The Framework Of This Anti-crime Plan Has Been On The Table For A Decade

I am again pub­lish­ing my plan to the Jamaican Government, a plan I believe is not a panacea but one that will begin the slow and tedious process of extri­cat­ing Jamaica from the jaws of failure.
Each of the pil­lars of this plan will need dis­cus­sion, and some will require new leg­is­la­tion to be passed to effec­tu­ate the desired out­comes. Additionally, this plan will be most effec­tive if exe­cut­ed with a par­al­lel eco­nom­ic plan that revi­tal­izes depressed areas pro­vid­ing jobs to dis­pos­sessed youths.
Jamaican lead­ers have con­sis­tent­ly led the Jamaican peo­ple into believ­ing the lie that we can achieve first-world sta­tus on old-world infrastructure.
The Soviet Union crum­bled when it engaged with America, which had a robust mod­ern econ­o­my. The Americans could spend what they want­ed; the Soviets could­n’t because their econ­o­my was large­ly propped up by sub­sis­tence farm­ing in the satel­lite states.

YouTube player

Jamaica, too is head­ed for finan­cial and soci­etal col­lapse as suc­ces­sive admin­is­tra­tions of the two polit­i­cal par­ties have con­tin­ued on the same path of lying to the peo­ple that we can achieve pros­per­i­ty on old laws which (a) have lit­tle to zero deter­rent effect, (b) dri­ves away the pri­vate sec­tor, © increas­es crime, (d) sends a larg­er share of the dimin­ish­ing gross domes­tic prod­uct to the fleet­ing con­cept of secu­ri­ty with­in the present construct.
We need a new con­sti­tu­tion that reflects the Jamaican peo­ple’s needs today and for centuries.
We need to extri­cate our­selves from the colo­nial shack­les still on our brains as we remain teth­ered to Britain for no rea­son oth­er than being afraid to be independent.
We need new laws that man­date no zinc fences any­where as we encour­age our peo­ple, regard­less of their finan­cial stand­ing to learn to live in an open and free society.
Only when we take these rather sim­ple steps will we begin to see a reduc­tion in the num­ber of vio­lent crimes com­mit­ted in our country.
No plan will be a panacea or a sil­ver bul­let against what has been decades in the mak­ing, speak­ing of the entrenched crime situation.
Nevertheless, we need a cit­i­zen-focused plan that con­sid­ers the inter­est of law-abid­ing Jamaicans over those of crim­i­nals who decide to engage in a life of crime.

MY CRIME PLAN

(1) Strong penalties for violent crimes.

The penal­ties present­ly in place for vio­lent crimes, includ­ing mur­ders, are far too lenient and offer pre­cious deter­rent effects, if any.
Additionally, to clear court dock­et back­logs, the gov­ern­ment has devised poli­cies that offer mur­der-accused and oth­ers a 50% reduc­tion in their sen­tence in exchange for a guilty plea.
To begin with, the sen­tences hand­ed down for mur­der some­times are as low as sev­en (7) years; a 50% reduc­tion takes it down to 312 years. If the accused is already in cus­tody because he was­n’t giv­en bail, they receive con­sid­er­a­tion for time served. Using this met­ric, a per­son final­ly con­vict­ed of mur­der may walk free from incar­cer­a­tion on the day they have been con­vict­ed of the crime.
In response to his sen­tenc­ing pat­terns in west­ern Jamaica, one of the judi­cia­ry mem­bers said the fol­low­ing. “If a rich man’s son “com­mits a crime, they expect lenien­cy,” but if a poor man com­mits a crime, they expect me to send him to prison.”
The judge cit­ed pro­ba­tion reports as being vital in play­ing a role in the sen­tenc­ing process. He argues that when the reports are looked at in some cas­es, many of the young boys involved had been involved in sport­ing activ­i­ties, includ­ing foot­ball. “You have to res­cue them,’
he said.
This judge spoke about mur­der­ers he released back into soci­ety after they were con­vict­ed, some­times on mul­ti­ple mur­der charges.
Here is an unelect­ed judge that is not answer­able to the peo­ple sup­plant­i­ng the already lax penal­ties in the laws with his idea of jus­tice. This must come to an end.

(2) Truth in sentencing.

Murder should car­ry a penal­ty of twen­ty-five (25) years on the low end and the high-end life with­out the pos­si­bil­i­ty of parole.
Judges should only be giv­en dis­cre­tion when vio­lence is used to cause some­one’s death when there was no intent. As in manslaugh­ter. For exam­ple, two peo­ple fight­ing, one push­es or punch­es the oth­er, who falls, hits his head, and dies.
In such a case, a judge may use their dis­cre­tion if the offend­er does not have a ver­i­fi­able vio­lent past on record.
The police cit­ed hun­dreds of ver­i­fi­able cas­es in which mur­der­ers and oth­er felons were released back onto the streets after they were arrest­ed. In most cas­es, offend­ers are charged with mur­der, and some­times sev­er­al counts of mur­der are grant­ed bail. Once released, they con­tin­ue on their mur­der spree, which usu­al­ly ends when they con­front the police with guns blazing.
The idea that judges see their roles as social work­ers instead of the fol­low­ing prece­dent as stip­u­lat­ed in paragraph(3) above demon­strates the need for manda­to­ry min­i­mum sen­tences for cer­tain crime cat­e­gories, effec­tive­ly remov­ing that func­tion from the hands of judges. The break­down of law and order and the gen­er­al law­less­ness in the coun­try are direct­ly attrib­ut­able to the lax, com­plic­it, cor­rupt, and incom­pe­tent jus­tice sys­tem led by the Islands judges who refuse to fol­low precedent.
Instead of fix­ing that prob­lem as police offi­cers have been demand­ing for decades [a prob­lem I com­plained about over two decades ago while I was a serv­ing police offi­cer], they con­tin­ue blam­ing the police for com­plic­i­ty while ignor­ing this glar­ing problem.


(3) Mandatory Minimum sentences for violent crimes.

The sen­tences applied for mur­der and oth­er crimes of vio­lence are insuf­fi­cient to con­vey that vio­lence will not be tol­er­at­ed. As such, vio­lence has become almost the only con­flict res­o­lu­tion tool used by cit­i­zens who no longer fear the con­se­quences of their vio­lent actions.
Some peo­ple talk about human rights when­ev­er the sub­ject of penal­ties is being dis­cussed for vio­lent offend­ers as if their vic­tims are not enti­tled to con­sid­er­a­tion or have the right to life and free­dom from violence.
Our crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem [must] be focused on the rights of crime vic­tims and law-abid­ing cit­i­zens over the rights of crime producers.
Pass laws that pro­tect the pop­u­la­tion and allow the apol­o­gists to do what they do ‑apol­o­gize and lob­by on behalf of murderers.

(4) Remove from the control of judges the sentence violent gangsters receive.

This sub-sec­tion is direct­ly relat­ed to sub-sec­tion 2 & 3 and is, for the most self-explanatory.


(5) Mandatory minimum of 25 years in prison and a maximum life without the possibility of parole for murder

See sub-sec­tion (2)


(6) No bail for accused murderers.

The bail act stip­u­lates that a defen­dant may be refused bail if he is like­ly to(a) re-offend, (b) like­ly to abscond and © like­ly to inter­fere with wit­ness­es. Despite these strong points for refusal of bail, the judi­cia­ry con­tin­ues to allow vio­lent mur­der­ers back onto the streets after arrest, with dev­as­tat­ing con­se­quences to inno­cent, law-abid­ing cit­i­zens under the guise that bail should not be used as punishment.
When a judge advances this argu­ment, it becomes clear that the life of the accused is more impor­tant than the vic­tims they are accused of tak­ing. This must stop.


(7) Speedy trial for murder accused.

The law guar­an­tees an accused per­son­’s right to a speedy tri­al. A speedy tri­al is cen­tral to the rights of per­sons accused of a crime and the aggriev­ed party.
It isn’t easy to make the case that the Jamaican state has ful­filled that guar­an­tee to per­sons it takes into custody.
The Justice Ministry has embarked on ill-advised mea­sures to free up court dock­ets, ulti­mate­ly aimed at speedy future trials.
I’m not con­vinced that allow­ing mur­der­ers to walk free if they do not receive a time­ly tri­al is the way to fix this problem.
But then again, the sys­tem was not built to care about crime vic­tims’ rights.
Because this plan espous­es no bail for the mur­der accused, a speedy tri­al is a crit­i­cal under­pin­ning of the former.


(8) Change criminal-focused strategy to victim-focused.

Every per­son has a right to be treat­ed with respect even when arrest­ed and accused of com­mit­ting a crime. The idea that a per­son is inno­cent until proven guilty is not an aca­d­e­m­ic or the­o­ret­i­cal con­cept but a fun­da­men­tal right that gov­ern­ments must respect.
Even con­vict­ed crim­i­nals enjoy cer­tain but not all, rights they had pre-con­vic­tion. The fact that crim­i­nals do not enjoy the same rights they had before they com­mit­ted crimes seems to be lost on leg­is­la­tors because of pow­er­ful and influ­en­tial lob­by­ing efforts from spe­cial inter­ests in JAMAICA.
Lost in the shuf­fle is the fact that there are vic­tims and their fam­i­lies whom every­one for­gets who suf­fer due to the crimes their assailants com­mit­ted against them.
At every turn, there are pon­tif­i­ca­tors and self-aggran­diz­ing, self-appoint­ed experts advo­cat­ing for mur­der­ous crim­i­nals. The Government has a sacred duty to pro­tect the rights and safe­ty of the Jamaican people.


(9) Create national security policy based on Jamaica’s unique needs, not what foreign interests want.

Jamaica has woven itself into a web of inter­na­tion­al treaties, mak­ing it almost impos­si­ble to gov­ern itself. A tru­ly inde­pen­dent nation has no oblig­a­tion to sign on to every treaty and con­ven­tion it sees to seem a part of the crowd.
A nation [must] exam­ine each treaty and con­ven­tion to see whether or not the needs of its peo­ple are best served.
A new con­sti­tu­tion would allow the Jamaican peo­ple to say through a bal­lot mea­sure whether it approves or dis­ap­proves of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment, for exam­ple, and not be dic­tat­ed to by a court of the colo­nial master.
No inde­pen­dent demo­c­ra­t­ic nation should give away its right to self-gov­ern by sign­ing on to inter­na­tion­al treaties and con­ven­tions that are anti­thet­i­cal to the good of its people.


(10) Invest heavily in criminal investigation techniques.

Two of the more effec­tive things that a police depart­ment can do to reduce crime are (1) deter would-be crim­i­nals and (2) have the capac­i­ty to find and pros­e­cute those who do com­mit crimes.
Jamaican law enforce­ment has demon­strat­ed that it can bring crim­i­nals to jus­tice if giv­en the prop­er train­ing and tools to do the job. However, the inter­est of the force and the Jamaican cit­i­zens have not been served as it should for decades, as the JCF has been starved of the train­ing, resources, and remu­ner­a­tions it needs to get the job done.
The JCF, as a law enforce­ment agency, through­out its exis­tence, has not demon­strat­ed or shown the prop­er respect detec­tives deserve. Detectives are not com­pen­sat­ed or pro­mot­ed com­men­su­rate with the val­ue of their work.
I know that the same argu­ments could be made for the entire force, and I may be some­what biased, hav­ing served in crim­i­nal investigations.
Nevertheless, those who served in crim­i­nal inves­ti­ga­tions know it is not a depart­ment where shifts and clock-watch­ing matter.
The gov­ern­ment must show respect to crim­i­nal detec­tives and give them the respect and reward they deserve.

(11) Hire more judges that were former prosecutors.

This plan has com­po­nents that would remove cer­tain func­tions from judges’ purview. To effec­tu­ate bet­ter out­comes with greater clar­i­ty, the gov­ern­ment should, as a mat­ter of pol­i­cy, hire more lawyers who come from the pros­e­cu­tion side of the aisle to become judges.
Even with inef­fec­tive legal penal­ties for the most seri­ous crimes, judges con­tin­ue to mock the crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem through polit­i­cal and cor­rupt means.
From Parish courts to the Supreme court, judges and’ jus­tices’ con­tin­u­al­ly act as defense attor­neys to the most dan­ger­ous killers brought before the courts.
Not only are they act­ing as defac­to lawyers for the defense, but they also have, over the decades, gone out of their way to be dis­re­spect­ful and hos­tile to police offi­cers and prosecutors.

(12) Build Prisons.

Whenever gov­ern­ments decide to build pris­ons, it cre­ates a flur­ry of heat­ed con­ver­sa­tions for and against them. However, gov­ern­ing is dif­fer­ent from talk­ing. Therefore, as the gov­ern­ment has a duty to build schools, hos­pi­tals, police and fire sta­tions, roads, and oth­er infra­struc­ture, it is also oblig­at­ed to build pris­ons to house seri­ous offenders.
Because Jamaica is forced to accept the dic­tates of its for­mer colo­nial mas­ter that it can­not hang mur­der­ers, it must ensure that they are not released back into soci­ety to cre­ate the may­hem they have been allowed to cre­ate for decades.

.

.

.

.

Mike Beckles is a for­mer Police Detective, busi­ness­man, free­lance writer, black achiev­er hon­oree, and cre­ator of the blog mike​beck​les​.com.

The Mongrel Judges Who Are Turning Mass-murderers Loose In Jamaica…

Every day we talk about these fuck­ing retard­ed ass­holes sit­ting as tri­ers of facts, pre­tend­ing to be judges in our country.
Let me first name this asswipe.
Bertram Morrison.

This is the fuck­ing retard Bertram Morrison who gave a dou­ble mur­der­er 12 years with eli­gi­bil­i­ty for parole after ten years… and I might add a mon­ster who was pre­vi­ous­ly arrest­ed on firearms charges. So it is safe to say the mag­got killed sev­er­al more peo­ple before he was caught.
These are the crim­i­nal-lov­ing shit­hous­es that are destroy­ing our country.
YouTube player

Here is a report from the Jamaica Gleaner

The Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions (ODPP) has revealed that the Westmoreland man today sen­tenced to 12 years in prison on two counts of mur­der had two pre­vi­ous con­vic­tions for ille­gal pos­ses­sion of a firearm.

Linden Powell, 21, was on August 21, 2019, sen­tenced to 18 months impris­on­ment at hard labor on each count of the firearm offenses.
Today, Justice Bertram Morrison sen­tenced him to 12 years in prison for the January 2017 mur­der of Oral McIntosh and anoth­er 12 years for the March mur­der of Ida Clarke, both in Westmoreland.
Both sen­tences are to run at the same time and Morrison ruled that Powell should become eli­gi­ble for parole after 10 years behind bars.
In a state­ment today, the ODPP revealed that after pass­ing down the sen­tence, the deputy direc­tor of pub­lic pros­e­cu­tions indi­cat­ed on the record that when the plea was being entered, the Crown had rec­om­mend­ed a sen­tence of life impris­on­ment on each count of mur­der with eli­gi­bil­i­ty for parole after 21 years “The learned judge respond­ed by say­ing he would be pro­ceed­ing with this sen­tence,” said a spokesper­son in the state­ment. The deputy direc­tor then told the court that the sen­tence of twelve years impris­on­ment would shock the pub­lic’s con­science giv­en the nature of these offens­es. However, Justice Morrison main­tained the sen­tence of 12 years impris­on­ment at hard labor with 10 years before the accused becomes eli­gi­ble for parole. The pros­e­cu­tion then decid­ed that it would appeal the sen­tence. In October this year, pros­e­cu­tors were giv­en a lim­it­ed right of appeal after Parliament passed the Judicature (Appellate Jurisdiction) (Amendment) Act 2021 and the Judicature (Parish Courts) (Amendment) Act 2021. The leg­is­la­tion came into effect on November 2, legal insid­ers dis­closed. Powell is one of six men who were found not guilty of var­i­ous breach­es of the anti-gang leg­is­la­tion dur­ing the Kings Valley gang tri­al in July last year.

What pos­si­ble ratio­nale could there be for a judge.….….any judge to pre­side over a dou­ble mur­der tri­al in which a defen­dant is found guilty, or plead guilty of mur­der­ing not one but two peo­ple and hand down a sen­tence of 12 years with the option for parole after ten (10) years?
These are the dirty, dirty, dirty, crim­i­nal sup­port­ing ass­holes that are destroy­ing our coun­try. These are the dirty left­ists who have tak­en it upon them­selves to sin­gle­hand­ed­ly sub­vert the will of the mass­es of the Jamaican people.
Am I mad?
No, not yet!!!

.

.

.

Mike Beckles is a for­mer Police Detective, busi­ness­man, free­lance writer, black achiev­er hon­oree, and cre­ator of the blog mike​beck​les​.com.

Cop Fired 9 Times Into The Back Of A Wheelchair-bound Man Killing Him…

When a Kenosha Wisconsin cop Rusten Shensky delib­er­ate­ly and cal­cu­lat­ing­ly placed 7 shots into the back of an unarmed Jacob Blake last year. Many folks with a con­science thought that those actions were so uncon­scionable and inde­fen­si­ble that there was no way that Rusten Shensky would not be sent to prison for the remain­der of his life for the betray­al of his oath, and for being a rot­ten excuse of a human being.
Those folks were wrong. Rusten Shensky was inves­ti­gat­ed by oth­er cops who said noth­ing to see here it is total­ly cool to shoot some­one in the back.….….. In fact, it is per­fect­ly fine to shoot anoth­er human being in the back as many times as you feel is nec­es­sary, on one condition.
You must be wear­ing the uni­form of an American police officer.
And just so you know those of you who tend to believe that the United States Justice Department is real­ly about jus­tice you may want to recon­sid­er that mind­set. The Justice Department looked at the shoot­ing of mis­ter Jacob Blake who will nev­er walk again and decid­ed, we looked at the evi­dence and we don’t see any­thing here either, move along folks”.
Jacob Blake is Black.
Rusten Shensky who is white was returned to the streets to kill and maim again.

Rusten Shesky

The shoot­ing of Jacob Blake in that fash­ion set off a firestorm of protests in Kenosha Wisconsin and across the state and country.
Out of that inci­dent, Kyle Rittenhouse Supremacist-inspired AR15 tot­ing thug went to Kenosha Wisconsin from his home in Illinois sup­pos­ed­ly to counter the Black Lives Matter pro­test­ers who were protest­ing the shoot­ing of Jacob Blake.
There Kyle Rittenhouse mur­dered two pro­test­ers and seri­ous­ly injured another.
Rittenhouse was even­tu­al­ly charged for those crimes but was quick­ly exon­er­at­ed of all charges by a Kenosha jury and a judge who made it clear whose side he was on.
At the time of the uncon­scionable shoot­ing of Jacob Blake by a cop who is sup­posed to under­stand restraint and the com­mit­ment to pro­tect life many peo­ple, (whites) choose as usu­al to cre­ate jus­ti­fi­ca­tion for the rep­re­hen­si­ble actions of the cow­ard­ly cop.
Those jus­ti­fi­ca­tions ranged from the eye-rolling, to too dis­gust­ing to dig­ni­fy. The thing about those jus­ti­fi­ca­tions is that from one end of the spec­trum to the oth­er, they were all influ­enced by the race of Blake and Shensky.
This brings me to a quote I have bor­rowed through­out the years that I have been a writer.

First, they came for the social­ists, and I did not speak out — because I was not a socialist.

Then they came for the trade union­ists, and I did not speak out— because I was not a trade unionist.

Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out — because I was not a Jew.

Then they came for me — and there was no one left to speak for me. (Martin Niemöller).
The mur­der­er and his rapa­cious and uncon­scionable defend­ers will use the deceased man’s past to cre­ate jus­ti­fi­ca­tion for his mur­der and they may well pre­vail in a sys­tem in which police are allowed to sum­mar­i­ly be judge, jury, and executioner.
I say take the guns away from these ani­mals and see how many of them resign; that I believe, is the best way to bring san­i­ty to this state of madness.

THEN THERE IS THIS

YouTube player

Harrowing footage caught the moment an off-duty Arizona cop work­ing as a Walmart secu­ri­ty guard shot a 61-year-old man in a wheel­chair nine times in the back, killing him — after the dis­abled man alleged­ly shoplift­ed. The offi­cer, Ryan Remington, was on assign­ment at the Walmart in Tucson on Monday when an employ­ee alert­ed him about 6 p.m. that a cus­tomer in a motor­ized wheel­chair had swiped a tool­box, KGUN report­ed. The employ­ee caught up with the sus­pect, iden­ti­fied lat­er as Richard Lee Richards, and asked him to show a receipt in the park­ing lot. “Instead of pro­vid­ing the receipt, Mr. Richards bran­dished a knife and said, ‘Here’s your receipt,’” Police Chief Chris Magnus said in a state­ment, accord­ing to CNN.

61-year-old wheel­chair-bound Richard Lee Richards, bla­tant­ly mur­dered by a cop who shot him nine times in the back…

The chief said Remington, a four-year mem­ber of the Tucson police force, also fol­lowed Richards while “attempt­ing to gain his coöper­a­tion” and sur­ren­der the blade. “Mr. Richards refused to com­ply, and instead con­tin­ued to head through the Walmart and Lowe’s park­ing lots,” Magnus said. “According to the Walmart employ­ee, Mr. Richards said, ‘If you want me to put down the knife, you’re going to have to shoot me.’ A sec­ond offi­cer then joined Remington at the scene, where they warned the sus­pect not to enter the Lowe’s but he again report­ed­ly ignored the commands.
The graph­ic video shows Richards begins to enter the store as Remington tells him, “Do not go into the store, sir.” He then opens fire at the sus­pect, who slumps over and crum­ples to the ground after being hit nine times. Remington is then seen hand­cuff­ing the man, who is not moving.

To be clear, I am deeply dis­turbed by Officer Remington’s actions, his use of dead­ly force in this inci­dent is a clear vio­la­tion of depart­ment pol­i­cy and direct­ly con­tra­dicts mul­ti­ple aspects of our use of force train­ing,” Magnus said in a press con­fer­ence Tuesday “As a result, the depart­ment moved ear­li­er today to ter­mi­nate Officer Remington,” he said, adding that the shoot­ing will be reviewed by the Pima County Attorney’s Office. Magnus said med­ical per­son­nel was called to the scene “but a short time lat­er Mr. Richards was declared dead.” Mike Storie, an attor­ney for the Tucson Police Officers Association, said: “What you saw was the police department’s edit­ed ver­sion of this event, which was cut and past­ed pieces of video of this event,” KGUN report­ed. “He thought it was appro­pri­ate at the time he used it and he still does,” Storie added, refer­ring to Remington In a state­ment, Mayor Regina Romero said: “The actions of the offi­cer involved in last night’s dead­ly shoot­ing are uncon­scionable and inde­fen­si­ble. The County Attorney’s Office has my full sup­port as they pro­ceed with their inves­ti­ga­tion. “It is moments like this that test our resolve to ensure jus­tice and account­abil­i­ty. We owe this to all Tucsonans. I ask our com­mu­ni­ty to remain calm and be patient as inves­ti­ga­tions ensue,” she added.

Murder On Red Hills Road Again (video)

YouTube player

Murder along Red Hills Road we are reli­ably informed at the same ser­vice sta­tion that two men were mur­dered last week.

What Happened To Jamaica We Once Had Leaders, Didn’t We?

The tiny Island-nation of Barbados recent­ly became a repub­lic, effec­tive­ly tak­ing charge of its own des­tiny while main­tain­ing a rela­tion­ship with Britain that is based on mutu­al respect.
This was a long time com­ing for the tiny island nation of 287,371 cit­i­zens whom many Jamaicans over the years libeled as hav­ing a colo­nial­ist men­tal­i­ty, one that was still shack­led to the old slaver, England.
Look who is colo­nial­ist now!
Or is it that despite the brava­do and bull­shit attempt at con­vinc­ing our­selves we are so bril­liant, we Jamaicans are just a bunch of weak-mind­ed descen­dants of slaves still suf­fer­ing from Stockholm syn­drome? Too dumb or too full of shit to pull the coun­try’s nose from the rear end of our sov­er­eign lady the queen? (sic).

YouTube player

Early last Tuesday morn­ing, as the coun­try took the reins to full auton­o­my, Prime Minister Mia Mottley said: “We believe that the time has come for us to claim our full des­tiny.
The tiny Island Nation decid­ed on 72-year old Sandra Mason, a for­mer Governor-General, to be its first pres­i­dent as a full free sov­er­eign nation.
Today, debate and dis­course have become action,” Ms. Mason told the onlook­ers gath­ered in the cap­i­tal, Bridgetown. “Today, we set our com­pass to a new direc­tion.
Those of you who fol­low this medi­um know that one of the things I have called for over the years is for our coun­try Jamaica to shed Britain and chart our own des­tiny. What, oh, what could Jamaica gain from main­tain­ing sec­ond-class cit­i­zen­ship under its old colo­nial dom­i­na­tor England?
How could a nation that pro­duced Bustamante, Norman Manley, Hugh Shearer, Michael Manley, Marcus Garvey, & Bob Marley con­tin­ue to be a nation of pre­tenders, men­tal­ly strick­en with the malig­nant con­di­tion Stockholm syndrome?

I, too, believed that Barbados appeared clos­est aligned to Britain and what she stands for of all the so-called inde­pen­dent English-speak­ing Caribbean nations. However, I may have missed that on a per capi­ta basis, Barbados has one of the high­est lit­er­a­cy rates in the world,96.6%, accord­ing to world pop­u­la­tion review.
That has to count for some­thing. It has to fac­tor in what new­ly installed pres­i­dent Sandra Mason said, “Today, debate and dis­course have become action’.
Not asi­nine mind-numb­ing igno­rant bang­ing on desks and hurl­ing child­ish insults at each oth­er. Not arro­gance and igno­rance, not brava­do and balder­dash, and damn sure not pre­tense that they are some­thing they are not.
Debate and dis­course becom­ing action.

In the video pre­sen­ta­tion above, I spoke of a time when every­one in the English-speak­ing Caribbean respect­ed us and want­ed to emu­late us. They did­n’t both­er cor­rect­ing out­siders who mis­took their accent for our Jamaica accent. Our coun­try was respect­ed and revered; she was con­sid­ered the cen­ter of the Caribbean; when Hugh Shearer or Michael Manley spoke, they were basi­cal­ly speak­ing for the entire region.
Today our coun­try lost most of our man­u­fac­tur­ing to Trinidad. The arro­gance of our union­ized work­ers who believed that being union­ized was a license to be rude, abra­sive, and lazy effec­tive­ly helped to dri­ve all of our com­pa­nies away to Trinidad & Tobago, anoth­er proud Republic.
Quality con­trol Worker caught sleep­ing on the job got fired, this led to work stop­page and demand that pro­duc­tion stopped until the errant work­er was reinstated.
What com­pa­ny would want to oper­ate in that kind of insane cor­rupt, and law­less environment?
Corrupt politi­cians allowed their gangs to extort the remain­ing com­pa­nies, run away util­i­ty, and oper­at­ing costs drove the final few away.

A coun­try so law­less that feed­er nations tell their nation­als to only stay in all-inclu­sive resorts if they decide to risk vis­it­ing our coun­try. Truth be told, most of our res­i­dents in the dias­po­ra choose the rel­a­tive safe­ty of the all-inclu­sive hotels when they ven­ture home. And who can blame them for tak­ing the nec­es­sary steps to secure them­selves and their families?
The down­side to the fore­gone is that the mon­ey spent in the all-inclu­sive hotels end up in the pock­ets of rich hote­liers over­seas, most of whom are [not] Jamaicans.
If the tourist dol­lar hard­ly gets any fur­ther inland than the major hotels on the shores, it is easy to see how the aver­age Jamaican is get­ting short-changed by not hav­ing access to vis­i­tors who once pur­chased arts and craft, sam­pled restau­rants and bars, and oth­er businesses.
All of this is because of the cri­sis of lead­er­ship that took over our coun­try from the ear­ly ’70s through to the present.
There may be the per­cep­tion of con­tra­dic­tion in my state­ments relat­ed to Michael Manley, whose grave errors may have pre­cip­i­tat­ed the nev­er-end­ing decline we are in as a coun­try. Still, it would be unfair to ignore Michael Manley’s con­tri­bu­tion in awak­en­ing aware­ness in Jamaicans to the need for self-reliance, auton­o­my, and agency.
Michael Manley was a walk­ing con­tra­dic­tion; his pol­i­tics was as alien to me as Mars is to earth. I do believe, how­ev­er, that had Michael Manley lived today, he would be lament­ing that his coun­try is still inex­plic­a­bly teth­ered to the skirt tails of Britain, still choos­ing to smell the foul wind from her racist backside.

Look at what we have become; a nation of pre­tenders, thieves, scam­mers, hus­tlers, mur­der­ers, rapists, and abusers of our chil­dren — a nation with the dubi­ous dis­tinc­tion as one of the most vio­lent places on our planet.
A nation where our lead­ers refuse to course-cor­rect their own mis­takes because they are too arro­gant to say,’ I made a mistake.
A nation in which we plug the port­holes, orga­nize the deck-chairs, and strike up the band on the sink­ing Titanic.

.

.

.

.

.
SHARE THIS ARTICLE

Mike Beckles is a for­mer Police Detective, busi­ness­man, free­lance writer, black achiev­er hon­oree, and cre­ator of the blog mike​beck​les​.com.

Neither Political Party Interested In Controlling Violent Criminals.…..

YouTube player

The pri­ma­ry focus of my crime-fight­ing strat­e­gy has con­sis­tent­ly been that we must throw out the old template.
We must first change our mind­set. Change our laws. Change how we respond to crim­i­nal con­duct. Change how we respond to law enforcement.
I know it is a heavy lift, but out­side of armed insur­rec­tion to course-cor­rect, I believe this may be the last best chance for the coun­try to.….…..well, course-correct.
In writ­ing about this sub­ject over the years, I have laid out strate­gies that will stop the blood­shed if the com­mon-sense approach­es I pro­posed are followed.

AUDIO VERSION OF ARTICLE

(1) Penalties for vio­lent crime that make it clear we will not tol­er­ate vio­lent crimes in our country.
(2) Truth in sen­tenc­ing, mean­ing that the sen­tence stip­u­lat­ed by the law is the sen­tence vio­lent offend­ers serve in prison.
(3) Mandator Minimum sen­tences for vio­lent offend­ers, whether they use firearms or machetes to com­mit vio­lent acts.
(4) Remove from the con­trol of judges the sen­tence vio­lent gang­sters receive.
(5) Make the sen­tence for mur­der a min­i­mum of 25 years in prison and a max­i­mum life with­out the pos­si­bil­i­ty of parole.
(6) No bail for mur­der accused.
(7) Speedy tri­al for mur­der accused.
(8) Change crim­i­nal-focused strat­e­gy to a vic­tim-focused strat­e­gy; wor­ry less about crim­i­nals, focus on crime victims.
(9) Create nation­al secu­ri­ty pol­i­cy based on Jamaica’s unique needs, not what for­eign inter­ests want.
(10) Invest heav­i­ly in crim­i­nal inves­ti­ga­tion techniques.

The ten-point plan I offered up is a sure-proof way to take back our coun­try from vio­lent mur­der­ers. In each bul­let point of the plan are strate­gies to be dis­cussed and worked out.
It is not a plan devised in the halls of acad­e­mia. It is not a plan devised from the back offices of crim­i­nal sup­port­ing cabals.
It is a com­mon-sense approach that comes from a crime fight­er who bled his shoes full of blood defend­ing the peo­ple of my country.
As I was work­ing on this arti­cle, a for­mer col­league texted me the fol­low­ing; “They would rather pay mil­lions to some con­sul­tants for some pie in the sky solu­tion, instead of get­ting it from peo­ple like you.”
“They are using crime as a polit­i­cal foot­ball whilst the coun­try is bleed­ing.”
This esteemed col­league and I entered the Police Academy on the same day in January of 1982. Unfortunately for him, he can­not walk; a gun­man’s bul­let sev­ered his spine in the line of duty years ago. He has no police detail pro­tect­ing him.

The frame­work need­ed to estab­lish Jamaica as a nation of laws is not dif­fi­cult; nei­ther polit­i­cal par­ty wants to adopt mea­sures that will stop the bloodshed.
If this ten-point plan I have been propos­ing for years is adopt­ed, it will begin the slow and tedious reduc­tion in mur­ders and oth­er vio­lent crimes that ZOSO’s and SOE’s indi­vid­u­al­ly or com­bined could nev­er hope to achieve.
So as they refuse to take coun­sel, we must ask whether they are seri­ous about reduc­ing vio­lent crimes, or are they mere­ly blow­ing smoke up the col­lec­tive ass of the people?
In a nation where there are not ade­quate laws, peo­ple do as they are allowed. It was no won­der that the Chief Justice was stunned that tele­com com­pa­nies could stymie and refuse to hand over cell phone data to the police who were legit­i­mate­ly engaged in mur­der investigations.
In the larg­er scheme of things, I would imag­ine those police inves­ti­ga­tors and the pros­e­cut­ing attor­ney could have gone to a judge and obtained a war­rant to secure the evi­dence they need­ed but there is no evi­dence that they both­ered pur­su­ing that route.

Presiding over the Klansman gang tri­al, the senior judge asked whether the pros­e­cu­tion had the call data to match what the senior police inves­ti­ga­tor tes­ti­fied to. The senior jurist was told that the tele­com com­pa­nies placed block­ades in the way of the police. Simply put, the tele­phone com­pa­nies oper­at­ing in Jamaica active­ly hin­dered the inves­ti­ga­tions into a major orga­nized crime syn­di­cate that took numer­ous lives.
How can a coun­try oper­ate this way while the morons in Gordon House bang on the peo­ple’s desks and hurl insults at each oth­er you ask?

The Chief Justice asked prosecutors:
How can there be a dif­fi­cul­ty in you get­ting infor­ma­tion from a ser­vice provider when the police are inves­ti­gat­ing seri­ous crimes? How is that pos­si­ble? So none of the ser­vice providers pro­vid­ed the call data? I want to know if that is what is being said because some­thing is seri­ous­ly wrong. Does the law per­mit them to with­hold the infor­ma­tion? Because if that is so, the law needs to be changed; some­thing is seri­ous­ly wrong here, no man, that can’t be.”
I.……rest my case…

.

.

.

.

Mike Beckles is a for­mer Police Detective, busi­ness­man, free­lance writer, black achiev­er hon­oree, and cre­ator of the blog mike​beck​les​.com.

Government Too Arrogant To Concede Crime Strategies Have Failed…

YouTube player

Incredible’, is the word that comes to mind as I watch our country implode into a failed state. ‘Incredible’, because the fix is not hard; the problem is that the country is being run by a bunch of egomaniacal narcissists who operate in an echo chamber.
They hear the echoes of their own voices and that of their sycophants, and nothing else…(The country is teetering on the brink)
This writer thanks the Police Officers Association (POA) under the leadership of the able and competent stewardship of Senior Superintendent Wayne Cameron for supporting the rank and file of the JCF in its just fight for wages they earned and deserve.

The Political Party present­ly in the oppo­si­tion is a weak knock­off of the American Republican Party. To the PNP, it is pow­er at all costs; desta­bi­liza­tion, lies, vot­ing against the stop­gap mea­sures the gov­ern­ment pro­pos­es, which by default aids the crim­i­nal gangs.
The People’s National Party would rather burn the coun­try to the ground to rule over the ashes.
It would be total­ly laugh­able if it weren’t so seri­ous that some­one like Peter Bunting, who was (a)Minister of National Security in a past PNP administration,(b) was sound­ly reject­ed by the vot­ers in his con­stituen­cy, © as min­is­ter threw up his hands and declared only divine inter­ven­tion could help jamaica’s crime prob­lem, (d) is propped up in the upper cham­ber at Gordon House as a Senator,(e) now is open­ing his mouth about crime. Peter Bunting had no clue as Minister of National Security; he has no clue now.

Make no mis­take about it Holness’ Zones Of Special Operations(ZOSOs) and States Of Emergency dec­la­ra­tions are not cred­i­ble crime-fight­ing strate­gies; he can­not be that naïve that he does­n’t know that.…..or is he?
On the oth­er hand, no one should be fooled into think­ing that the deci­sion by the PNP dum­b­ass­es in the upper cham­ber to vote against a new ZOSO has any­thing to do with core beliefs, con­sti­tu­tion­al­i­ty, or that they have a bet­ter plan that they pre­sent­ed to Holness.
The People’s National Party is the Party that allowed crim­i­nals to take over our coun­try unchecked. The PNP is still the par­ty with zero inten­tion of curb­ing the vio­lence in our coun­try. The PNP ben­e­fits from the gangs and the vio­lence that dri­ves busi­ness­es out of Jamaica.
As for this writer, I do not expect any­thing from that par­ty except thiev­ery, cor­rup­tion, more sup­port for crim­i­nals, scan­dals, and pover­ty for Jamaicans. That par­ty would be dis­band­ed and barred from con­test­ing elec­tions in Jamaica for­ev­er if it was up to me.
Twenty-two and one-half years 2212 of PNP rule for­ev­er changed and dam­aged our coun­try irreparably.
Now onto the gov­ern­ment and its failures.

Prime Minister Andrew Holness gen­uine­ly wants to see vio­lent crime go down; how­ev­er, arro­gance will not allow him to con­cede, “I total­ly fucked up when I lam­bast­ed the police.” “I fucked up when I did not lis­ten that ZOSOs & SOEs are not real crime-fight­ing strate­gies.” “I fucked up when I decid­ed to put a sol­dier in charge of polic­ing.” “I fucked up when I caused the nin­com­poops asso­ci­at­ed with the University of the West Indies to influ­ence me on how I approach crime-fight­ing with their bull­shit thesis.”
Now, look where all of that; hifa­lutin bull­shit has got­ten the country?
The prob­lem with the choice for Commissioner of Police is that Antony Anderson also gen­uine­ly wants to make a dif­fer­ence. Of course, he has been giv­en more resources, grace, lat­i­tude, and agency to bring about the gov­ern­men­t’s change. Still, the vio­lent crime sta­tis­tics tell a dif­fer­ent story.

All of the police offi­cers who knew the streets are long gone. We now have a force that is larg­er than two decades ago, bet­ter equipped (rel­a­tive­ly speak­ing);. However, they have to pur­chase their own uni­forms, afraid to do their jobs because the Holness admin­is­tra­tion and its cre­ation INDECOM will imprison them.
Police need over­sight, but I warned that there would be con­se­quences for the direc­tion Holness was taking.
The top-tiered rung of the lead­er­ship of the JCF, deputy com­mis­sion­ers, and assis­tant com­mis­sion­ers, sure­ly sound like intel­lec­tu­als when they speak. Still, they have no idea what actu­al crime-fight­ing is.
In a forum the JCF spon­sored recent­ly, I saw brava­do and balder­dash; not a sin­gle speak­er seemed to know a damn thing out­side of try­ing to sound impres­sive. Not one seemed to have a sin­gle strat­e­gy for root­ing out and elim­i­nat­ing the gangs, but they were heavy on par­rot­ing talk­ing points.
The sad real­i­ty is that the data point­ed in the oppo­site direc­tion as they par­rot­ed what the gov­ern­ment want­ed them to say.
The fact that the forum was nec­es­sary is evi­dence that the gov­ern­men­t’s strat­e­gy has failed.
So while the rank and file mem­bers were demon­strat­ing in front of the supreme court for monies earned, and oth­ers were bemoan­ing the con­di­tions they are being asked to work under in the ZOSO’s & SOE’s, their so-called lead­ers were in a pan­el dis­cus­sion par­rot­ing the admin­is­tra­tion’s talk­ing points like wound-up robot toys.

Let’s hear from the police com­man­ders them­selves.

YouTube player

Having watched the pan­el dis­cus­sion, do you under­stand why I have always said that these so-called lead­ers are incom­pe­tent lapdogs?
The offi­cers are in these zones of oper­a­tion with­out toi­lets for long hours, and here are their lead­ers telling the forum that they are well tak­en care of.
No one men­tioned that these offi­cers need to be paid the monies owed to them, which would boost morale and make them want to con­tin­ue serv­ing and sac­ri­fic­ing for the country.
Listening to them, one would walk away believ­ing that they have a crime under con­trol. Here ladies and gen­tle­men are why they do not qual­i­fy to lead the JCF. This is why they are not respect­ed. This is why crime is out of control.
ZOSO’s & SOEs move crim­i­nals from one area to anoth­er; it does [NOT] low­er vio­lent crime sta­tis­tics. I lis­tened to some ques­tions in that forum that sought to debunk points I have con­sis­tent­ly raised.
For exam­ple, the air in the bal­loon anal­o­gy; you squeeze the bal­loon, and air rush­es to anoth­er sec­tion of the balloon.
Commanders swore that it was­n’t so because the num­bers went down in the areas under occupation.….smile.
They failed to rec­og­nize that over­all crime went up in oth­er areas, borne out in the vio­lent crime statistics.
How can we achieve a seri­ous reduc­tion in vio­lent crimes with lead­ers of this caliber?
Our coun­try is in seri­ous trouble.

.

.

.

.

.

Mike Beckles is a for­mer Police Detective, busi­ness­man, free­lance writer, black achiev­er hon­oree, and cre­ator of the blog mike​beck​les​.com.

Government’s Refusal To Pay Police What Is Owed Them Is A National Disgrace…

YouTube player

Images of crowds of police offi­cers demon­strat­ing in front of the supreme court build­ing for wages they earned and deserve speaks vol­umes about the impor­tance the admin­is­tra­tion places on the nation’s security.
What jus­ti­fi­ca­tion could there be for an employ­er to refuse to pay wages earned to its employees?
A Government that refus­es to pay for work done is oper­at­ing out­side the law, plain and sim­ple. The Government has no legit­i­ma­cy to gov­ern if it refus­es to pay wages owed to any cat­e­go­ry of its workers.……it is that simple.
This is not a polit­i­cal state­ment; the gov­ern­ing admin­is­tra­tion is tee­ter­ing dan­ger­ous­ly close to becom­ing an ille­gal and dic­ta­to­r­i­al government.

Wanting to have a bet­ter under­stand­ing of the gov­ern­men­t’s intran­si­gence in refus­ing to pay this vital cat­e­go­ry of work­ers, I reached out to sources who advised me that the gov­ern­ment agreed to cer­tain con­di­tion­al­i­ties from as far back as 2008, the source con­firmed that this mat­ter is still being lit­i­gat­ed and that the Government has still not paid what is owed to the officers.
We reached out to the Ministry Of National Security for some clar­i­fi­ca­tion, but no one would speak to us because the mat­ter is before the courts. Below is a sin­gle page of the agree­ment that the gov­ern­ment reached with the rank and file of the JCF that is at the cen­ter of the dispute.

We must first acknowl­edge that the gov­ern­ment has many cat­e­gories of work­ers to deal with on salaries and ben­e­fits. It is also impor­tant to process those facts against the back­drop of a less than infi­nite pool of resources to tack­le these demands.
With that said, the con­tin­u­a­tion of a pol­i­cy by the two polit­i­cal par­ties to diss the police as a strat­e­gy should be lost on no one. It must be eval­u­at­ed as part and par­cel of the esca­lat­ing crime pan­dem­ic fac­ing the nation. It is endan­ger­ing lives, includ­ing that of police officers.
The admin­is­tra­tion has made it abun­dant­ly clear that it has scant regard for the Jamaica Constabulary Force, even as it pays lips ser­vice to the ever-esca­lat­ing vio­lent crime cri­sis threat­en­ing to engulf the nation.
It is death by a thou­sand pricks; this admin­is­tra­tion has embarked on a process of a thou­sand instances of dis­re­spect for the nation’s crime fight­ers; the nation is pay­ing a very cost­ly price for it.

Whose deci­sion is it to hold monies owed to these work­ers? Is it the per­ma­nent sec­re­tary in the secu­ri­ty Ministry? Is it the deci­sion of the cab­i­net? Or is it the deci­sion of one man.…the prime minister?
I am inclined to believe that this is a deci­sion reached by a sin­gle indi­vid­ual who has demon­strat­ed that he does­n’t care too much about the mem­bers of the Jamaica Constabulary Force out­side of their use­ful­ness to him as pho­to props.
This medi­um urges Prime Minister Andrew Holness to end this dis­grace­ful act and advis­es the Prime Minister to order that the monies owed to the mem­bers of the Constabulary Force be made ful­ly avail­able to them at the ear­li­est pos­si­ble time…
Surely the Prime Minister can­not be so bone-head­ed that he is unaware of the harm he is doing to the coun­try and Bustamante’s par­ty that he inherited.
The last time the peo­ple turned against the JLP, it took 2212 years for the par­ty to see inside Jamaica House again. If Holness con­tin­ues with these unwar­rant­ed and reck­less actions, it may be a full half a cen­tu­ry before the JLP is returned to office once boot­ed; and it will be all on his head.
The only thing he has going for him now is that the PNP is a frag­ment­ed cor­rupt pro-crime-and-vio­lence par­ty that is bereft of both ideas & leadership.
But that could change soon.

.

.

.

.

.

Mike Beckles is a for­mer Police Detective, busi­ness­man, free­lance writer, black achiev­er hon­oree, and cre­ator of the blog mike​beck​les​.com.

Fall Images In The Hudson Valley

I was sur­prised by this beau­ti­ful plant in the mid­dle of November. While most of the foliage was already gone from oth­er trees and plants, the for­est floor lit­tered with fall­en leaves, this beau­ty was adorned in all its glo­ry in a wood­ed area close to my house.

There she is in the fore­ground with an all yel­low foliage in the back­ground… I had to get these shots.

Simply stun­ning.

Bright reds or soft yel­lows fall in the Hudson Valley is sim­ply beautiful…I con­sid­er it a bless­ing to have these on my prop­er­ty to enjoy, right in my backyard.

Then there are the greens and browns.

Yup, still fall .…

The cat­a­log would not be com­plete with­out a shot of the Wappingers Creek.

This one I stole from my neigh­bor’s yard…

I hope you enjoyed view­ing them as much as I enjoyed shar­ing them with you?

Guilty Verdicts In Arbery Case

The three men charged with mur­der­ing Ahmaud Arbery have been found guilty by a Georgia jury of their peers.
A jury has returned guilty ver­dicts against all three defen­dants in the mur­der of Ahmaud Arbery in Brunswick, Georgia. Travis McMichael, who fired the fatal shots, was con­vict­ed on all counts, includ­ing the charge of mal­ice mur­der. His father Gregory McMichael and neigh­bor William “Roddie” Bryan was con­vict­ed of felony mur­der and oth­er charges

Arbery, a 25-year-old Black man, was shot to death while jog­ging in the neigh­bor­hood in February 2020. Cellphone video showed the men chas­ing Arbery and cor­ner­ing him with their pick­up trucks before a scuf­fle that end­ed with Travis McMichael shoot­ing Arbery at close range with a shotgun.

As the first guilty ver­dict was read aloud, peo­ple in the pub­lic gallery were heard audi­bly gasp­ing. Marcus Arbery, the father of Ahmaud Arbery, could be heard say­ing, “Long time com­ing,” before being told by secu­ri­ty to leave the court­room. Judge Timothy Walmsley remind­ed the court­room to remain silent as he con­tin­ued to read the rest of the jury’s ver­dicts aloud. [See below for a full break­down of the charges against each defendant.]

As he stood to leave the court­room, Travis McMichael, look­ing red-faced, mouthed the words “love you” to his mother.

The Associated Press reports the three men face min­i­mum sen­tences of life in prison. The judge will decide whether that comes with or with­out the pos­si­bil­i­ty of parole.

A sen­tenc­ing date has yet to be scheduled.

The ver­dict today was a ver­dict based on the facts, based on the evi­dence, and that was our goal, was to bring that to that jury so that they could do the right thing, because the jury sys­tem works in this coun­try,” the lead pros­e­cu­tor in the case, Linda Dunikoski, said out­side the cour­t­house after the ver­dict was announced. “And when you present the truth to peo­ple and they can see it, they will do the right thing, and that’s what this jury did today in get­ting jus­tice for Ahmaud Arbery.”

Ahmaud Arbery
Ahmaud Arbery

I nev­er thought this day would come, but God is good,” Arbery’s moth­er, Wanda Cooper-Jones, said at a news con­fer­ence after the ver­dict, adding that her son “will now rest in peace.”

The McMichaels and Bryan are also fac­ing fed­er­al hate crimes charges. A sep­a­rate tri­al in the fed­er­al case is sched­uled to begin on February 7, 2022.

The defense in the mur­der tri­al cen­tered around the claim that the three men act­ed under the state’s cit­i­zen’s arrest law — which was in effect at the time but has since been repealed — because they were sus­pi­cious Arbery might have been involved in neigh­bor­hood bur­glar­ies. They argued they had a right of self-defense against Arbery who, one defense attor­ney said, “chose to fight.”

The pros­e­cu­tion dis­put­ed that and argued that the three men had no legit­i­mate rea­son to chase down and con­front Arbery.

All three of these defen­dants made assump­tions — made assump­tions about what was going on that day, and they made their deci­sion to attack Ahmaud Arbery in their dri­ve­ways because he was a Black man run­ning down the street,” Dunikoski told the jury.

Though Arbery had gone inside a house under con­struc­tion in the neigh­bor­hood, “noth­ing had ever been tak­en from the con­struc­tion site,” Dunikoski said, and the defen­dants had no direct knowl­edge link­ing him to any crime when they began their pursuit.

He was try­ing to get away from these strangers that were yelling at him, threat­en­ing to kill him. And then they killed him,” she said, adding that Arbery was killed “for absolute­ly no good rea­son at all.”

3-arbery-suspects.jpg
L‑R: Gregory McMichael, his son Travis McMichael, and William “Roddie” Bryan are charged with mur­der in the shoot­ing death of Ahmaud Arbery in Brunswick, Georgia.GLYNN COUNTY DETENTION CENTER VIA AP/​WJAX

The jury was able to hear from Travis McMichael when he took the stand in his own defense. He tes­ti­fied that he had heard about break-ins in the neigh­bor­hood and had pre­vi­ous­ly seen a Black man “lurk­ing” and “creep­ing” around a house under construction.

He tes­ti­fied that when his father spot­ted Arbery on February 23, they decid­ed to dri­ve up along­side him and ques­tion him. As the con­fronta­tion ensued, McMichael said he was forced to make a split-sec­ond “life-or-death” deci­sion when he said Arbery grabbed for his shotgun.

It was the most trau­mat­ic event of my life,” he told the court.

But under cross-exam­i­na­tion, McMichael acknowl­edged that Arbery was “just run­ning” and did not threat­en them.

The oth­er two defen­dants did not tes­ti­fy at the trial.(CBSnews.com)

Maryland Cop Convicted Of Rape Sentenced To Home Detention

#White privilege

Maryland cop convicted of rape gets home detention pending appeal
Anthony Michael Westerman,

A Baltimore County, Maryland, police offi­cer con­vict­ed of rap­ing a woman and assault­ing anoth­er was sen­tenced to home deten­tion after a judge found that there was no “psy­cho­log­i­cal injury” in one of the cas­es, pros­e­cu­tors said Monday.

Baltimore County Circuit Judge Keith Truffer sus­pend­ed all but four years of a 15-year prison term and ordered the offi­cer, Anthony Westerman, to serve it at home, NBC affil­i­ate WBAL report­ed. In a state­ment to NBC News, Baltimore County State’s Attorney Scott Shellenberger said the sen­tence was “not appro­pri­ate” for a police offi­cer, who “should know as well or bet­ter than oth­ers the rep­re­hen­si­bil­i­ty of such an act.” “I fear this could cause rape vic­tims to hes­i­tate to report their crimes if they do not feel like they will get jus­tice,” he said. Westerman, who had plead­ed not guilty to charges of sec­ond-degree rape, sec­ond-degree assault and oth­er crimes, was con­vict­ed in August, court records show.
Read the full sto­ry here. https://​www​.nbc​news​.com/​n​e​w​s​/​u​s​-​n​e​w​s​/​m​a​r​y​l​a​n​d​-​p​o​l​i​c​e​-​o​f​f​i​c​e​r​-​c​o​n​v​i​c​t​e​d​-​r​a​p​e​-​s​e​n​t​e​n​c​e​d​-​h​o​m​e​-​d​e​t​e​n​t​i​o​n​-​r​c​n​a​6​416

Brazen Double Murder On Red Hills Rd, Shows Killers Are In Control…(May Be Inappropriate For Some Viewers)

YouTube player

We were cred­i­bly informed that this inci­dent occurred yes­ter­day at a Red Hills Road gas sta­tion. The killers drove up, stopped in a way that cuts off the pos­si­ble escape of their tar­get vehi­cle, after which one assailant exit­ed the car and opened fire, report­ed­ly killing two people.
In the first video, we see the assailants tac­ti­cal­ly dri­ve up and stop their vehi­cle. One assailant then exit­ed the vehi­cle and sum­mar­i­ly exe­cut­ed the vehi­cle’s occu­pants with cold, cal­cu­lat­ed precision.
Look at the place­ment of the rounds he fired into the vehi­cle strik­ing the victims.
These were not wild­ly fired rounds that just hap­pened to hit their tar­gets. They were well-placed, designed to strike cen­ter mass.

In the sec­ond video, you will see one vic­tim slumped on the ground as he attempt­ed to flee. This is the lev­el of brazen­ness with which these killers oper­ate with no appar­ent fear that they will be inter­cept­ed or ever held to account.

The Number One Responsibility Of Government Is To Provide Security For Its Citizens…

YouTube player

The num­ber one respon­si­bil­i­ty of the gov­ern­ment is to pro­vide secu­ri­ty for its cit­i­zens. I doubt that any ratio­nal per­son would deny that in our Island home of Jamaica, suc­ces­sive admin­is­tra­tions of both polit­i­cal par­ties have failed dis­mal­ly at that core responsibility.
Frustrated, many of our fel­low cit­i­zens have thrown up their hands because they see no change in the direc­tion of our pol­i­tics and as a con­se­quence, they are con­vinced there will be no change in the down­ward spiral.
Why are Jamaican politi­cians so in love with crim­i­nals is the ques­tion that we must all ask our­selves? The oth­er ques­tion is, if you are aligned to vio­lent mur­der­ers, are you by default a crim­i­nal yourself?
I am still hope­ful that the nation’s lead­ers will change course for the good of all of our peo­ple, par­tic­u­lar­ly the young peo­ple who deserve a future out­side of hope­less­ness, hunger, and despair.
As I point­ed out in the above video, I am still hope­ful that there is still time to change course before it is too far gone.

I under­stand the idea that if suc­ces­sive admin­is­tra­tions have been unable to offer the Jamaican peo­ple the degree of secu­ri­ty they deserve, then expect­ing them to offer oth­er basic infra­struc­tur­al devel­op­ment may be out­side what we can expect of them. I get how that can breed cynicism.
I am also con­ver­sant that oth­er dynam­ics at play impact how the nation’s lead­ers approach the crime fight.……Apathy, igno­rance, incom­pe­tence, com­plic­i­ty, involve­ment, pas­siv­i­ty, to name a few.
And then, I also under­stand that col­lec­tive­ly, the lead­er­ship of both polit­i­cal par­ties have min­i­mal knowl­edge of any­thing out­side the shores of the Island, which in turn lim­its their abil­i­ties in terms of crit­i­cal think­ing, which is cru­cial to governance.

Securing the nation can be accom­plished, but it will require a gov­ern­ment and oppo­si­tion that ful­ly eschew con­nec­tions with and to crim­i­nal net­works. It will require lead­ers who are not only untaint­ed by cor­rup­tion but who are vir­u­lent­ly anti-corruption.
Do I see the fore­gone emerg­ing in my life­time? Sadly, no! The nation needs lead­ers ded­i­cat­ed to sav­ing our coun­try from the crim­i­nal gangs that pre­vi­ous lead­ers encour­aged and nurtured.
So we must make do with the crop of lead­ers we have, cows that give a pail of milk then kicks it over.
In some cas­es, some mean well and want the coun­try to do well but have no idea how to get there.
I believe we are exact­ly mired in that quandary at present in our nation’s development.

In the mean­time, it would be a great idea for the gov­ern­ing admin­is­tra­tion to embark on some oth­er infra­struc­ture devel­op­ment projects since secur­ing the Jamaican peo­ple is out­side the scope of what it can accomplish.
How about build­ing roads and bridges all across the Island? Improving water sup­ply, elec­tric­i­ty and broad­band, will expo­nen­tial­ly reduce urban sprawl and add val­ue to peo­ple’s prop­er­ty across the country.
Investors may be per­suad­ed to invest, and Jamaicans liv­ing abroad may be inclined to con­sid­er return­ing to live with their resources which they may invest in hir­ing more young people.
Maybe, just maybe, if this approach is adopt­ed in the face of the inabil­i­ty to deal with the crim­i­nals, enough, peo­ple may return with the mon­ey and the clout to change the coun­try themselves.

.

.

.

Mike Beckles is a for­mer Police Detective, busi­ness­man, free­lance writer, black achiev­er hon­oree, and cre­ator of the blog mike​beck​les​.com.

If You Ever Wondered What Exactly Is White Privilege? This Was It.……

Shroeder and dou­ble mur­der­er Kyle Rittenhouse. Rittenhouse wear­ing a suit and tie.

Before dou­ble mur­der­er Kyle Rittenhouse was set free by a dis­grace­ful, almost all-white jury, Bruce Shrouder, the judge over­see­ing the tri­al, all but freed the fresh-faced killer.
Shrouder’s anger and dis­dain for the pros­e­cu­tion’s case and his lovey-dovey treat­ment of the youth­ful dou­ble mur­der­er Kyle Rittenhouse was one of the worst instances of white ‑pow­er dis­played in a courtroom.
But as black is to white and front is to back, Shrouder’s love affair with the defense and the ruth­less killer should only be processed against the back­ground of white judges’ racial ani­mus toward black defendants.
Those judges sen­tence black defen­dants to expo­nen­tial­ly harsh­er sen­tences than they do white defen­dants. On aver­age, a black defen­dant receives 20% more time in prison than a white defen­dant who com­mits the same offense.
In 2017 the Washington Post report­ed Black men who com­mit the same crimes as white men receive fed­er­al prison sen­tences that are, on aver­age, near­ly 20 per­cent longer, accord­ing to a report on sen­tenc­ing dis­par­i­ties from the United States Sentencing Commission (USSC).

Murderer of Ahmaud Arbery Travis McMichael tes­ti­fy­ing. The mur­der defen­dant is wear­ing a suit and tie.

According to the report, the black/​white sen­tenc­ing dis­par­i­ties have been increas­ing in recent years, the report found, par­tic­u­lar­ly fol­low­ing the Supreme Court’s deci­sion in United States v. Booker in 2005. Booker gave fed­er­al judges sig­nif­i­cant­ly more dis­cre­tion on sen­tenc­ing by mak­ing it eas­i­er to impose harsh­er or more lenient sen­tences than the USSC’s sen­tenc­ing guide­lines called for. Before that deci­sion, fed­er­al judges were gen­er­al­ly required to abide by those sen­tenc­ing guidelines. 
The Sentencing Commission’s report­ed that the black/​white sen­tenc­ing dis­par­i­ties are being dri­ven in large part by “non-gov­ern­ment spon­sored depar­tures and vari­ances” — in plain English, sen­tenc­ing choic­es made by judges at their own dis­cre­tion. Judges are less like­ly to vol­un­tar­i­ly revise sen­tences down­ward for black offend­ers than for white ones, in oth­er words. And even when judges do reduce black offend­ers’ sen­tences, they do so by small­er amounts than white offend­ers.

From Stardom To Orange Prison Jumpsuit! Handcuffed R Kelly Arraigned In Court
Singer and accused sex­u­al assaulter Robert Kelly in prison jump­suit and shackles.

If you ever won­dered what the term insti­tu­tion­al­ized racism means, this is it. It is the built-in racial ani­mus in the United States that is nei­ther sub­tle nor implicit.
This trav­es­ty of a crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem is a dis­grace­ful spec­ta­cle that should­n’t fool any­one into believ­ing it works the same for all Americans.
From Police to Prosecutors, judges, and every bot­tom feed­er on the food chain, the ani­mus toward peo­ple of col­or is a dis­grace to the entire world. It is well-oiled machin­ery of racism and racial privilege.
Shroeder insist­ed that Prosecutors not refer to the two men who died and one injured at the hands of Rittenhouse in Kenosha, Wisconsin, as victims.
His log­ic is that it is exact­ly what the jury is sup­posed to be find­ing out, the ques­tion of whether or not they are vic­tims or just … well, by his log­ic, dis­pos­able loot­ers and arsonists.
In fact, he told the defense attor­neys for Kyle Rittenhouse that they could label the two deceased arson­ists and loot­ers if they could prove it.
To an apol­o­gist of this sys­tem, this seems a fair trade­off, but to some­one attuned to the sys­tem, these were guardrails put in place to pre­serve the sanc­ti­ty of white fragility.…white innocence.
Berating the hap­less pros­e­cu­tors while act­ing as a pseu­do defense attor­ney for Rittenhouse, Bruce Shrouder laid the per­fect foun­da­tion for the coup de grâce, the not guilty ver­dict by the almost lily-white jury.

We wit­nessed a dou­ble-mur­der­er close to an unper­turbed tri­al judge as if it was the most com­mon thing in the world. Someone asked me why it is that Black defen­dants are gen­er­al­ly shack­led? Hands shack­led to chains around their waists, and feet shack­led togeth­er, reduc­ing them to shuf­fling unsym­pa­thet­ic crea­tures that must be guilty.
On the oth­er hand, we saw Rittenhouse in a suit sit­ting and talk­ing, wear­ing a suit in all his white fresh-faced glory.
To begin with, a per­son in a suit is a more sym­pa­thet­ic fig­ure than a shack­led one. The very shack­les make the defen­dant unsym­pa­thet­ic, already condemned.
So how do some mur­der­ers get to wear suits while oth­ers are shack­led like run­away slaves?
Judges grant white killers bail, so they get to wear suits to court.
Judges hard­ly grant the Black accused bail or set bail at such an incred­i­ble out­ra­geous amount that they can­not afford to post bond. So the Black defen­dant is brought to court in shack­les.…… pre­sumed guilty even before a trial.

This writer is not mak­ing a case for bail for mur­der accused, even though I respect the idea of inno­cent until proven guilty; I am mere­ly stat­ing the bla­tant inequity in the system.
On February 26, 2012, 17-year-old Trayvon Martin was gunned down in Miami Gardens by a wannabe white, wannabe cop vig­i­lante George Zimmerman.
The polit­i­cal right rose in defense of the vig­i­lante killer, and the sys­tem found Zimmerman not guilty. Kyle Rittenhouse, a vig­i­lante, left his home state of Illinois and went to Wisconsin, where he mur­dered two men and seri­ous­ly injured anoth­er. The Political right rose in defense of this killer; the sys­tem found him not guilty.
The mes­sage inher­ent in these acquit­tals and oth­ers is that more and more the polit­i­cal rights have so cor­rupt­ed the sys­tem that jus­tice may now be an idea only.
The coun­try is fast approach­ing full fas­cist mode…

.

.

.

.

.
SHARE THIS ARTICLE

Mike Beckles is a for­mer Police Detective, busi­ness­man, free­lance writer, black achiev­er hon­oree, and cre­ator of the blog mike​beck​les​.com.

Legally Justified By Laws Designed To Be Racist; Morally Reprehensible Otherwise.……

Heavily armed police continue to show up to situations that require patience & persuasion, itching for any sliver of legal justification to shed blood. The common thinking is that there is a cut-off time, and thereafter, they are legally justified to end the situation by extra-judicially murdering the person they were called to help.
How much more innocent blood will American police be allowed to shed because the twisted laws created to murder Black people with no consequences to the killers, are still being used today?

Following on in the series of Articles we have cho­sen to bring to your atten­tion, this sto­ry involves anoth­er liv­ing, breath­ing per­son just expe­ri­enc­ing men­tal dis­tress being gunned down by police.
Police offi­cers whose job is to save lives have become one of the great­est threats to the lives of Americans of col­or and those who are suf­fer­ing from men­tal distress.
In the fol­low­ing arti­cle, you will see that not only has a police com­man­der deemed it nec­es­sary to order an under­ling to end the life of the 19-year ‑old; quote, “If he does­n’t drop it, just take him. In con­junc­tion with the local District Attorney, they lied to the par­ents of the young man they mur­dered and then tam­pered with crit­i­cal evi­dence that deter­mines ‘jus­ti­fi­ca­tion.’
Police offi­cers are not sol­diers; they are not sup­posed to be ordered to kill any­one. Each police offi­cer bears full respon­si­bil­i­ty for their actions.

The idea that any police offi­cer at a scene can order that the life of some­one be end­ed because he is not com­ply­ing with police orders to drop a weapon should be fright­en­ing to everyone.
The idea that local pros­e­cu­tors would have access to video evi­dence of a crime against an indi­vid­ual, regard­less of who that indi­vid­ual is, and know that the evi­dence was tam­pered with and refuse to act even more frightening.
In the video, you will see that the account­ing of the police and the lat­er lies they told as they tried to jus­ti­fy killing an inno­cent was not sup­port­ed by the real facts as they evolved in the video.

YouTube player

The video below shows how cor­po­rate media reports these killings and gloss­es over these atroc­i­ties by accept­ing police ver­sions of those crimes.

YouTube player

Here also is NBC news report­ing on the incident.

Fatally shot by Pennsylvania State Police last year, a Chinese American teenag­er had his hands in the air when troop­ers opened fire. New videos reveal, prompt­ing calls for an inde­pen­dent inves­ti­ga­tion. The videos, record­ed by the State Police, show the final moments of Christian Hall’s life on the after­noon of Dec. 30, 2020.
Hall, 19, who had been diag­nosed with depres­sion, was stand­ing on the ledge of a high­way over­pass near Stroudsburg, in north­east­ern Pennsylvania, when troop­ers arrived. They tried to per­suade him to get down, but they backed away when they saw he had a gun — lat­er deter­mined to be a real­is­tic pel­let gun.
Video pre­vi­ous­ly released by the Monroe County dis­trict attor­ney shows Hall rais­ing his hands in the air, with the gun in one hand, after a troop­er fired bul­lets that struck the bridge.
But the final sec­onds before he was killed were blurred by author­i­ties.
https://​www​.nbc​news​.com/​n​e​w​s​/​u​s​-​n​e​w​s​/​c​h​r​i​s​t​i​a​n​-​h​a​l​l​-​p​e​n​n​s​y​l​v​a​n​i​a​-​p​o​l​i​c​e​-​s​h​o​o​t​i​n​g​-​v​i​d​e​o​-​r​c​n​a​5​626

.

.

.

.

Mike Beckles is a for­mer Police Detective, busi­ness­man, free­lance writer, black achiev­er hon­oree, and cre­ator of the blog mike​beck​les​.com.

Student Constable Murdered In Whithorn Westmoreland

When politi­cians play pol­i­tics with nation­al secu­ri­ty, these are the con­se­quences of their actions. If there is a prob­lem with a gov­ern­ment agency, get in there and cor­rect it. That is not what Andrew Holness did; he bad-mouthed the police and made them feel disrespected.
Even you are unaware of what can hap­pen as a leader, you are by default empow­er­ing the transna­tion­al crim­i­nals that find a haven in Jamaica.
Now no one is safe.….…..Not even the Prime Minister, who recent­ly point­ed to the coun­try’s dilem­ma as he ref­er­enced events in Haiti where the pres­i­dent of that neigh­bor­ing nation was mur­dered in his home.

TRAINEE-CONSTABLE MURDERED

A police stu­dent con­sta­ble was shot and killed in the Whithorn dis­trict of Westmoreland last night. Dead is stu­dent-con­sta­ble Duvaughn Brown, a trainee at the National police col­lege. Reports from the police are that at about 9:50 p.m, Brown went to a shop and was shot mul­ti­ple times. He died on the spot.
Constable Brown’s killing is in line with the esca­lat­ing mur­der rate in the Island Nation that has the nation once again find­ing itself as one of the mur­der cap­i­tals of the world.

Student con­sta­ble Duvaughn Brown

The mur­der­ers in Jamaica know that they have the Government of the defense, so they are not wor­ried about consequences.
For the coun­try’s lead­er­ship that decid­ed to bad­mouth the police before being forced to face the con­se­quences, this is the con­se­quence of their actions.

.

.

.

.

Mike Beckles is a for­mer Police Detective, busi­ness­man, free­lance writer, black achiev­er hon­oree, and cre­ator of the blog mike​beck​les​.com.