israeli bombs rain down on their cities and towns dec­i­mat­ing their lives and families.
The debate about that equiv­a­lence is a legit­i­mate one to which con­sen­sus will not come any­time soon.

Back here in the United States many of the young black men who are incar­cer­at­ed align them­selves with Islam . Just yes­ter­day a young man who was recent­ly incar­cer­at­ed revealed to me that in prison align­ing with a cause is a means of sur­vival . He argues some of his con­tem­po­raries do not want to be aligned with the Bloods or the Crips or any of the oth­er crim­i­nal gangs on the inside, so they self iden­ti­fy as Muslims.
Many of the young men of col­or who find them­selves behind bars are from oth­er places includ­ing the Caribbean. After doing their time these men are gen­er­al­ly deport­ed back to their coun­try of ori­gin with a rad­i­cal new world view and anger toward the United States or whichev­er coun­try they got deport­ed from.

In Trinidad there is an active Muslim com­mu­ni­ty , frac­tions of which has­n’t shied away from engag­ing in vio­lence against the state. On the Island of Jamaica there is an ever increas­ing Muslim pop­u­la­tion , parts of which came into exis­tence through depor­ta­tions as I allud­ed to. To date there has not been any real evi­dence that this com­mu­ni­ty has engaged in any acts of ter­ror­ism against the state or any oth­er inter­ests as for that mat­ter . At the same time the Island is present­ly gripped in the ten­ta­cles of an exis­ten­tial fight against home grown crim­i­nals many of whom are using ter­ror­ist meth­ods to make their point.
Incredibly the pop­u­la­tion spends its time and resources tear­ing down the insti­tu­tions which are try­ing their best to pro­vide some sem­blance of security.
Major coun­tries like the United States Britain France and oth­ers has the resources to strength­en secu­ri­ty around their facil­i­ties but what hap­pen to the inno­cent pub­lic with­in poor­er nations in which these assets are stationed?
Many small­er nations through­out Europe and even poor coun­tries across Africa has suf­fered untold loss of life and incred­i­ble dam­age and destruc­tion to their infra­struc­ture as a result of terrorism.
Even with lim­it­ed resources they are being forced to con­tend with the emerg­ing real­i­ties of a chang­ing world. Those coun­tries under­stand that they have to band togeth­er with the agen­cies try­ing to pro­tect them and as some say if you see some­thing say something.

As the stakes becomes high­er those who sur­vive will be those who aid in their own secu­ri­ty. Whether it is a man walk­ing into a bank in Guyana attempt­ing to rob the bank claim­ing ISIL bona fides ‚every instance is a poten­tial wake up call .
As it is on the Serengeti the week who decide to go it alone despite the rel­a­tive secu­ri­ty of the herd will be vic­tim­ized . Whether ter­ror­ism comes through reli­gion or sim­ply because we allow it to hap­pen through home grown punks , ter­ror is ter­ror. Those who would take lives will con­tin­ue to do so unless they are stopped .

Terrence Williams Not About Investigating Dirty Cops But About Self Promotion, Grandstanding, And Smear.…

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INDECOM came into existence because of the bad behavior of some police officers that cannot be ignored or denied.Since it’s creation under the Bruce Golding Administration however this writer has consistently made the point that it was a necessary law , poorly thought out and implemented in a knee-jerk fashion with devastating consequences so far for law abiding Jamaicans.

I warned that INDECOM would increase crime under­stand­ing Jamaican cul­ture of course, crime increased as I pre­dict­ed. I said it would embold­en crim­i­nals, it has. I said it would do pre­cious lit­tle to root out crim­i­nal cops, it hasn’t..
Simply put, the resources placed into the cre­ation and oper­a­tion of INDECOM should have been placed into improv­ing the capa­bil­i­ties of the police depart­ment, pay­ing offi­cers bet­ter, hav­ing bet­ter super­vi­sion and account­abil­i­ty , bet­ter back­ground checks, bet­ter train­ing and a COMPSTAT type polic­ing model.
Instead the Golding Administration allowed Elitist Jamaicans like the Bar Association the group of crim­i­nal lawyers who make a liv­ing from crime, the pha­lanx of human rights lob­by groups which gained rel­e­vance as a func­tion of the Island’s inor­di­nate­ly high mur­der rate and oth­ers who ben­e­fit from crime to dic­tate the agenda..

Williams who came to the job after been reject­ed in his bid to get the job as Director of pub­lic pros­e­cu­tion, once served as a Judge in a neigh­bor­ing Island. Since then he has picked fights with the DPP Paula Llewelyn , the per­son who got the job he craved , Greg Christie the for­mer Contractor General , and the police high Command . It now appears that the rea­son Williams want­ed the job of DPP was to per­se­cute Police offi­cers, not to go after crim­i­nals of all stripes.
Since then Terrence Williams’ mis­sion may be best char­ac­ter­ized as a cru­sade against the police , while stat­ing he has no vendet­ta against the police.
If you have to say you have no vendet­ta , you have a vendet­ta . This medi­um is once again call­ing for the removal of Terrence Williams as head of INDECOM.
His tenure has been acri­mo­nious, undu­ly con­fronta­tion­al and in effect by his own words the vast major­i­ty of inves­ti­ga­tions his agency has under­tak­en has result­ed in no evi­dence of impro­pri­ety against police officers.

Terrence Williams (right) commissioner of the Independent Commission of Investigations (INDECOM), Hamish Campbell, (centre) IDECOM's assistant commissioner and Dave Lewis, INDECOM's director of complaints central region at a Gleaner Editors' Forum last Friday. (Source: jamaicagleaner.com)
Terrence Williams (right) com­mis­sion­er of the Independent Commission of Investigations (INDECOM), Hamish Campbell, (cen­tre) IDECOM’s assis­tant com­mis­sion­er and Dave Lewis, INDECOM’s .

Nevertheless despite those protes­ta­tions Williams con­tin­ue to use the agency as a posi­tion to grand­stand and make friv­o­lous argu­ments not borne out by facts . Terrence Williams does not allow the truth to get in the way of his grand­stand­ing and pos­tur­ing even as crime goes through the roof as a result of the chill­ing dem­a­goguery and witch-hunt he has waged on the abil­i­ty of police to do their jobs.
Jamaica is now a place many view as a par­adise for crim­i­nals , this guy must go.

Jamaicans Bury Their Heads As A Strategy For Dealing With Crime.….

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It’s not the first time that a coun­try has issued a trav­el advi­so­ry against anoth­er and it cer­tain­ly won’t be the last . So it comes as no sur­prise that Canada issued a trav­el advi­so­ry to it’s cit­i­zens wish­ing to vis­it Jamaica.
The sil­ly reac­tion of many Jamaicans to this rou­tine advi­so­ry by Canada to the Island’s crime prob­lem should come as no sur­prise either.
trav­el warn­ing, trav­el alert, or trav­el advi­so­ry is an offi­cial warn­ing state­ment issued by a gov­ern­ment agency to pro­vide infor­ma­tion about the rel­a­tive safe­ty of trav­el­ling to or vis­it­ing one or more spe­cif­ic for­eign coun­tries or destinations.

In oth­er words it is the duty of Governments to warn their nation­als trav­el­ing to oth­er coun­tries of the risks and pos­si­ble dan­gers they may encounter and and how to nav­i­gate those risks. A trav­el advi­so­ry is com­plete­ly dif­fer­ent than a trav­el ban, which ulti­mate­ly pre­vents peo­ple from trav­el­ling to cer­tain coun­tries for what­ev­er reason.
Canada recent­ly issued a trav­el advi­so­ry to it’s cit­i­zens trav­el­ling to Jamaica, the advi­so­ry not the first ‚warned Canadians how to pro­tect them­selves while on the Island. In 2007 Canada issued a sim­i­lar advi­so­ry to its cit­i­zens lead­ing up to the August 27th gen­er­al elec­tions on the Island.
The advi­so­ry warned that “Canadians in Jamaica should main­tain a high lev­el of per­son­al secu­ri­ty aware­ness,” . “Canadians should avoid demon­stra­tions at all times and not attempt to pass through road­blocks, should they occur,”>
The advi­so­ry went on to state that although the two pre­vi­ous nation­al elec­tions were rel­a­tive­ly peace­ful , elec­tions in the 1980’s were vio­lent affairs.
Additionally it added that Jamaican offi­cials them­selves had advised that there is poten­tial for vio­lence and dis­tur­bances dur­ing that year’s elections.

It is there­fore a bit curi­ous that Jamaicans would have a prob­lem with Canada tak­ing steps to warn it’s nation­als of the risks inher­ent in trav­el­ling to Jamaica or any oth­er place for that mat­ter , par­tic­u­lar­ly when they just recent­ly lost one of their cit­i­zens and the United States recent­ly lost two aid work­ers just weeks apart to vio­lent crime.
THIS IS IT
There is no nation­wide advi­so­ry in effect for Jamaica. However, you should exer­cise a high degree of cau­tion due to the high lev­el of vio­lent crime. https://​trav​el​.gc​.ca/​d​e​s​t​i​n​a​t​i​o​n​s​/​j​a​m​a​ica.

A trav­el advi­so­ry is not a per­son­al vendet­ta which larg­er nations have against their much poor­er weak­er neigh­bors. They are not Capitalistic tools used to pun­ish small­er coun­tries which does not do larg­er nation’s bid­ding (though they can be).
Canada does not have a sin­gu­lar focus on Jamaica as some seem to believe, as such Jamaicans can look at the link pro­vid­ed in the pre­vi­ous para­graph, that it’s noth­ing personal .
Canada has an A‑Z trav­el advi­so­ry on lit­er­al­ly all nations on Earth . Relax Jamaicans the world is not out to get you.
In fact the Jamaican Government would be derelict in it’s duty to Jamaicans look­ing to trav­el if it does not have it’s own trav­el advi­so­ry which informs Jamaicans on how to be safe while trav­el­ing abroad.
Jamaica is absolute­ly free to include Canada and all oth­er coun­tries which have issues which should be raised a s a mat­ter of precaution.

There is a con­found­ing prac­tice among some Jamaicans to cir­cle the wag­ons and become defen­sive when­ev­er any­one point to the excep­tion­al­ly high crime rate on the Island .Cursing and berat­ing even Jamaicans who are uncom­fort­able with crime. I see this issue as a two-fold issue really.(1) Jamaicans react neg­a­tive­ly because they are trau­ma­tized sig­nif­i­cant­ly and would rather bury their heads and pre­tend it does not exist. Or (2) They are involved some­how in what’s going on .
To a large extent , there is evi­dence that many Jamaicans in the dias­po­ra are active­ly fuel­ing crime by send­ing back high-pow­ered weapons to the Island.
When you pre­tend that those who point out the prob­lem are the prob­lem you miss the oppor­tu­ni­ty to fix the prob­lem. When you cir­cle the wag­ons you end up with a cir­cu­lar fir­ing squad ‚before long you end up killing yourselves.

The Island’s crime prob­lem can­not be hid­den in the age of cell phones , the inter­net and the rapid dis­sem­i­na­tion of infor­ma­tion and images made pos­si­ble by a sin­gle click. There is no pri­va­cy , no hid­ing place , we live in an increas­ing­ly inter­con­nect­ed world . Pretending that trav­el advi­sories are tools designed to destroy Jamaica is the opti­mum insan­i­ty . Nationalistic pride is cool and com­mend­able but it will not fix a nation in a seri­ous state of denial about the expo­nen­tial­ly high rate of mur­der and oth­er seri­ous felonies.
It is absolute­ly mind bog­gling to see the idi­ot­ic attempts among many Jamaicans to ratio­nal­ize and device met­rics which seeks to prove that Jamaica’s crime rate is just fine. It caus­es me to won­der whether they are trau­ma­tized or sim­ply a part of the problem?

When you bury your head in the sand you expose your a** that is nev­er a good strategy.

Freddie Gray Verdict: Baltimore Officer Who Drove Van Not Guilty On All Charges…

Gray, who was 25, suf­fered a dev­as­tat­ing spinal injury and died in April 2015, about a week after he was arrest­ed and placed into a pris­on­er van that Goodson was driving.
Of the six offi­cers arrest­ed in the case, Goodson faced the most seri­ous charges. The sec­ond-degree depraved heart mur­der is a charge unique to a few states that implies that the defen­dant acts with extreme indif­fer­ence with regard to the human con­se­quences and per­ils of their actions.
The ver­dict is anoth­er set­back for State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby, who dra­mat­i­cal­ly announced the charges against the six offi­cer last year from the broad steps of the down­town War Memorial.

The ‘rough ride’

Prosecutors alleged that after Gray was arrest­ed on a weapons charge, Goodson took him on a “rough ride” in a pris­on­er van — a puni­tive mea­sure police used against unruly subjects.
Freddie Gray
They said Goodson drove so rad­i­cal­ly that he blew through a stop sign and veered into anoth­er lane of traf­fic because of the speed he was trav­el­ing, which pros­e­cu­tors said would have tossed Gray around in the van. This is the point in the ride that pros­e­cu­tors think Gray sus­tained his fatal spinal injury.
The pros­e­cu­tion argued that Goodson failed on two accounts: fail­ing to put a seat belt on Gray when he was in the back of the van and neglect­ing to pro­vide Gray with prop­er med­ical assis­tance after Gray indi­cat­ed that he want­ed to go to the hospital.
Goodson was also charged with sec­ond-degree assault, mis­con­duct in office, invol­un­tary manslaugh­ter, manslaugh­ter by vehi­cles (gross neg­li­gence), manslaugh­ter by vehi­cle (crim­i­nal neg­li­gence) and reck­less endangerment.

Goodson’s defense

Defense attor­neys for Goodson argued that there is no evi­dence of that rough ride and that Gray’s injuries were caused in part by his own agi­ta­tion and thrash­ing around in the van.
Officer: Van driver was responsible for Freddie Gray
Officer: Van dri­ver was respon­si­ble for Freddie Gray 01:45
They said Gray was com­bat­ive and unco­op­er­a­tive and that Goodson used his judg­ment to not put a seat belt on Gray because he felt it was­n’t safe.
“We cer­tain­ly don’t want to speak poor­ly about the deceased, but Mr. Gray cre­at­ed the high-degree of risk,” defense attor­ney Matthew Fraling said dur­ing the bench trial.
The defense added that, although he asked to go to the hos­pi­tal, Gray nev­er showed symp­toms that would have called for imme­di­ate med­ical atten­tion, such as bleed­ing, bruis­ing or bro­ken limbs.
Over the sev­en-day tes­ti­mo­ny, the state called 21 wit­ness­es; the defense called on nine. Goodson did­n’t testify.

Plug This Loophole Now.…

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There are some things which the police can do and there are others the Government can do . Of course there are things which the Government and the police can do better together . What is required though is leadership.

According to the Jamaica Observer the Westmoreland police are now in the cus­tody of over 1,000 motor­cy­cles, nei­ther licensed nor insured, more than 600 of which have been removed from the streets since the start of this year.
Additionally over 200 oth­er vehi­cles, includ­ing cars and trucks, have been seized this year, with over 300 indi­vid­u­als charged for breach­es of the Road Traffic Act over the period.
And 30.000 tick­ets were hand­ed out to errant motorists. Clearly this has not worked.

Commanding offi­cer for the Parish Deputy Superintendent David White report­ed that oper­a­tors of the motor­cy­cles, a num­ber of whom are play­ers in the lot­to scam, pur­chase oth­er bikes instead of tak­ing the nec­es­sary steps to repos­sess those con­fis­cat­ed by the police. “A lot of scam­ming is involved, so they can afford to pur­chase more. If we seize one, they do not come back for it, they just pur­chase a new one,” DSP Whyte argued. “They have easy access to pur­chas­ing them because it doesn’t require much to buy them; they [bik­ers] just go and pur­chase them. Quite a num­ber of them don’t even have a driver’s licence to dri­ve the bikes. A num­ber of them can­not read or write.”

This fol­lowed close­ly on the heels of sim­i­lar com­ments recent­ly by com­mand­ing offi­cer for Saint Ann Superintendent Wayne Cameron that many dri­vers can­not read or write.

Dsp White..
Dsp White..

For decades it has been an open secret that the Government Agency which grants dri­vers licences is a cesspool of cor­rup­tion and graft. Despite this there has been zero Investigations toward root­ing out the cor­rup­tion there. Literally every Jamaican knows that their abil­i­ty to be a safe dri­ver will not get them a dri­ver’s licence, a fat wal­let will.
As the police bemoan this car­nage on the road the hier­ar­chy of the force must take full respon­si­bil­i­ty for it’s gross abdi­ca­tion of it’s respon­si­bil­i­ty to root out crime using sim­ple inves­tiga­tive tech­niques. This nev­er required much more than a sim­ple audio record­ing device and the will to pros­e­cute crim­i­nal examiners.

Superintendent White made one poignant obser­va­tion how­ev­er ‚“They have easy access to pur­chas­ing them [bikes]because it doesn’t require much to buy them.”. ..
Clearly the tick­et­ing blitz is not work­ing ‚con­fis­cat­ing the motor­cy­cles is not work­ing because the offend­ers are flush with money .
This is where the Government must plug this loop­hole real quick , it’s not rock­et science .

Police officer shows motorcycles to the media . Observer photo...
Police offi­cer shows motor­cy­cles to the media .
Observer pho­to…

It does not require much think­ing to draft leg­is­la­tion mak­ing it impos­si­ble to pur­chase a motor vehi­cle of any kind with­out a valid dri­vers licence . Also include seri­ous penal­ty for any­one who pur­chase a vehi­cle of any kind for some­one who does not have a valid dri­vers licence. Also attach seri­ous puni­tive sanc­tion for any­one who pur­chas­es a motor vehi­cle for oth­ers who engage in crim­i­nal con­duct. Essentially tying togeth­er all of the oper­at­ing parts as one crim­i­nal empire as the American Rico statute does.
If the coun­try is seri­ous about crime it must act now on this mat­ter in the way outlined .
Jamaican politi­cians in the par­lia­ment has tra­di­tion­al­ly left the police on it’s own to do an impos­si­ble task . Here is an oppor­tu­ni­ty for this admin­is­tra­tion to plug this loop­hole now.
The politi­cians of both polit­i­cal par­ties can­not con­tin­ue to sit on their hands and expect crime to go away with­out doing what they are elect­ed to do, which is to secure the nation.

Cops In The Dark…

ROCK, Trelawny — Members of the Jamaica Constabulary Force Marine Division who are sta­tioned at Glistening Waters mari­na in Trelawny are com­plain­ing bit­ter­ly about the lack of elec­tric­i­ty at the police post, a sit­u­a­tion they say has exist­ed for almost two years now.

One of the dis­grun­tled cops, who spoke to the Jamaica Observer West on con­di­tion of anonymi­ty, claimed that vis­i­bil­i­ty at the facil­i­ty is zero after oper­a­tors of the mari­na where they are sta­tioned turn their lights off after clos­ing at nights. “Over two years now there is no elec­tric­i­ty. We can’t do any effec­tive polic­ing in the dark. During the course of the night after the oper­a­tions (at the mari­na) close off, di peo­ple them turn off dem light on the com­pound. And that leave the whole place in dark­ness,” the cop fumed. According to the police source, when­ev­er they are required to log reports at night, they do so with the assis­tance of the light from their cel­lu­lar phones.

The police also claimed that work­ing in the dark pos­es a secu­ri­ty threat.“ The offi­cers find it threat­en­ing because if any­body come up you can’t see them. Sometimes your own col­leagues use the bath­room and are return­ing but you can’t make them out in the dark,” the cop stat­ed. In addi­tion to not hav­ing light in the night time, the cops also have to endure heat despite there being an air con­di­tion­ing unit. The marine cop said the morale of the 16-mem­ber team is very low as a result. When the Observer West con­tact­ed act­ing per­ma­nent sec­re­tary in the min­istry Karen Clarke Davis on the issue yes­ter­day, she said she was will­ing to look into the sit­u­a­tion at the Trelawny police post, but only after the cops report the issue to their supe­ri­ors. “If you have unsat­is­fac­to­ry work­ing con­di­tions the onus is on you to bring it to your supe­ri­ors. There is a process, “ Clarke Davis argued. “I will not inter­vene if they have not tak­en all the steps to bring to the atten­tion of the author­i­ties their plight and con­di­tion. So I am will­ing to help, but you have got to show me what you have done,” she continued.

The Observer West was informed that at least one high-rank­ing mem­ber of the marine divi­sion, who recent­ly vis­it­ed the post, is ful­ly aware of the sit­u­a­tion, but our police source expressed hes­i­ta­tion to report the con­di­tions, because of what the source described as pos­si­ble vic­tim­i­sa­tion from their supe­ri­ors. Recently, Minister of National Security Robert Montague address­ing town­hall meet­ings he host­ed in west­ern Jamaica, bemoaned poor work­ing con­di­tions of some mem­bers of the force. During a vis­it to the bar­racks at one of the sta­tions he toured, the secu­ri­ty min­is­ter, who said he wouldn’t sleep there, ordered the per­ma­nent sec­re­tary to pur­chase mat­tress­es for the facility.
Read more here : http://​www​.jamaicaob​serv​er​.com/​w​e​s​t​e​r​n​n​e​w​s​/​C​o​p​s​-​i​n​-​t​h​e​-​d​a​r​k​_​6​4​764

LeBron James Staying In Cleveland, Says He Doesn’t Have Plans To Leave Cleveland ‘at This Point’

LeBron James is stay­ing in Cleveland.

Just before he got on a float for the Cavaliers’ parade through down­town Cleveland, James told reporters that he has “no plans to go nowhere at this point.”

At. This. Point.

James said that he loves being in Cleveland — his sec­ond tour in the city — and will defend the franchise’s first NBA cham­pi­onship next season.

I love it here. I love being here. I love my team­mates,” James told cleve​land​.com. “Obviously my agent will take care of all the logis­ti­cal things but, I’m hap­py. I’ve got no plans to go nowhere at this point.”

Committing to Cleveland doesn’t mean that James won’t opt-out of his con­tract, of course. He has a one-year, $24 mil­lion option for next sea­son but can make north of $30 mil­lion if he opts out.
http://www.nydailynews.com/sports/basketball/lebron-james-coming-back-cavaliers-article‑1.2683633

Peter May Be Overplaying His Hand As He Edges For Another Leadership Challenge.….

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It’s lit­er­al­ly com­e­dy hour at the Apollo lis­ten­ing to the com­ments of Dr Peter Phillips the for­mer finance Minister of the People’s National Party Administration recent­ly defeat­ed at the polls.
Dr Phillips has been tout­ed as the heir-appar­ent of the PNP ‚des­tined to suc­ceed par­ty leader and for­mer Prime Minister Portia Simpson Miller.
To date despite those rum­blings the for­mer Prime Minister has not indi­cat­ed whether she is quite ready to exit the polit­i­cal stage and the par­ty leadership.

Phillips who pre­vi­ous­ly chal­lenged Miller for lead­er­ship of the par­ty and lost seem to have gone rogue even before the nation­al elec­tions of February 25th 2016. In what many char­ac­ter­ized as a kamikaze type fix­a­tion on the leader of the oppo­si­tion’s house , Phillips con­tin­ued his attacks which some say may have cost his par­ty the elections.
Despite vot­ers con­cern with cor­rup­tion in Government and the pub­lic sec­tor, many peo­ple argue that Holness’ man­sion could not have come from siphon­ing off pub­lic funds because Andrew Holness had no access to pub­lic funds.

Voters who opined on social media, pri­vate blogs and the Jamaican media stat­ed clear­ly they thought Peter Phillips fix­a­tion on the leader of the Opposition’s house amount­ed to plain old Jamaican “bad mind”.
I believe Peter is as sil­ly as a Fox , but I will get back to that.
Despite Holness mak­ing full dis­clo­sure about how he and his wife Juliet,a real estate devel­op­er are able to afford their home Phillips has moved the goal post as this writer pre­dict­ed he would.
Peter Phillips now insist that Holness now the Prime Minister ‚table his dis­clo­sure in the par­lia­ment despite (1) there being no law which forces him to do so,(2) he has made his dis­clo­sure to three sep­a­rate media houses,(3) nei­ther the leader of the opposition,Peter Phillips him­self , nor any of the oppo­si­tion mem­bers have done so except Julian Robinson.

Opposition Leader Portia Simpson Miller and Dr Peter Phillips, opposition spokesman on finance, address members of the media during a press conference hosted by the People’s National Party at its Old Hope Road, St Andrew headquarters yesterday.
Opposition Leader Portia Simpson Miller and Dr Peter Phillips, oppo­si­tion spokesman on finance, address mem­bers of the media dur­ing a press con­fer­ence host­ed by the People’s National Party at its Old Hope Road, St Andrew :file photo.

In what appears to be a seem­ing­ly irra­tional and dis­joint­ed set of state­ments made by Phillips , many are argu­ing that the for­mer finance min­is­ter may be los­ing it, but is he?
Speaking to Party loy­al­ists in Saint James Phillips jok­ing­ly said “Many of us are upset, because it’s three months gone and we are not back in office yet,” .
Okay so this is not the worst thing he could have said to a room­ful of par­ty hacks but his com­ment was part of a larg­er address which was pure­ly delusional .

The fact of the mat­ter, as men­tioned ear­li­er, is that we are see­ing an Administration in office now that is demon­strat­ing day after day, to put it in reg­u­lar lan­guage, demon­strat­ing say them nuh ready,” “We have the slimmest mar­gin in the Parliament; that has ever exist­ed, and the truth is that the [thing] we must [do] now is to ensure that the People’s National Party pre­pares itself to resume the task of lead­ing Jamaica for­ward,

No sign of that PhD in this statement.
Slimmest mar­gin in Parliament yes, but no men­tion that in the 63 seat leg­is­la­ture and about 21 gar­ri­son seats nev­er in con­tention 15 – 6 in favor of his par­ty , the PNP lost 11 of the 42 seats which were in play. Of the so-called mar­gin­al seats (seats not char­ac­ter­ized as gar­risons) 42 , the JLP gained 11 with­out los­ing a sin­gle seat.
In a leg­is­la­ture of that size that is a mas­sive repu­di­a­tion of PNP policies .
That is what I find per­son­al­ly curi­ous about Phillips con­tin­ued fix­a­tion on the fan­ta­sy cam­paign against Holness and what he per­ceived to be only a mar­gin­al loss for his party.
Which leads me to believe Peter Phillips is not doing so out of conviction.

It was not so long ago that Peter Phillips was brand­ed a trai­tor by many in his par­ty, yet Phillips har­bor real aspi­ra­tions of becom­ing Prime Minister.
It was at the Manatt Commission of Enquiry in 2004 that it came to light that Phillips then the min­is­ter of nation­al secu­ri­ty signed two top secret mem­o­ran­dum of under­stand­ing relat­ing to inves­ti­ga­tion of drug traf­fick­ing and organ­ised crime, with­out inform­ing the then prime min­is­ter and Cabinet. The MOUs were between Jamaica, the United States and the United Kingdom.
At the time Phillips told the com­mis­sion that Cabinet was not an appro­pri­ate body with which the infor­ma­tion should be shared.
I can agree that not every per­son in a gov­ern­ment must know every­thing .Many Governments oper­ate that way but it can­not escape com­mon sense that before Peter Phillips signed those Memorandums he did not dis­cuss them or the impli­ca­tions with his boss and Prime Minister Portia Simpson Miller .
Neither did he reveal his actions to her after he did.

The Prime Minister is Minister of defense . If Phillips thought that the then prime min­is­ter could not be trust­ed with nation­al secu­ri­ty secrets whats does it say about the then Prime Minister?
Phillips was vil­i­fied by many in the PNP and there were rum­blings that his safe­ty may have been in ques­tion. Phillips weath­ered that storm and lat­er chal­lenged the ever pop­u­lar Simpson Miller for lead­er­ship of the par­ty after her loss to Bruce Golding but Miller prevailed.
Many con­tend that del­e­gates had not for­got­ten what Phillips had done.

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Which brings me to my ear­li­er com­ment that Peter Phillips may be as sil­ly as a fox . Is Peter Phillips just yap­ping , hop­ing to keep his name in the media glare before anoth­er lead­er­ship chal­lenge ? Surely Phillips knows that Simpson Miller has made some dubi­ous his­to­ry of her own despite her incred­i­ble rise with­ing the PNP.
Despite her per­son­al suc­cess­es , she has lost two nation­al elec­tions in less than five years. That is not exact­ly a ring­ing endorse­ment of her skills as a force for good in the coun­try despite her con­tin­ued popularity.

Peter Phillips knows this is his moment if ever he is to become prime min­is­ter. The par­ty leader is silent why should he be? Phillips is bank­ing on keep­ing his name out front as he has been doing . He may have adopt­ed the cal­cu­lus that all pub­lic­i­ty (good or bad) is good pub­lic­i­ty but is he correct?
What he may be miss­ing in his quest for lead­er­ship of the par­ty and his ambi­tion of becom­ing prime min­is­ter is that the issue he has cham­pi­oned as his cause célèbre may have already cost his par­ty one defeat.
Peter Phillips must then decide whether it is worth win­ning a bat­tle while los­ing the war .
Only time will tell.

In Search Of Solutions To Jamaica’s Crippling Crime Problem.…

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With crime and lawlessness amok in Jamaica authorities of the four month old Labor party administration are contemplating a raft of issues which they hope will lead to a better system of justice delivery, less overcrowding in the Island’s prisons and a reduction in crime.

Jamaica’s Minister of National Security has no expe­ri­ence in secu­ri­ty , he is not a lawyer and he has nev­er held any law-enforce­ment or secu­ri­ty port­fo­lios to my knowl­edge but he does seem to have a grasp at least of the things which can be done bet­ter with­ing his broad portfolio.
Jamaica’s decrepit non-func­tion­ing jus­tice sys­tem did not hap­pen overnight , nei­ther will it be fixed overnight. Respect for law-enforce­ment and the rule of law must be part of any suc­cess­ful coun­try’s culture.
Disrespect for law-enforce­ment and the rule of law is a humon­gous part of Jamaican cul­ture. When we con­sid­er how the Island decayed to the extent even our Caribbean neigh­bors do not want our nation­als on their shores look no fur­ther than at indi­vid­ual Jamaicans actions and utterances.

Robert Montague
Robert Montague

Montague has pro­posed a num­ber of pol­i­cy ini­tia­tives which if adopt­ed could change the tra­jec­to­ry of crime. Nevertheless it will require a mon­u­men­tal and par­a­digm shift in the thought process­es of the peo­ple . Sadly I do not see that happening .
The min­is­ter will find his task tan­ta­mount to rolling a bar­rel up a steep hill while oth­ers are push­ing the bar­rel the oth­er way.
Whether it is as he sug­gest (1) arm­ing the cit­i­zen­ry , (2) mak­ing pris­on­ers sen­tenced to hard labor work for their keeps ‚Or (3) allow­ing low risk offend­ers to go home with ankle bracelets ‚or any of his oth­er rec­om­men­da­tions it shows that the min­is­ter is thinking.

Speaking to one media house on the Island Montague said :
“Not all Jamaicans will get it, but they must have a fair oppor­tu­ni­ty to apply for it and the sys­tem must come down on the side of the cit­i­zen. It is born out of a very, very sim­ple con­cept: when a crim­i­nal is break­ing through your win­dow, he must give pause and won­der how many guns are inside that house. Is it one or is it five? What are my chances if I go in and there is five? He must give pause and won­der. Our crim­i­nals have it too easy and decent law-abid­ing cit­i­zens should be giv­en a fair oppor­tu­ni­ty against the crim­i­nal,” .

Some of the Ministers sug­ges­tions are work­able and oth­ers not so much .Even though I believe ordi­nary cit­i­zens should not be at the mer­cy of crim­i­nals, arm­ing the pop­u­la­tion more than they are already armed can­not be the answer. For a small nation Jamaica already has way too many peo­ple affil­i­at­ed with gangs, and oth­er crim­i­nal enti­ties walk­ing around with reg­is­tered firearms.
When you want to put out a fire you don’t pour gaso­line on it.

Percival James Patterson former PM presided over years of corruption and failed leadership
Percival James Patterson for­mer PM presided over
years of cor­rup­tion and failed leadership

The Island was allowed to set­tle into the great­est peri­od of rot and deca­dence dur­ing the tenure of Percival James Patterson the man who sin­gle-hand­ed­ly wrecked Jamaica.

Patterson destroyed both the econ­o­my and the police force .He placed detec­tives back in uni­form effec­tive­ly destroy­ing the inves­tiga­tive arm of the force . Patterson allowed crime to grow out of con­trol by not pro­vid­ing mon­ey to train a sin­gle detec­tive for almost a decade. Even if a leader/​s set out to will­ful­ly destroy a coun­try they could hard­ly have been more suc­cess­ful than Patterson has been.
Under Patterson the very nature of the peo­ple changed to any­thing goes , “any ting a any ting “. Patterson’s claim to fame “every man fi dri­ve car an hav nuff gyal”. Such has been the per­mis­sive and encour­ag­ing nature of the Island’s longest serv­ing Prime Minister a colos­sal fail­ure and a blight on the beau­ti­ful nation.

Portia Simpson Miller the former Prime Minister ...
Portia Simpson Miller the for­mer Prime Minister …

The Island we once knew as Jamaica took a fate­ful down­ward turn under Percival Patterson who should have been impeached and sen­tenced to prison for dere­lic­tion of duty and gross negligence.
Oh that only hap­pen in coun­tries which respect the rule of law.

As if that was not enough Patterson encour­aged a deca­dence and law­less­ness nev­er before seen in Jamaica.
Turning Jamaica around will require a lot of heavy lift­ing , the hard­est lift in my esti­ma­tion is the mind­set of the pop­u­la­tion toward the rule of law. Juxtapose that with the litany of groups who make a liv­ing from crime and the task becomes almost impossible .
Yet I sup­port any­thing which will bring san­i­ty to this cesspool of insanity.

Cavaliers Defeat Warriors In Game 7 Of NBA Finals To Win First Championship

LeBron James cra­dled the shiny gold tro­phy and strug­gled to sum up what might be his sweet­est cham­pi­onship yet, the one he is so proud­ly bring­ing home to his native north­east Ohio just as he promised to do when he returned to the Cavaliers two sum­mers ago.

James and his relent­less, nev­er-count-them-out Cavs pulled off an improb­a­ble NBA Finals come­back, and Cleveland is title town again at long last.

Unfazed by the crit­i­cism and chat­ter all series, James deliv­ered on a vow to his home state and brought the Cavs back as they became the first team to ral­ly from a 3 – 1 finals deficit, beat­ing the defend­ing cham­pi­on Golden State Warriors 93 – 89 on Sunday night to end a 52-year major sports cham­pi­onship drought in Cleveland.

I’m hap­py to be a part of his­to­ry,” James said, then added, “I’m home. I’m home. … I’m at a loss for words. This is unbelievable.”

In a testy series of blowouts — and a few blowups — the win­ner-take-all Game 7 pro­vid­ed the thrilling finale with James as the finals MVP dis­arm­ing two-time reign­ing MVP Stephen Curry and his record-set­ting Warriors.

Playing his sixth straight finals, James almost sin­gle-hand­ed­ly car­ried the Cavs back into this series and fin­ished with 27 points, 11 assists and 11 rebounds as the Cavs cap­tured their first cham­pi­onship in fran­chise his­to­ry and gave their city its first major sports win­ner since the Browns won the NFL title in 1964. He also had three blocked shots and two steals, over­com­ing five turnovers.

CLEVELAND! This is for you!” James bel­lowed in his postgame inter­view before being announced as finals MVP.

An emo­tion­al James fell to the floor when this one end­ed with a sec­ond win in six days on Golden State’s impos­ing home floor, sur­round­ed by his team­mates. Only sec­onds ear­li­er, he went down in pain with 10.6 sec­onds left after being fouled by Draymond Green while going for a dunk, then came back out to make the sec­ond of two free throws.

After four suc­cess­ful sea­sons in Miami and two titles with the Heat, James came back to the Cavs in hopes of win­ning the title this fran­chise and cham­pi­onship-starved city so cov­et­ed. It took a sec­ond try against Golden State after Cleveland lost to the Warriors in six games last year.

Cleveland did it after a coach­ing change, with Tyronn Lue tak­ing over in January for the fired David Blatt.

We made his­to­ry tonight,” Lue said. “Cleveland, Ohio, we’re com­ing back, baby!”

Kyrie Irving scored 26 points to cap his bril­liant finals, includ­ing a 3‑pointer over Curry with 53 sec­onds left.

It was a fairy­tale end­ing,” Irving said.

Curry sat briefly on the bench to take in the scene after the Warriors made their last bas­ket with 4:39 left.

It hurts, man,” Curry said. “I’m proud of every sin­gle guy that stepped foot on the floor for our team this year. … Hopefully we’ll have many more oppor­tu­ni­ties to fight for cham­pi­onships and be on this stage. This is what it’s all about.”

Green had 32 points, 15 rebounds and nine assists, but the Warriors’ record-set­ting sea­son end­ed with­out the only prize this close-knit “Strength In Numbers” crew cared about from way back in the begin­ning — through the record 24 – 0 start as Coach of the Year Steve Kerr was out, Curry’s sec­ond con­sec­u­tive MVP cam­paign, and the 73 reg­u­lar-sea­son wins to break the 1995 – 96 Chicago Bulls’ mark.

As Cleveland cel­e­brat­ed in the tro­phy cer­e­mo­ny, Green returned to the floor to con­grat­u­late the Cavs. He stopped by the win­ning lock­er room, too, and Warriors gen­er­al man­ag­er Bob Myers deliv­ered the win­ning nets fresh­ly cut down.

The Warriors might always be remem­bered as one of the best teams ever that could­n’t close it out, and Green is tak­ing at least a good share of the blame after he sat out Game 5 on Monday night sus­pend­ed for fla­grant fouls.

The Cavs staved off elim­i­na­tion twice to force Game 7 back at Oracle Arena, where the Warriors went up 2 – 0 with a pair of lop­sided wins to start this series.

This marked the first NBA game decid­ed by five points or few­er since May 11, Golden State’s 125 – 121 vic­to­ry over the Portland Trail Blazers in Game 5 of the sec­ond round.

With its 100th post­sea­son vic­to­ry, Cleveland became just the fourth team to win an NBA Finals Game 7 on the road.

Curry — who said before­hand he need­ed the best game of his career — scored 17 points on 6‑for-19 shoot­ing, while Splash Brother Klay Thompson added 14 points while mak­ing 6 of 17 shots.

”I did­n’t do enough to help my team win,” Curry said. “It will haunt me for a while.
Read more here. http://​www​.foxnews​.com/​s​p​o​r​t​s​/​2​0​1​6​/​0​6​/​2​0​/​c​a​v​a​l​i​e​r​s​-​d​e​f​e​a​t​-​w​a​r​r​i​o​r​s​-​i​n​-​g​a​m​e​-​7​-​n​b​a​-​f​i​n​a​l​s​-​t​o​-​w​i​n​-​f​i​r​s​t​-​c​h​a​m​p​i​o​n​s​h​i​p​.​h​tml

Briefs..

Illiteracy responsible for several St Ann crashes — Supt. Wayne Cameron

CAMERON... they (taxi drivers) only conform when they see the police present at a checkpoint or observe a police unit in traffic...
CAMERON… they (taxi dri­vers) only con­form when they see the police present at a check­point or observe a police unit in traffic…

St Ann has been under the micro­scope in recent times fol­low­ing sev­er­al road fatal­i­ties in the parish. The most recent inci­dent, which occurred in Llandovery, claimed the lives of five peo­ple, includ­ing a basic school prin­ci­pal, when the dri­ving shaft of the pub­lic pas­sen­ger bus they were trav­el­ling in broke, caus­ing the dri­ver to lose con­trol of the vehi­cle, which then col­lid­ed with the Toyota Rav4. It was then dis­cov­ered that the dri­ver of the bus was actu­al­ly the conductor.

The worst set of dri­vers I have seen in my many years as a police are the bus dri­vers who ply the route from Brown’s Town to Ocho Rios. They have absolute­ly no regard for the road traf­fic laws. They do not obey the stop­lights, they over­take on the con­tin­u­ous white lines, they over­take on the unel­e­vat­ed medi­ans, they over­take on inter­sec­tions, and they under­take on both soft and hard shoul­ders. “They only con­form when they see the police present at a check­point or observe a police unit in traf­fic,” Cameron told Jamaica Observer North East. Cameron said these oper­a­tors not only show dis­re­gard for the road traf­fic laws, “but that it is also a human fac­tor in that they have no dis­ci­pline at all”. “I’ve also recog­nised that many of the dri­vers can­not read or write and those who can are not so good at it. And I believe that this is a neces­si­ty in order to oper­ate vehi­cles. The dri­vers behave the same way they do on wet roads as they do on dry roads. There is no obser­vance or con­sid­er­a­tion on their part,” he lamented.

As a result, Cameron is urg­ing vehi­cle own­ers to “employ peo­ple who can at least read and write”. “Employ peo­ple who have devel­oped some amount of lit­er­a­cy, who not only use judge­ment, because it is not suf­fi­cient, espe­cial­ly as a pub­lic pas­sen­ger vehi­cle dri­ver,” he insist­ed. At the same time, Cameron said to mit­i­gate the prob­lem, focus will also be placed on own­ers. “I think the tar­get­ing will not just be about bus dri­vers, but also about own­ers. The own­ers are to use due dili­gence when hir­ing peo­ple to dri­ve and con­duct for them. “We have learnt that many times the con­duc­tors are the ones dri­ving the bus with­out the prop­er train­ing or licens­ing, and this is evi­dent in the last ill-fat­ed crash. We will have to start sanc­tion­ing the own­ers of buses.
Read more here: http://​www​.jamaicaob​serv​er​.com/​r​e​g​i​o​n​a​l​/​I​l​l​i​t​e​r​a​c​y​-​r​e​s​p​o​n​s​i​b​l​e​-​f​o​r​-​s​e​v​e​r​a​l​-​S​t​-​A​n​n​-​c​r​a​s​hes — Supt – Wayne-Cameron_64415

Three shot dead in Westmoreland, 8‑y-o injured

WESTMORELAND, Jamaica — Three men were yes­ter­day shot dead in sep­a­rate inci­dents in Whithorn, Westmoreland, mere min­utes apart. An eight-year-old boy was also shot and injured in one of the inci­dents. The first inci­dent occurred about 8:30 pm, while 22-year-old Gawayne Morris, 31-year-old Jason Wedderburn and the boy were at a shop in Lindos Hill. Reports from the police are that a motor car drove up and assailants dis­em­barked the vehi­cle then opened gun­fire at them. They all received gun­shot wounds. Morris and Wedderburn were pro­nounced dead at hos­pi­tal while the eight-year-old boy, whose injury is con­sid­ered minor, was treat­ed. Then at 9:00 pm, res­i­dents heard explo­sions in the Maxfield area and alert­ed the police. Stanford Anderson, a 59-year-old fruit ven­dor, was lat­er found dead close to his stall on the Maxfield main road. The police say inves­ti­ga­tions into both inci­dents are ongoing.

Gunmen videoed running through community, cops investigate

KINGSTON, Jamaica – OBSERVER ONLINE has obtained a video which shows five gun­men run­ning through a com­mu­ni­ty in broad day­light. Explosions can be heard as the men, dressed in pullovers and bran­dish­ing guns, make their way through a com­mu­ni­ty which sources say is Norwood, St James. Police in Montego Bay told OBSERVER ONLINE that they are aware of the video, but could not con­firm where or when the inci­dent occurred. Head of the St James Police Divison, Senior Superintendent Marlon Nesbeth, told OBSERVER ONLINE on Sunday that checks are being made and infor­ma­tion is being gath­ered as they con­tin­ue to look into the mat­ter. Reaad more @ http://​www​.jamaicaob​serv​er​.com/​n​e​w​s​/​G​u​n​m​e​n​-​v​i​d​e​o​e​d​-​r​u​n​n​i​n​g​-​t​h​r​o​u​g​h​-​c​o​m​m​u​n​ity – cops-investigate

Briefs…

POLICE TO PATROL IN NUMBERS.

Remarkably these sim­ply oper­a­tional details have to be announced by a min­is­ter. These sim­ple things are among the most mun­dane steps the police can take with­out a grand min­is­te­r­i­al announcement.
When did the police brass get this epiphany? I get crit­i­cized for chal­leng­ing the police to do bet­ter with what it has , this is one such moment in which the police must real­ly ask itself why is some­thing this sim­ple a part of any new strategy?

Patrolling in num­bers is cru­cial in light of the lawlessness,the propen­si­ty to resist arrest, and the lack of puni­tive sanc­tions for resist­ing arrest and assault­ing officers.
It also has the very real effect of reduc­ing if not total­ly elim­i­nat­ing the very real desire to fight with police officers.
As I have writ­ten over the years Jamaican peo­ple will means test their police offi­cers to ensure they are tough enough to be trust­ed to defend them.
Their meth­ods (usu­al­ly ill-advised con­fronta­tion with a young offi­cer ) was their crude yet not total­ly borne out of mal-intent was their way of decid­ing whetehr a cop was wor­thy of their respect.
Decisive actions by police in effec­tive­ly and prompt­ly exe­cut­ing arrest includ­ing any­one who inter­feres, is one of the best tools offi­cers have at their disposal.
Not just to deal with indi­vid­ual inci­dents but in elim­i­nat­ing future occurrences.
Patrolling in strength it is only one com­po­nent of what’s need­ed from the police. The police must show what they are taught in effec­tive­ly and deci­sive­ly exe­cut­ing arrest.
It is impor­tant to effec­tive­ly tar­get those who would intervene.
Most impor­tant of all is get­ting reinforcements(backup) to offi­cers in dis­tress in record time and ensur­ing that no one who attempt to inter­fere in an arrest is allowed to walk away with­out being arrested.

National Security Minister Robert Montague advised this week that cops will be patrolling in greater num­bers. Perhaps this gath­er­ing on West Street, down­town Kingston, is a show of that force.

Observer photo
Observer pho­to

More judges for parish courts

The Government is seek­ing to increase the num­ber of judges avail­able to serve in parish courts. “In the short term, we want to employ at least anoth­er 15 or 20 judges per­ma­nent­ly or on a part-time basis to deal with the back­log in the parish courts,” said Minister of Justice Delroy Chuck. He was mak­ing his con­tri­bu­tion to the 201617 Sectoral Debate in the House of Representatives on Wednesday. Minister Chuck not­ed that the parish courts are now over­bur­dened with civ­il and crim­i­nal cas­es and “it is impor­tant that we attend to them urgently”.
“This is where the aver­age man gets his jus­tice and we have to make sure more judges, pros­e­cu­tors and clerks of court are avail­able so that these mat­ters can be dealt with,” he point­ed out.

Meanwhile, the Justice Minister is encour­ag­ing Jamaicans to utilise alter­na­tive means such as arbi­tra­tion and restora­tive jus­tice to deal with dis­putes. He not­ed that the Restorative Justice Bill will be brought before Parliament short­ly. “If we can get the offend­er to admit that he has com­mit­ted the offence and the vic­tim to for­give, then we can say use restora­tive jus­tice to exer­cise mer­cy in the dis­pos­al of the mat­ter,” the Justice Minister said. As it relates to arbi­tra­tion, he informed that a bill is to be sub­mit­ted to Cabinet before tabling in Parliament. The Justice Minister not­ed that many coun­tries, such as Singapore, have been mak­ing use of arbi­tra­tion to set­tle com­mer­cial dis­putes. “When big mon­ey is in con­flict, many of the par­ties do not want to go to court; they want arbi­tra­tors to assist them in com­ing to a deci­sion. Singapore is now becom­ing the top place for arbi­tra­tion,” Chuck said. He said it is hoped that not only will Jamaica have a mod­ern leg­is­la­tion but that the coun­try will become an arbi­tra­tion cen­tre “for those big com­pa­nies that have dis­putes and want it to be dealt with not in the courts, but by arbitrators”.
http://​www​.jamaicaob​serv​er​.com/​n​e​w​s​/​P​o​l​ice – force-_64263
It appears that the Government is begin­ning to rec­og­nize that growth can­not hap­pen as it should in anarchy.We applaud these moves even as we ask the police to be a lot more proac­tive in how it approach­es it’s task.

The Cruel Irony Which Is The Tivoli Gardens Inquiry…

mb
MB

So the Tivoli Report is out; final­ly, after a report­ed M$367 expen­di­ture, the three-mem­ber pan­el has made its find­ings known to the Parliament. I have not seen the report, and as such, I am restrained in my com­ments except on some salient points pub­lished in the Jamaican media.
Before I go into specifics, though, I won­der what could have been done with M$367 mil­lion out­side the colos­sal waste of this inquiry? Well, I take that back one man’s waste is anoth­er man’s trea­sure; the fool and his mon­ey will soon part.
And, the part they have.
In January 2015, Desmond McKenzie, the Member of Parliament for west Kingston, said that the com­mis­sion’s Chairman, Bajan, David Simmons, was being paid more than M$52.
Simmons, who came to Jamaica with an air of supe­ri­or­i­ty, cer­tain­ly will not need to wor­ry about mon­ey for the rest of his life. He can go back home to Barbados ghet­to rich and resume life as an hon­orary white man of the British Empire.
While we are at it, let David Simmons take some of Jamaica’s crim­i­nals back to his native Barbados, he seemed to like crim­i­nals and their way of life when he lived off the Jamaican dime. Let him take them back to Barbados and see how that turns out for them and him. As my grand aunt would say, “pop­py show.”

David Simmons, chief commissioner for the Tivoli Enquiry
David Simmons, chief com­mis­sion­er for the Tivoli Inquiry.

At the time, McKenzie called for an end to the inquiry argu­ing, ” We need to know how much mon­ey it cost the coun­try so far to put up the com­mis­sion­er, what is his phone bill, what is his food bill, and how much mon­ey to rent the con­fer­ence cen­ter and how much mon­ey for the sup­port staff, all that was not in the dis­clo­sure, and we need to know now.”
At the same time, Desmond McKenzie made those state­ments; he revealed a rather poignant truth about his think­ing. It should have giv­en pause to any per­son who serves in the secu­ri­ty forces or their fam­i­ly mem­bers who love and sup­port them.

As some­one who writes for the con­sump­tion of read­ers across oceans and not just Jamaica, I found the mem­ber of par­lia­men­t’s words rather telling.
When will the peo­ple get the oppor­tu­ni­ty to point out a police or a sol­dier? Over one week of oper­a­tion, do you want to tell me that not one police offi­cer or sol­dier has been arrest­ed and charged for any offense against the peo­ple? You want to tell me that the behav­ior was so good that nobody down there can com­plain about their actions?”
Haha…
So there you have it, the ene­my was not Christopher Dudus Coke, the inter­na­tion­al crim­i­nal. In Desmond McKenzie’s mind, the peo­ple we ought to be look­ing to imprison are the sol­diers and police offi­cers. But who is sur­prised by this? Both Political par­ties are lit­tle more than crim­i­nal enterprises.

Desmond McKenzie
Desmond McKenzie

TRADITIONAL DISTRACTION

Much of the talk among the pub­lic seeks to cov­er or deflect atten­tion away from the events of 2010, which was the great­est threat against the con­sti­tut­ed Jamaican state in his­to­ry. A crim­i­nal Kingpin and his mer­ce­nar­ies picked up arms in a trea­so­nous assault against the Jamaican state. That alone should give pause to the blind par­ti­sans, but it doesn’t.
They deflect atten­tion from that momen­tous and crit­i­cal­ly-telling event, by cre­at­ing a kan­ga­roo pan­el to cre­ate a doc­u­ment telling us how bad­ly the secu­ri­ty forces operated.
No men­tion of the crit­i­cal and hor­rif­ic sequence of events that neces­si­tat­ed the actions in the first place. What they do is come up with sug­ges­tions of com­pen­sa­tion to the peo­ple who for decades encour­aged, nur­tured, and pro­tect­ed the type of crim­i­nal­i­ty which bred not just that indi­vid­ual king­pin Christopher (dudus) Coke, but an entire fam­i­ly and lin­eage of oth­er kingpins.
Regardless of polit­i­cal affil­i­a­tion, every Jamaican should be offend­ed by this, but they won’t be.
It’s the police and mil­i­tary’s fault. Please send them to prison.

Sergeant Wayne Henriques... Constable Jason Davis, both of the Motorised Patrol Division brutally slaughtered along Mountain View Avenue.
Sergeant Wayne Henriques& Constable Jason Davis, both of the Motorized Patrol Division, were bru­tal­ly slaugh­tered along Mountain View Avenue.

Hannah Town police station burned.
Hannah Town police sta­tion burned.

♦Was it the police’s fault why the sta­tions were burned? ♦ Was it the police’s fault that police sta­tions were strafed with high-pow­ered weapons? ♦Was it the police’s fault that Max and his col­league were slaugh­tered? ♦ Was it the police’s fault why the com­mu­ni­ty of Tivoli Gardens was bar­ri­cad­ed and made a ver­i­ta­ble fortress? ♦Was it the police who pre­vent­ed com­mu­ni­ty mem­bers from leav­ing the com­mu­ni­ty, or was it the trea­so­nous mer­ce­nar­ies? ♦ Was it the secu­ri­ty forces that turned that com­mu­ni­ty and oth­ers like it into vir­tu­al states with­in Jamaica, out­side the con­trol of the rule of law?♦ Was it the police who divid­ed up the Island into war­ring fac­tions pit­ting broth­ers against broth­ers and sis­ter against sis­ter, or was it the politi­cians you worship?

The Darling Street Police Station
The Darling Street Police Station

Attack on State - Police stations set ablaze as mercenaries openly parade with high-powered weapons...
Attack on State — Police sta­tions set ablaze as mer­ce­nar­ies open­ly parade with high-pow­ered weapons…

The Island's justice Minister Delroy Chuck ,. Just open the vaults and pay up, oh apologize as well...
The Island’s jus­tice Minister Delroy Chuck,
Just open the vaults, pay up, and apol­o­gize as well…

Apologize to the peo­ple and pay them, the sit­ting min­is­ter of jus­tice tells the admin­is­tra­tion of which he is a key component.

Such is the coun­try Jamaica; this is what they want to hide from International scruti­ny while telling investors to come and telling dias­po­ra mem­bers to return home to live out their lives.
What I find laugh­able yet instruc­tive is that many of the pro­po­nents of the luna­cy are, like myself, com­par­a­tive­ly secure in adopt­ed coun­tries while advo­cat­ing a regres­sive view that has had dev­as­tat­ing con­se­quences for the coun­try since 1962.

Whenever the seri­ous issue of crime comes up, they come up with a smoke screen: “the police are cor­rupt.” It is s straw man excuse that has worked for both polit­i­cal par­ties and their apol­o­gists since day one. Please show me a police depart­ment that does not have offi­cers with bad char­ac­ter, and I say wel­come to Utopia. We can elim­i­nate bad cops and hon­or the good ones; we are not play­ing that hate game with you.
Let’s dis­pense with the bull­shit the schools of high­er learn­ing are insti­tu­tions of anti-police pro­pa­gan­da and anarchy.
For self-right­eous apol­o­gists who want to talk about police cor­rup­tion, let’s talk. Still, I will also talk about your earth­ly polit­i­cal Gods and their cor­rupt­ing influ­ences on the nation.
Let’s talk about the crim­i­nal lawyers who actu­al­ly give new mean­ing to the term “crim­i­nal lawyers.”
Let us talk about some of the cor­rupt judges and oth­er pub­lic servants.
If you want to talk about the cor­rup­tion on the Island, let us do so, but let us include every­one, not scape­goat the poor police, you hyp­ocrites. Let us have that con­ver­sa­tion now.

Portia Simpson Miller the former Prime Minister initiated the inquiry for purely political reasons.
The for­mer Prime Minister, Portia Simpson Miller, ini­ti­at­ed the inquiry for polit­i­cal reasons.

Others come up with con­vo­lut­ed alter­na­tive met­rics to con­vince them­selves and the gullible that the crime mon­ster on the Island is com­pa­ra­ble to America, the default adver­sary they love to hate, just not their dollar…
Yet I have spo­ken to police offi­cers, past and present, who have served in depart­ments across the coun­try, many of whom nev­er need­ed to remove their ser­vice weapons from their hol­sters their entire career.
My neigh­bor is one of them. So go ahead and con­vince your­selves that America is just as vio­lent as Jamaica.
Most offi­cers who leave the JCF and con­tin­ue a life in law enforce­ment in oth­er coun­tries do so with dis­tinc­tion. Those depart­ments respect and hon­or what they do.
Others like myself who chose dif­fer­ent careers after leav­ing do well for themselves.
Wherever Jamaicans live abroad, they dare not assault police offi­cers, nei­ther phys­i­cal­ly nor ver­bal­ly. They know bet­ter, so they leave that bull­shit at the Donald Sangster and the Norman Manley International air­ports before they leave.
Those who for­get find their sor­ry ass­es back on the next flight. Even with­in the CARICOM com­mu­ni­ty, oth­er Islands have none of it. Threats of boy­cotts and law­suits will not change the atti­tudes of Jamaica’s neigh­bors, who do not want Jamaicans and their crim­i­nal cul­ture in their coun­tries and do not want Jamaica to add to their crime sta­tis­tics even with much crime.
Rather telling.

Following the crim­i­nal politi­cian’s play­book by mak­ing scape­goats of the Island’s secu­ri­ty forces makes goats of those so fooled.
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Mike Beckles is a for­mer Police Detective, busi­ness­man, free­lance writer, black achiev­er hon­oree, and cre­ator of the blog mike​beck​les​.com.

Strike Up The Band Let The Party Begin…

THIS IS WHAT IT WAS ALWAYS ABOUT , GETTING TAX PAYERS MONEY THEN HAMSTRUNG THE SECURITY FORCES WORKS FOR BOTH POLITICAL PARTIES ON THE ISLAND..

Tivoli Enquiry commissioners make recommendation to Gov’t

The Commission of Enquiry into the May 2010 secu­ri­ty forces oper­a­tion in West Kingston has rec­om­mend­ed com­pen­sa­tion, with­out delay, and an apol­o­gy to res­i­dents for some actions of the State agents dur­ing the event.

We rec­om­mend that the Government of Jamaica apol­o­gis­es in Parliament to the peo­ple of West Kingston, and Jamaica as a whole, for the excess­es of the secu­ri­ty forces dur­ing the oper­a­tion,” the three-man com­mis­sion, chaired by Barbadian attor­ney Sir David Simmons, said in its report. In the report, which was tabled in the House of Representatives, yes­ter­day by Justice Minister Delroy Chuck, the com­mis­sion, which also includ­ed jurist Justice Hazel Harris and crim­i­nol­o­gist Professor Anthony Harriott, said that this should be done with a view to “assuag­ing the hurt feel­ings, bit­ter­ness and resent­ment of the peo­ple of West Kingston, and with a view to pro­mot­ing restora­tive jus­tice and bring­ing clo­sure to this sor­ry chap­ter in Jamaica’s his­to­ry”. But, accord­ing to the com­mis­sion­ers, even this would not be enough. They felt that there should also be prompt redress by way of com­pen­sa­tion for the victims.

While we recog­nise that there is a press­ing need to bring clo­sure to this mat­ter, and while we are con­scious of INDECOM’s con­tin­u­ing inves­ti­ga­tions, which must not be con­strict­ed, we are of the opin­ion that redress by way of com­pen­sa­tion should pro­ceed with­out delay,” they said. However, the com­mis­sion­ers admit­ted that they have been advised that for­mal legal claims against the State for com­pen­sa­tion in mat­ters involv­ing injury, loss of life and dam­age to prop­er­ty are barred after three years, in some cas­es of death, and after six years in all oth­er cas­es. This means that it would be too late for peo­ple to insti­tute lit­i­ga­tion against the State for com­pen­sa­tion for per­son­al injuries, death and loss and dam­age to prop­er­ty. In the cir­cum­stances, they rec­om­mend­ed that the State “waive its strict legal rights to all claims” and agree to set­tle com­pen­sa­tion on an ex gra­tia basis in respect of claims brought by aggriev­ed indi­vid­u­als, per­son­al rep­re­sen­ta­tives and/​or near rela­tions and/​or depen­dents of the deceased persons.

They said that they have an assur­ance from the Office of the Public Defender that it is “ready, will­ing and able” to facil­i­tate the pro­ce­dur­al require­ments to obtain grants of rep­re­sen­ta­tion. The com­mis­sion­ers, how­ev­er, made it clear that their rec­om­men­da­tion for a waiv­er also applies to claims for loss and dam­age to prop­er­ty and per­son­al injury. The com­mis­sion­ers said, how­ev­er, that the terms of ref­er­ence require the com­mis­sion to deter­mine the ade­qua­cy of com­pen­sa­tion to be paid to the vic­tims, and implies “a will­ing­ness on the part of the Government to ade­quate­ly com­pen­sate the vic­tims who suf­fered per­son­al injuries and prop­er­ty dam­age. “We find this pre­dis­po­si­tion of the Government to be admirable. It is the right thing to do. And it should be done fair­ly,” the report stat­ed. The report was reviewed by the Cabinet on Monday at its week­ly meet­ing at Jamaica House, lead­ing to a deci­sion by the Government to have it tabled by Chuck in the House of Representatives yes­ter­day. The delay was in order to give time to the min­istry to pre­pare copies for cir­cu­la­tion to par­lia­men­tar­i­ans, the press, and oth­er par­tic­i­pat­ing bod­ies. Chuck tabled it pri­or to mak­ing his pre­sen­ta­tion to the House in the annu­al Sectoral Debate, and com­pact discs of the 900-page doc­u­ment were circulated.

The min­is­ter said that despite Monday’s review, because of the length of the report, Cabinet has appoint­ed a sub­com­mit­tee to look at the find­ings and rec­om­men­da­tions in detail and to report back to the minister.Opposition spokesman on nation­al secu­ri­ty Peter Bunting not­ed that there were a num­ber of rec­om­men­da­tions relat­ing to the Defence Act and the Jamaica Defence Force (JDF) which ought to be stud­ied more closely.“I think that there are going to be some very impor­tant take-aways for this Parliament to look at amend­ing some of the leg­is­la­tion to reflect the real­i­ty of how our mil­i­tary oper­ates in sup­port of polic­ing in ways which were, per­haps, nev­er con­tem­plat­ed when it was estab­lished in 1962 and when the Defence Act was passed,” Bunting said.

He said that the Government could count on Opposition sup­port in pass­ing those amend­ments. He also said that the May 2010 activ­i­ty amount­ed to “almost an impos­si­ble sit­u­a­tion” for every­one involved. The com­mis­sion also con­clud­ed that a total of 69 peo­ple were killed dur­ing the oper­a­tion which was aimed at appre­hend­ing fugi­tive gang­ster Christopher ‘Dudus’ Coke, who was want­ed by the United States to face fed­er­al drug charges.The oper­a­tion was launched on May 24, 2010 after repeat­ed appeals by the author­i­ties for the dis­man­tling of block­ades mount­ed at the entrances to Tivoli Gardens were ignored. But police and sol­diers met resis­tance from gun­men loy­al to Coke, result­ing in the fatal­i­ties. During the fight­ing, Coke fled Tivoli Gardens, but was cap­tured weeks lat­er, on June 22, 2010, and waived his right to an extra­di­tion hear­ing. On June 24, 2010, he was flown to New York and was even­tu­al­ly sen­tenced to a 23-year prison term in June 2012 after plead­ing guilty to rack­e­teer­ing. Sticking to the sen­tenc­ing guide­lines under a plea bar­gain­ing arrange­ment reached between Coke’s defence team and pros­e­cu­tors in August 2011, Judge Robert P Patterson imposed the max­i­mum sen­tence, despite last-minute pleas for lenien­cy by Coke him­self and his attor­ney Stephen H Rosen.

AND THE VULTURES CIRC LE FOR THEIR SHARE OF THE PICKINGS..

JFJ demands action after Tivoli Enquiry report tabled

KINGSTON, Jamaica – Jamaicans for Justice (JFJ) are today demand­ing action from the Government, fol­low­ing the tabling of the West Kingston Commission of Enquiry report in Parliament yes­ter­day. In a news release, the JFJ said the commission’s report detailed some of the “great­est assaults on human rights in Jamaica’s mod­ern his­to­ry” and serves as a reminder of the dead­ly cost of a cul­ture of impuni­ty – one paid by the over 70 Jamaicans killed dur­ing the joint police-mil­i­tary oper­a­tion in 2010. However, JFJ point­ed out that the Commission’s report is not the end of the process but the begin­ning of anoth­er stage. “Now, the gov­ern­ment must com­mit to a seri­ous pro­gramme of reform that recog­nis­es, inter­rupts and pre­vents human rights vio­la­tions by the secu­ri­ty forces and strength­ens State organs capa­ble of pro­vid­ing effec­tive reme­dies,” the human rights group said. “Action is the only response that hon­ours the dig­ni­ty of vic­tims and secures jus­tice for those still harmed by State vio­lence across Jamaica.”
The group is there­fore call­ing on the gov­ern­ment to respond offi­cial­ly to the report’s find­ings and expe­di­tious­ly imple­ment its recommendations.

JFJ moved to iden­ti­fy some key rec­om­men­da­tions in the 900-page report, which it says needs to be addressed with­out delay.

The rec­om­men­da­tions are that: the Government apol­o­gise to and com­pen­sate res­i­dents for the “excess­es of the secu­ri­ty forces dur­ing the oper­a­tion”, affirm­ing Jamaica’s bind­ing human rights oblig­a­tions local­ly and inter­na­tion­al­ly; there be con­tin­ued crim­i­nal inves­ti­ga­tions into the killings of res­i­dents whom “all the evi­dence adduced strong­ly suggests…were unlaw­ful­ly killed by uniden­ti­fied police offi­cers”, plac­ing a bur­den on the Government to ensure that the Independent Commission of Investigations (INDECOM) is suf­fi­cient­ly equipped to con­duct impar­tial inves­ti­ga­tions, free from obsta­cles and frus­tra­tions; there be reforms of the secu­ri­ty forces that would improve their use of force, arms man­age­ment, and civil­ian over­sight – long­stand­ing issues raised repeat­ed­ly by civ­il soci­ety. “Starting the process on these pri­or­i­ty rec­om­men­da­tions does not require lengthy delib­er­a­tions – it only requires polit­i­cal will. On mat­ters of such impor­tance, fur­ther delay is not an option,” the JFJ said. http://​www​.jamaicaob​serv​er​.com/​n​e​w​s​/​J​F​J​-​d​e​m​a​n​d​s​-​a​c​t​i​o​n​-​a​f​t​e​r​-​T​i​v​o​l​i​-​E​n​q​u​i​r​y​-​r​e​p​o​r​t​-​t​a​b​led

Of Primates, Reptiles ‚black And White In America.…

10734218_10203187417145913_1187502936954276739_n-e1456464036486-64x90

It was­n’t so long ago that a Gorilla nick­named Harambe was out of neces­si­ty killed to save a lit­tle Ohio boy who slipped away from it’s moth­er and fell into the moat which formed part of the Gorilla’s sanctuary.
Media report­ing on the inci­dent said the child’s moth­er was con­tend­ing with oth­er chil­dren when the lit­tle boy went through par­ti­tions and even­tu­al­ly fell into the moat where he was snatched and dragged around vio­lent­ly by the Gorilla for almost 10 min­utes before author­i­ties were forced to take the nec­es­sary actions to save the young child’s life.
Out of that inci­dent hun­dreds of thou­sands of peo­ple across the coun­try signed peti­tions and rose up in self right­eous indig­na­tion , demand­ing that charges be prof­fered against the moth­er of the child. The gen­er­al tone of their anger was that the endan­gered pri­mate should not have been killed to save the child.
As a lover of ani­mals I was stunned at the bla­tant hypocrisy . These pri­mates are endan­gered because of white peo­ple who believe they have a right to kill what­ev­er and whomev­er with­out restraint now they have the nerve to decide when one may be killed to save human life.

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One of he prob­lems I had with those calls was that the out­rage did not seem to bear a sin­gle iota of con­cern for what the moth­er of the lit­tle boy must have gone through while her child was sec­onds from death in the cus­tody of the wild beast.
As a par­ent who lost a child I can imag­ine the absolute hor­ror of that moth­er, not know­ing whether she would ever get to touch her son alive again.
The calls prompt­ed police author­i­ties to com­mence Investigations and for­ward their find­ings to pros­e­cu­tors who cor­rect­ly said he was frankly offend­ed at the attempts to equate the life of an ani­mal with that of a human being. The pros­e­cu­tor found no evi­dence of wrong­do­ing or neg­li­gence on the part of the moth­er. No charges were filed against her .
Not a sin­gle one of the per­sons call­ing for her arrest empathized with her ordeal or how close she came to los­ing her child .

The Hypocrisy Of The Harambe Objectors…

Did I men­tion that the moth­er was black ?

Fast for­ward to Tuesday June 14th around 9.00 pm a two-year-old baby (2) was wad­ing in the shal­low water close to theo edge f the Seven Seas lagoon at the Grand Floridian Resort & Spain Orland Florida. when an Alligator esti­mat­ed to be between 4 – 7 feet dragged the infant under water. The child has not been seen since. Authorities said that the child is part of a fam­i­ly of five which arrived there on Sunday from Nebraska.
Thus far we have heard not one sin­gle soli­tary word of con­dem­na­tion for the moth­er of this child . Not a sin­gle com­ment about police inves­ti­ga­tions and poten­tial jail­ing the moth­er for negligence.
We have heard no word on how many Alligators have been abused or pos­si­bly killed as they try to deter­mine which gator may have dragged the child under.
Where are the cries and out­rage from the pha­lanx of sanc­ti­mo­nious hyp­ocrites ? What is the dif­fer­ence with this case.

Since no one is ask­ing ques­tions I will.….
Where was the moth­er, or whomev­er was sup­posed to be attend­ing to the two-year-old baby?
Why was a baby wad­ing in water out of arms reach of an adult and worse at 9.00 clock at night ?
If ever there was a case of neg­li­gence this seem to be it. The age of this infant is half that of the child which fell into the Gorilla enclave. Why is there a dif­fer­ent stan­dard for the black moth­er than the white care­givers of this child?
The younger the child the greater the lev­el of hands on care is required.
So far there has been total radio silence , so while I am lis­ten­ing , I wish to bring to the fore that though there prob­a­bly will nev­er be any out­cry. And though what we will most def­i­nite­ly see is a Over-dra­ma­tized out­pour­ing of grief for that fam­i­ly’s loss we have already made our deter­mi­na­tion that those who cried for Harambe were fraud­u­lent racist hypocrites.
We knew would be exposed in short order!

Update…

Since I wrote this sto­ry author­i­ties have report­ed that the body of the child have been found in about 6 feet of water. They report­ed that this was made pos­si­ble through the use of sonar technology.
They have also report­ed that at least 5 Alligators were pulled from the lagoon and they have tak­en steps to try to fig­ure out which one was respon­si­ble for pulling the child underwater.
Your guess is as good as mine as to the meth­ods used.

What About Malahoo Forte’s Right To Free Speech.…..

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It seem that Jamaica’s Attorney General Marlene Malahoo Forte,is hav­ing a dif­fi­cult time avoid­ing con­tro­ver­sy since tak­ing office. Immediately upon becom­ing Attorney General Forte speak­ing in St James told mem­bers of the secu­ri­ty forces that she will be pay­ing close atten­tion to ensure that they do not abuse the rights of civil­ians. Forte was speak­ing in Montego Bay Cultural Center in Sam Sharpe Square, Montego Bay, dur­ing the third in a series of island-wide town-hall meet­ings put on by Security Minister Robert Montague.
Said Malahoo Forte ,  “I assure you sir (secu­ri­ty min­is­ter) that in my role as mem­ber of Parliament I will ensure that all coöper­a­tion is pro­vid­ed to the secu­ri­ty forces. But I say to the secu­ri­ty forces also, in my role as mem­ber of Parliament and as attor­ney gen­er­al, I will be watch­ing vig­i­lant­ly how the secu­ri­ty forces car­ry out their work in this chal­leng­ing envi­ron­ment. “I know SSP (Steve) McGregor under­stands my own view that the police — and com­mis­sion­er, you may be hear­ing it for the first time – are not enti­tled to break the law in their efforts to uphold the law, not enti­tled to abuse the rights of our cit­i­zens, how­ev­er chal­leng­ing the cir­cum­stances will be,”.

Malahoo Forte’s state­ments were absolute­ly not unrea­son­able giv­en anoth­er forum but this writer thought that giv­en that forum which for all intents and pur­pos­es was geared at find­ing solu­tions to the nation’s crime prob­lem her rebuke were offen­sive, patron­iz­ing , dis­re­spect­ful and amount­ed to grandstanding.
This writer was cer­tain­ly not shy in call­ing her out for that blunder.
As did a host of online read­ers who felt sim­i­lar­ly as well.
https://​mike​beck​les​.com/​m​a​l​a​h​o​o​-​f​o​r​t​e​-​s​h​a​m​e​l​e​s​s​-​g​r​a​n​d​s​t​a​n​d​i​n​g​-​j​u​s​t​-​s​h​u​t​-​a​l​r​e​a​dy/

After the night­club shoot­ing in Orlando Florida a few nights ago the United States decid­ed to fly the Gay-pride rain­bow flag at half staff at all it’s embassies across the world. This prompt­ed Attorney General Malahoo Forte to tweet the following .
“I strong­ly con­demn #OrlandoNightClubShooting but find it dis­re­spect­ful of Jamaica’s laws to have #RainbowFlag flown here #MyPersonalView.
The United States Embassy in Kingston alleged­ly tweet­ed back .
“@mmalahooforte we’re lis­ten­ing. Explain the legal rea­son­ing? It [the Orlando shoot­ing] was an attack of ter­ror and hate, tar­get­ing the LGBT community!”

Since the tweet Attorney General Malahoo Forte has tak­en sig­nif­i­cant flack as is to be expect­ed with sen­si­tive issues as these.
The Opposition People’s National Party has since issued a state­ment over the sig­na­ture of Morais Guy .

The Jamaican Government has to be reminded that the conduct of business on premises on which embassies and high commissions are located must be regarded as business being conducted on foreign soil.“We believe there is a requirement for clarification and, if necessary, apology by our foreign ministry to the government and people of the United States consequent on the recent comments of the attorney general regarding business taking place on the grounds of their embassy in Kingston and which is consistent with business that is taking place at their embassies across the globe,”.

On the oth­er hand there has also been strong sup­port for Malahoo Forte com­ing from two Christian lob­bies, the Lawyers’ Christian Fellowship and the Jamaica Coalition for a Healthy Society (JCHS). In a state­ment the Organizations respond­ed con­demn­ing the killings while say­ing this.

The flying of the rainbow flag, a counter-cultural symbol of a movement dedicated to undermining Jamaica’s buggery and marriage laws, sends an overt symbol that the United States Embassy in Jamaica is aligned with those who would break our laws”. “Notwithstanding the fact that the embassy is considered American territory in international law, the LCF asks US Ambassador Luis G. Moreno to immediately take down the flag and, in so doing, eliminate potential misunderstanding and barriers to the natural outpouring of sympathy and support for the United States and those who have suffered.”

Meanwhile, the JCHS ques­tioned if the US Embassy had flown any school or mil­i­tary or church flags after pre­vi­ous mass killings in the US.

While the US Embassy in Kingston is con­sid­ered to be on US soil, the embassy is still a guest of the Jamaican Government and peo­ple and is expect­ed to con­duct its affairs in a respect­ful man­ner,” the JCHS said.
Of all the argu­ments raised since this non-sto­ry broke I believe the ques­tion com­ing from the JCHS is the most pro­found. Yesterday I wrote about the almost dai­ly mass killings across America and the clas­sic response by the media and politi­cians who fall over them­selves to claim Islamic Terrorism. Ironically most of the ter­ror attacks in the United States has been car­ried out by white male under 35 years old.
Ms Malahoo Forte has a right to her opin­ion as a pri­vate cit­i­zen, and she did say she was speak­ing per­son­al­ly not in her offi­cial capac­i­ty as Attorney General. Even if Ms Forte was speak­ing in her capac­i­ty as Attorney General she would be absolute­ly cor­rect in her statements.
I find the American Embassy’s response both patron­iz­ing and pater­nal­is­tic. Quote “@mmalahooforte we’re lis­ten­ing. Explain the legal reasoning?
Jamaica is a sov­er­eign nation , not a state of the United States. Jamaican laws make it a crime for it’s cit­i­zens to engage in bug­gery. On that basis any for­eign coun­try which is rep­re­sent­ed by a mis­sion or embassy must respect that nation’s laws .
No coun­try can be dis­re­spect­ful of American laws and tra­di­tions while main­tain­ing diplo­mat­ic mis­sions on American soil.
It is remark­able that rather than stand­ing with it’s own Government the People’s National Party sought to cur­ry favor and once again got it total­ly wrong.
The mas­sacre of those inno­cent souls must shake even the most soul­less indi­vid­u­als. Regardless of peo­ple’s sex­u­al ori­en­ta­tion, reli­gion , race, or any oth­er defin­ing char­ac­ter­is­tic peo­ple have a right to con­gre­gate with­out the expec­ta­tion that they will be sum­mar­i­ly gunned down in cold blood.
Yet there is no evi­dence that the vic­tims of the night­club shoot­ing were killed because they were Gay. Of course the clas­sic response from the pur­vey­ors of fear with their own per­son­al agen­das are nev­er con­strained by com­mon sense when they run ahead of law enforce­ment agen­cies to make state­ments which are not sup­port­ed or borne out by the evidence.
There is emerg­ing evi­dence with­in the pub­lic space which now indi­cate that the shoot­er may have been gay as well which if true dis­cred­its the notion that the vic­tims were mas­sa­cred because of their sex­u­al orientation.

Neither Jamaica nor Ms Malahoo Forte owes the American Embassy any oblig­a­tion to explain her state­ments. They were sound per­son­al­ly and pro­fes­sion­al­ly. It is sad that the oppo­si­tion par­ty and Gay sup­port­ers have allowed pol­i­tics and alle­giances to cloud their judgement.
Gays assume the role of vic­tims but are most intol­er­ant and vehe­ment­ly opposed to the rights of oth­ers to dis­agree with their lifestyles. Daring to dis­agree with them can get one black-list­ed , cost peo­ple their busi­ness­es, their jobs and ostra­cized from society.
Even as they claim to be seek­ing to live their lives the way they want like every­one else, their actions are dia­met­ri­cal­ly opposed to those protestations.
Their right to live their lives the way they chose can­not come at the expense of Ms Malahoo Forte’s right to free speech .
As such we stand with the Attorney General against this tyranny.

Worse Mass Killing In American History .…Not Even Close.

WORST MASS SHOOTING IN AMERICAN HISTORY.…

Ever since a shoot­er entered a Gay night­club in Orlando Florida killing 49 peo­ple and wound­ing 53 the mass media have engaged in a sys­tem­at­ic and seem­ing­ly coör­di­nat­ed attempt to paint this lat­est mass shoot­ing as the worst in American history.
The United States of America did not become a nation three days ago. Neither did it become a nation even 70 years ago. So in the inter­est of clar­i­ty I would pick one sto­ry out of the litany of sto­ries which puts this nar­ra­tive to a lie. Whether New York or Chicago, Greenwood Florida to Tulsa Oklahoma the instances are many.
We chose to use a sin­gle sto­ry this time.

Black History Month

The Tulsa Massacre, 1921

Revolutionary Worker #1043, February 20, 2000

On May 30, 1921, a rumor swept through the boom­ing west­ern oil town of Tulsa, Oklahoma that a young Black man had insult­ed a white woman in a down­town elevator.

According to the white suprema­cist rules of U.S. soci­ety, the accused man faced an imme­di­ate death sen­tence. Since the turn of the cen­tu­ry, many hun­dreds of Black men in the U.S. had been bru­tal­ly lynched and muti­lat­ed by vig­i­lante gangs – with­out tri­al or inves­ti­ga­tion – often for accu­sa­tions of “affronting white womanhood.”

But this time, in Tulsa, it was dif­fer­ent. This time there was resis­tance. Organized mil­i­tant forces in the Black com­mu­ni­ty stepped for­ward to defend Dick Rowland.

All the hate­ful forces of white suprema­cy in the area respond­ed to that resis­tance with two fever­ish days of mur­der and fire. The dead of Tulsa’s Black com­mu­ni­ty lay stacked in piles. And the cen­tral Black busi­ness dis­trict of North Tulsa was total­ly burned out.

Tulsa 1921 is a sto­ry of bru­tal “eth­nic cleans­ing” and geno­cide. This was the largest “civ­il dis­tur­bance” since the Civil War and the anti-Indian wars of the 1800s. It is a sto­ry that has been sys­tem­at­i­cal­ly cen­sored by the sys­tem – despite the repeat­ed efforts of the Black press, rev­o­lu­tion­ary forces and pro­gres­sive his­to­ri­ans to bring the facts to light.

Now, after almost 80 years, the truth about the Tulsa Massacre is final­ly break­ing into the pub­lic are­na, and the last sur­vivors are step­ping for­ward to tell the sto­ry that has been denied and suppressed.

Tulsa’s Little Africa

For decades, Black peo­ple flee­ing the hor­rors of the plan­ta­tion South had found their way west to North Tulsa and forged a new com­mu­ni­ty of 15,000 – togeth­er with Black Seminoles who arrived in Oklahoma a cen­tu­ry ear­li­er after the infa­mous “Trail of Tears.” This new com­mu­ni­ty was called the Greenwood dis­trict, or “Little Africa.”

Most of the peo­ple in this Black com­mu­ni­ty were wage work­ers – often cross­ing the rail­road tracks into South Tulsa for the worst jobs and domes­tic work. At the same time, the rigid seg­re­ga­tion of Tulsa meant that “Little Africa” cre­at­ed its own busi­ness dis­trict along Greenwood Avenue. Supporters of Black cap­i­tal­ism nick­named it “the Negro Wall Street.”

There were Black-owned movie the­aters, a news­pa­per, jew­el­ry stores, 15 doc­tors, three law offices, a school, three gro­cery stores, many restau­rants, church­es, and a Black-owned bus line.

But the Tulsa Tribune and white racists of South Tulsa just called it “N*ggertown.”

The inven­tion of cars and intense demands of World War 1 brought explo­sive growth to the petro­le­um fields and to the noto­ri­ous­ly cor­rupt and row­dy town of Tulsa. The local Tulsa own­ing class felt that their boom­ing down­town busi­ness dis­trict was hemmed in by the Black Greenwood com­mu­ni­ty. They want­ed Blacks moved out. Police Commissioner Adkison and the Tulsa Tribunecon­stant­ly accused Greenwood of being a cen­ter of pros­ti­tu­tion, drugs, liquor and gambling.

Meanwhile in “Little Africa,” like in oth­er Black com­mu­ni­ties, there was a deeply impa­tient new mood of resis­tance. Black vet­er­ans came back from World War 1 with pride and a fresh belief that they deserved respect and equal­i­ty. In urban areas, many Black peo­ple were bold­er in ques­tion­ing the lynch-law cus­toms of Jim Crow. The rev­o­lu­tion­ary storms of Europe and Russia after World War 1 inspired the new rev­o­lu­tion­ary and com­mu­nist orga­ni­za­tion among Black people.

The Call for Lynching

Dick Rowland, a young Black shoeshine man, knew the white ele­va­tor oper­a­tor Sarah Page. An inves­ti­ga­tor from the NAACP uncov­ered that Rowland had called for the ele­va­tor. Page had been angry to be called by a Black man and closed the doors while he was only halfway in. Thrown off bal­ance, he had stepped on her foot. As Rowland left that ele­va­tor, Page screamed that he had insult­ed her.

Rowland was arrest­ed and tak­en to the Tulsa County Courthouse. No charges were ever pressed, no evi­dence was ever presented.

The next morn­ing, the Tulsa Tribune print­ed a rabid edi­to­r­i­al with the head­line “To Lynch Negro Tonight.” That evening, an armed mob of white peo­ple gath­ered out­side the jail to lynch Dick Rowland.

A remark­able thing hap­pened: Suddenly an armed group of Black men (var­i­ous­ly report­ed at 50 to 75) arrived from Greenwood, dressed in World War 1 Army fatigues. With breath-tak­ing courage, they con­front­ed this grow­ing crowd of 2,000 racists – announc­ing that they would fight to pro­tect Rowland’s life and see that he got basic justice.

There were shouts back and forth between the two groups – then shots. Several men fell dead. Greatly out­num­bered, the Black mil­i­tants retreat­ed north, across the rail­road tracks into Greenwood.

The local police orga­nized a mur­der­ous attack on the Black com­mu­ni­ty. They dep­u­tized hun­dreds of men from the lynch mob and told them, “Now you can go out and shoot any n*gger you see, and the law’ll be behind you.” Groups of white men broke into down­town hard­ware stores, pawn­shops, and gun stores and took firearms and ammunition.

As the racist forces tried to cross the rail­road tracks, fight­ers with­in the Black com­mu­ni­ty held them off for hours with sniper fire. By dawn, huge num­bers of armed whites had gath­ered – as many as 10,000 – and at 5 a.m. they moved into “Little Africa.” It was a full mil­i­tary inva­sion – com­plete with machine guns.

A 1924 legal brief by the American Central Insurance Company would lat­er describe their “com­mon intent to exe­cute a com­mon plan, to-wit: the exter­mi­na­tion of the col­ored peo­ple of Tulsa and the destruc­tion of the col­ored set­tle­ment, homes, and build­ings, by fire.”

There was con­tin­u­ous resis­tance. Teams of Black fight­ers formed to fight for the lives of the peo­ple. The com­bat was house-to-house, and even hand-to-hand in some areas. A Black woman, Mary Jones Parrish, lat­er wrote: “Looking south out of the win­dow of what then was the Woods Building, we saw car loads of men with rifles unload­ing up near the gra­nary.… Then the truth dawned upon us that our men were fight­ing in vain to hold their dear Greenwood.”

The sur­vivors report­ed that their neigh­bor­hoods were strafed by air­planes. Explosives and fire­bombs were dropped. A Tulsa cop, Van B. Hurley, lat­er report­ed that sev­er­al promi­nent city offi­cials met with local plane own­ers in a down­town office and planned the air attack. It was one of the first report­ed uses of aer­i­al bombs in world history.

Fire and Mass Murder

They set our house on fire and we were up in the attic… five kids… We were able to get out with­out injury but bul­lets were zing­ing around there… But when we got down, the tele­phone poles were burned and falling and my poor sis­ter who was two years younger than I am said, ‘Kinney, is the world on fire?’ I said, ‘I don’t think so, but we are in deep trouble.“ ‘

Kinney Booker, who was 8
dur­ing the Massacre

The attack­ers imme­di­ate­ly set the Black com­mu­ni­ty on fire. A wall of flame swept through the Greenwood busi­ness dis­trict– burn­ing out every­thing in its path.

Meanwhile, gangs of heav­i­ly armed attack­ers went house-to-house – killing peo­ple, tak­ing away Black men in a sys­tem­at­ic roundup, steal­ing any­thing valu­able and light­ing Black homes on fire. Eyewitnesses report­ed that Sheriff’s deputies used kerosene to burn down the finest homes in the dis­trict. About 1,200 hous­es, hotels, and busi­ness­es were destroyed. Thirty-five blocks were a burnt-out waste­land. Charred bod­ies were found in the debris.

Regular infantry of the Oklahoma National Guard rushed in on a spe­cial train, arriv­ing June 1. The Guard’s com­man­der lat­er wrote, “Twenty-five thou­sand whites, armed to the teeth, were rang­ing the city in utter and ruth­less defi­ance of every con­cept of law and right­eous­ness. Motor cars bristling with guns swept through the city, their occu­pants fir­ing at will.” The Guard sol­diers were offi­cial­ly there to stop the “dis­tur­bance,” but they quick­ly went to work round­ing up Black peo­ple at bay­o­net point, wound­ing many in the process.

Behind the trees and walls near the foot of Standpipe Hill, the armed defense fight­ers of the Black com­mu­ni­ty made their last stand. The National Guard set up two machine guns and poured dead­ly fire into the area. The last Black fight­ers sur­ren­dered. They were dis­armed and marched in columns to four major intern­ment areas that had been set up at the city’s Convention Hall, McNulty Baseball Park, the Fairgrounds and the town’s airport.

The killing was sys­tem­at­ic and heart­less. Death squads of armed whites, many of them orga­nized Klansmen, went door-to-door in the burn­ing neigh­bor­hoods killing peo­ple. They shot any­one mov­ing in the streets. Black men were chained to cars and dragged to their deaths. In white areas, Black domes­tic work­ers were gunned down on their way home – with­out warn­ing. Dr. A. C. Jackson (who was described by a founder of the Mayo Clinic as “the most able Negro sur­geon in the coun­try”) was mur­dered after sur­ren­der­ing him­self to police.

The National Guard orga­nized teams to stack bod­ies and load them on wag­ons and trucks. The Red Cross report­ed treat­ing almost 1,000 wound­ed peo­ple – over­whelm­ing­ly Black. The local Black school, which escaped the fire, became a field hos­pi­tal. One observ­er wrote, “There were men wound­ed in every con­ceiv­able way, like sol­diers after a big bat­tle. Some with ampu­tat­ed limbs, burned faces, oth­ers minus an eye or with heads ban­daged. There were women who were ner­vous wrecks, and some con­fine­ment cas­es. Was I in a hos­pi­tal in France? No, in Tulsa.”

Many Black peo­ple fled the city com­plete­ly – into the Osage Hills and the many Black com­mu­ni­ties that dot­ted rur­al Oklahoma. Many thou­sands had been cap­tured at gun­point. Some were tak­en to killing fields and exe­cut­ed in cold blood. Others, includ­ing many chil­dren, were marched to the intern­ment cen­ters. At the entrance to the Tulsa Convention Center, a mur­dered Black man’s body was pub­licly dis­played as a tro­phy in the back of a truck. And columns of cap­tured Black peo­ple were forced to pass in front of it, on their way into the building.

Reporter Brent Staples describes the after­math (New York Times December 19, 1999): “Corpses stacked like cord­wood on street cor­ners, pho­tographed for keep­sakes. Corpses piled in the backs of wag­ons, dump trucks, and along rail­road sid­ings. Corpses buried in an under­ground tun­nel down­town, where one caller said 123 blacks had been clubbed to death. Corpses left to rot for days in a park under the blis­ter­ing Oklahoma sun. Corpses dumped in the Arkansas River and allowed to float away.”

By June 2, the fight­ing was over. The Black com­mu­ni­ty had been com­plete­ly burnt out — turned into a smok­ing waste­land. After being held in intern­ment, a thou­sand Black peo­ple were forced to spend the fol­low­ing win­ter in a refugee city of tents and board shacks under bit­ter con­di­tions. For months, Black peo­ple would see white peo­ple on Tulsa’s down­town streets wear­ing cloth­ing and jew­el­ry stolen dur­ing the pogrom.

The Fight for the Truth

The Black press in the U.S. fought hard to expose what had hap­pened in Tulsa.

The new­ly formed Communist Party (CP) print­ed hun­dreds of thou­sands of fly­ers enti­tled “The Tulsa Massacre.” The leaflet bold­ly sup­port­ed the armed self-defense of Black com­mu­ni­ties and called for the rev­o­lu­tion­ary over­throw of the cap­i­tal­ist sys­tem for its bru­tal white suprema­cy. Activists dis­trib­uted them very wide­ly across the coun­try – in fac­to­ry dis­tricts, Black com­mu­ni­ties and con­ven­tions of orga­ni­za­tions like the NAACP.

Government infor­mants report­ed that a ton of the fly­ers were dis­trib­uted in Chicago alone.

Revolutionaries and pro­gres­sive peo­ple orga­nized cam­paigns to aid the burned-out sur­vivors of this massacre.

In Tulsa itself, amid the hor­ror and sor­row, there was report­ed­ly tremen­dous pride that Rowland had gone free and that the com­mu­ni­ty had fought so fierce­ly with guns against racist attack.

Meanwhile, the U.S. pow­er struc­ture imme­di­ate­ly moved to white­wash this event, and to sup­press knowl­edge of it. A hasti­ly con­vened grand jury announced that the events were caused by the Black com­mu­ni­ty – specif­i­cal­ly blam­ing “an effort on the part of a cer­tain group of col­ored men who appeared at the cour­t­house…” In the sec­ond place they blamed the “agi­ta­tion among the negroes of the social equal­i­ty.” Local author­i­ties blamed a rev­o­lu­tion­ary orga­ni­za­tion, the African Blood Brotherhood, for insti­gat­ing the resis­tance. Leading fig­ures of the Black com­mu­ni­ty were indict­ed for “incit­ing” the events of May 31. Not one white per­son was ever arrest­ed or charged for the Tulsa Massacre.

Mayor Paul Brown report­ed that only 36 peo­ple died – 10 whites and 26 Black peo­ple. This fig­ure was repeat­ed in his­to­ry books and accounts – as an offi­cial account­ing of these so-called “Tulsa Race Riots.”

The head­lines of the Tulsa Tribune raged:

  • Propaganda of Negroes is Blamed”
  • Black Agitators Blamed for Riot, Plot by Negro Society?”
  • Bloodshed in Race War will Cleanse Tulsa”
  • Negro Section Abolished by City’s Order”

Local author­i­ties made sure “Little Africa” would nev­er be rebuilt – mon­ey was denied, new ordi­nances were passed.

The new­ly formed FBI focused much of its activ­i­ties dur­ing the sum­mer of 1921, iden­ti­fy­ing and harass­ing the forces cir­cu­lat­ing the CP’s “Tulsa Massacre” fliers. Insurance com­pa­nies refused to com­pen­sate the vic­tims of the Tulsa mas­sacre and fire.

And soon, this shame­ful Tulsa Massacre was sim­ply erased from offi­cial American his­to­ry and pub­lic dis­cus­sion. Most peo­ple have sim­ply nev­er heard of it. Someone at the Tulsa Tribuneremoved all records that their news­pa­per had called for the lynch­ing of Dick Rowland – no known copies of the inflam­ma­to­ry arti­cles exist today.

Over the years, there was an ongo­ing strug­gle to break through the silence. Survivors told of the air attacks and of bod­ies dumped in mine­shafts and the near­by riv­er. Officially, such reports were dis­missed as unfound­ed exag­ger­a­tions and lies. In the 1970s, thanks to the pow­er­ful Black Liberation move­ment, accounts of the Tulsa Massacre start­ed to appear in pro­gres­sive mag­a­zines, rad­i­cal his­to­ry books and the new cours­es on Black Studies.

Memory and Mass Graves

Six years ago, the world learned about the 1923 racist attack in Rosewood, Florida, through the movie and the court case where sur­vivors received $2 mil­lion in restitution.

Since 1997, a relent­less move­ment has emerged to demand an account­ing in Tulsa. Many par­tic­i­pants demand repa­ra­tions for the bru­tal­i­ty and destruc­tion. More than 150 wit­ness­es, includ­ing 60 sur­vivors, have tes­ti­fied at a “Tulsa Race Riot Commission” of the Oklahoma Legislature. And their pow­er­ful sto­ries have brought out the truth – after all these many years. People have stepped for­ward to iden­ti­fy three places in Tulsa where Black bod­ies were buried in mass graves. Excavations at one of the mass grave sites are sched­uled to begin this summer.

Historians gen­er­al­ly now esti­mate that at least 300 peo­ple died dur­ing this Massacre – over 90 per­cent of them Black. Some peo­ple sus­pect the num­ber was much high­er. In fact, the real num­ber of dead may nev­er be known.

*****

No force can undo the crimes of the Tulsa Massacre. But the strug­gle and deter­mi­na­tion of Black peo­ple has forced a pub­lic inves­ti­ga­tion of these events. Just demands are being made for a pub­lic account­ing and reparations.

At a time when offi­cial Amerikkka crude­ly denies the exis­tence of sys­tem­at­ic and insti­tu­tion­al racism – the real­i­ty of Black peo­ple’s lives and oppres­sion has been wrenched into the light of day.

This arti­cle is post­ed in English and Spanish on Revolutionary Worker Online
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