Robert Williams burst into the stationhouse on Longwood Ave. just before 8 a.m. and blasted the lieutenant, identified by sources as Officer Jose Gautreaux, in the arm, authorities said. Williams threw himself on the floor in surrender and tossed his gun away, sending it skittering across the station house floor.
“I will point out that this coward immediately laid down, but only after he ran out of bullets,” NYPD Commissioner Dermot Shea said at a press conference Sunday. Williams, 45, was released on parole in 2017 for an attempted murder conviction, records show.
Category Archives: Law Enforcement
No One Has Done More To Dismantle The Rule Of Law Than They…
Years ago I warned that our continued affinity for following blindly behind, and accepting the narrative of anyone with pale skin would probably lead to our undoing as a nation.
Sadly, despite the fact that slavery was abolished in 1834, and Jamaica gained its Independence (of sorts) in 1962, Many Black Jamaicans to this day, seem to be stuck believing that white people are superior to themselves.
This sense of dark-skinned inferiority, and fealty to Caucasians, is also extended to Mullatos and pretty much anyone, not Black.
Most of you can relate to this, what I call the (bigger-heads )syndrome.
The unfortunate truth is that like in Blacks in other parts of the world, some Jamaican Black people have resigned themselves to what they have been told about themselves, (that they are inferior to other races).
Sure, I know that this kind of talk may be offensive to some people, but sometimes these things need to be said. There is no point sweeping the garbage under the carpet and pretend that the house is clean.
In the early, to mid-1990s Jamaica’s murder rate was at what I thought at the time was an intolerably high level. I had entered the law enforcement space in 1982 believing that I could make a difference.
I was not the only one who felt that way, I know for sure guys who had left the teaching profession to become police officers, others had left other jobs including in the private sector. I for one had decided on law enforcement after they made the Jamaica school of agriculture defunct. My dream was to pursue studies in agricultural science as a career. That dream was enhanced by my high school teacher Mister Bascoe who thought he saw something in me, and gave me an all-expense-paid trip to the Jamaica school of agriculture (JSA) situated on the Twickenham Park campus. This facility now houses the Police academy.
As a teenager, I was in hogs-heaven during that visit. However, before I could get into that institution it was made defunct.
I eventually spent the better part of the year 1982 on the same campus, not as an agri-science student, but as a police trainee.
As I said initially, I was aghast at the number of homicides being committed during the time I served. In retrospect, I believe that every ‑law-abiding Jamaican would do anything to get back to where we were between the years 1982 the year I joined & 1991 when I departed the JCF.
What is evident in the numbers below is that though the murder statistics were highly intolerable and should provided no comfort to anyone, particularly because the country is so small.
The numbers were what they were, and so we worked assiduously to make the streets safe for Jamaicans and visitors alike.
It is important to reconcile that in the year 1980 during the bloodiest national elections in the country’s history, 899 were killed, largely as a result of political violence.
After the elections of 1980 murders dropped by almost 50% to 490 in 1981, this was under the JLP’s Edward Seaga’s Government. We do not have accurate numbers for the year 1985.
| 1982 | 405 |
| 1983 | 424 |
| 1984 | 484 |
| 1986 | 449 |
| 1987 | 442 |
| 1988 | 414 |
| 1989 | 439 |
| 1990 | 543 |
| 1991 | 561 |
By the end of 1988, Edward Seaga was gone from office, Michael Manley had been returned to Jamaica House by the short-memory electorate.
Prime Minister Manley was ailing not long after taking office again, and as a result, he was forced to turn over leadership of the country to his Deputy Percival Patterson by 1992.
What happened in Jamaica afterward, is up to anyone’s interpretation, those paying attention can come to their own conclusions.
One thing is certain, it is that Percival Patterson became the only Prime Minister in Jamaica’s history to be sworn into office for a fourth term, consecutive or otherwise.
The People’s National Party occupied Jamaica House for an unprecedented 181⁄2 years between 1988 and 2007.
The murder statistics below are reflective of those four terms and beyond.
| 1992 | 629 |
| 1994 | 690 |
| 1995 | 780 |
| 1998 | 953 |
| 1999 | 849 |
| 2000 | 887 |
| 2002 | 1045 |
| 2003 | 975 |
| 2004 | 1471 |
| 2005 | 1674 |
| 2006 | 1340 |
| 2007 | 1574 |
| 2008 | 1601 |
| 2009 | 1680 |
| 2010 | 1428 |
| 2011 | 1125 |
| 2012 | 1097 |
| 2013 | 1200 |
| 2014 | 1005 |
| 2015 | 1192 |
| 2016 | 1350 |
In the September 2007 general elections, Bruce Golding eeked out a marginal win for the JLP, breaking the PNP’s stranglehold on Jamaica House. Murders which seemed to have taken on an even more ominous trajectory in the same year continued through 2008 and 2009 before taking a dive in 2010.
The over 200 fewer killings in 2010 than 2009 is attributed to the actions the security forces took to annex the JLP stronghold of Tivoli Gardens to the rest of the country.
The southward trajectory continued even after the JLP was ousted from office as a result of Bruce Golding’s handling of the Christopher Duddus Coke extradition request by the United States.
A closer look at the numbers reveals a rather telling story. In the numbers is the appearance that a cultural shift occurred.
Something happened during those 181⁄2 years that undeniably changed the way Jamaicans viewed the sanctity of life, or should I say, for many Jamaicans life was no longer a thing of value.
What I do recall is that the Jamaican people were told that quote; “anything a anything, run wid it”.
Out of that wink and nod by the Patterson Administration to criminals to do as they please, was a resultant massive escalation of killings.
Those were not political killings as had obtained during the 1980 election cycle.
Those killings were gang-related and were largely attributed to the criminal underworld murdering people who had refused to bow down to their extortion demands.
During this time not a single detective was trained by the Patterson administration for over a full decade. As rampant criminality escalated, the police became more ineffective. Patterson who seemed to have hated Detectives issued through his lackeys in the JCF hierarchy, a decree that all police officers were to be back in uniform.
By that decree, Percival James Patterson effectively gave criminals carte blanch to do as they please without consequence.
The JCF is still reeling from the harm done to it and the country as a result of the Patterson government.
Another significant event occurred during that period. A mass smear campaign against the hard-working members of the JCF who were keeping the murderers on the run was initiated. It was executed across the board with precision-like mastery.
Literally, every police shooting was branded as an extrajudicial killing in the media.

It was a masterful stroke of genus initiated by the thugs who ran the innercity communities. Those communities had become veritable incubators, producing a never-ending supply of young men ready for a life of crime.
The media in total fealty to the campaign of smear, willingly gave a platform to the throngs of manufactured mourners who turned out to mourn every police shooting.
Throngs of women gave exact eye-witness accounting of how those events occurred contrary to police accounting of events.
Never mind that many of those shootings occurred in the dead of night, or early in the morning when they could not have been present and clearly were lying.
No one bothered to check the veracity of those stories, no one bothered to take notice that it was the very same faces who claimed to have seen each and every shooting in the respective communities.
The murderers who operated under the sanitized name of (Area Leaders) given them by the media and the self-styled NGOs like the Peace Managemen Unit operated by Horace Levy, had all but taken over.
The PMI and other groups that had sprung up supposedly in the fight to protect civil rights, were essentially running interference for the Gangsters.
When the police designated a certain gang as such, Horace Levy refuted the police designation and claimed they were not gangs at all, but [corner crews].
The grossly understaffed, poorly paid, unsupported, poorly trained, grossly under-equipped police department was on its own.
The Patterson destruction of the Police department and the rule of law was complete.
Between the slew of foreign-funded groups like JFJ that had sprung up and the false information being bandied about, foreign publications like the [Guardian] and others engaged in a feeding frenzy.
They Blared out insidious headlines like “JAMAICAN POLICE FINALLY BEING MADE TO ACCOUNT”.
Tragically for Jamaicans, not a single one of those entities care about the bloodshed occurring today, except to highlight their home country’s travel advisories to their nationals wishing to travel to Jamaica.

Not only had the gangsters seized the initiative based on the support they were getting from all quarters, but they also went on the offensive by using the proceeds of their ill-gotten wealth to import more guns and ammunition into the country.
Communities were solely run by these overlords, none more powerful than Christopher Dudus Coke.
By now Lotto scamming and other trans-national crimes, including human trafficking( et al) had now found their way into the arsenal of the Islands criminals.
Battered bruised and confused, members of the JCF began to look for the exits. The force not only could not keep the people it had, but it was also unable to replace those who were heading for the exits.
In all of the foregone, no single individual had been more impactful in changing contemporary Jamaica than a mullato pediatric doctor named Carolyn Gomez.
Gomez created a group she named Jamaicans For Justice, (JFJ). Like the white angel she was, Carolyn Gomez convinced herself that it was her calling to ride in and save Jamaicans from the police who were supposedly killing everyone premeditatedly and extra-judicially.[sic]
It was not hard for Gomes to gain traction, she has pale white skin and she is a doctor to boot.
Jamaicans, even some of whom had sent their daughters and sons to risk their lives to keep the country safe, fell hook-line-&-sinker for the smear campaign against the police.
That is not to suggest by any stretch that the police are without bad actors. Like any police department, the JCF has always had its share of incompetent and corrupt cops.
This reality was not anything closely related to what was being promulgated in the media. Nevertheless, by then, an expansive phalanx of anti-police agencies had sprung up in the space.
Anti-police demagoguery had now become the nation’s largest growth industry, outside what the criminal underworld was doing.

Anti-police demagoguery now had a recognizable face, a white face, a face Jamaicans could not for once believe may be wrong, or have ulterior motives.
Simple concepts like (esprit de corps) the spirit of brotherhood, that we were taught we needed, each one look out for the other, something critically necessary in police work was slandered and demonized.
The nation’s political leadership bought into the defamation, so too did the inept police hierarchy. Esprit de corp was now a blue wall of silent criminal acquiescence. It was gone.
What the Jamaican people clamoring for Gomez and JFJ never bothered to find out was where exactly was the funding coming from?
They did not draw the line when Gomez jetted off to Washington DC to the Inter American Commission on Human Rights, with the names of hard-working police commanders whose jobs it was to keep crime under control in tough depressed communities like Western Kingston and Saint Andrew Southern.
Those officers were branded as extrajudicial killers by Gomez and JFJ without a single scintilla of evidence.
Other bottom feeders like (FAST), Families Against State Terrorism one of the many human rights groups had joined the fray to protect the Jamaican people from the extra-judicial killers in police uniforms.
The struggling police department tried to hold down crime even while it was losing its members to the gangster’s guns. This same police department according to FAST was for all intents and purposes A terrorist group.
Merriam’s: definition of the word “Terrorism”, the unlawful use of violence and intimidation, especially against civilians, in the pursuit of political aims.
The poor police department that may have been a lot of things was never this.

Carolyn Gomez, Horace Levy, and the others continued with the tarring and feathering of the Police Department, too pitiful to defend itself the department absorbed the body blows without fighting back.
The Government did nothing to defend the police,
and so the violence producers stepped up their game. By the time Bruce Golding took over the country the police department was so battered, demoralized and depleted, the damage was already done.
Golding was to add the coup de grâce, INDECOM was born.
Today murders are trending dangerously high, it harkens back to the period in 2002 when murders topped a thousand for the very first time.
That period included the twilight of Patterson’s régime, through the March 2006 Portia Simpson Miller take over as Prime Minister, through to the Bruce Golding tenure.
What the homicide numbers portend is that the endemic violent crime has incubated, taken hold and metastasized under Percival Patterson.
It continued unchecked under Portia Simpson Miller and Bruce Golding’s leadership and even under Andrew Holness’s truncated first tenure as Prime Minister.
On 5 December 2011, Andrew Holness was defeated at the polls by Portia Simpson Miller turning back Holness’s bid to gain his own mandate after succeeding Bruce Golding who resigned in disgrace.
For Portia Simpson Miller it was a political vindication of sorts, winning her own mandate after she was beaten by Golding during her truncated tenure, having taken over from Patterson.
On 25 February 2016, Andrew Holness would defeat Portia Simpson Miller in national elections called by Miller.
Holness too had been vindicated politically, he had won his own mandate.
The unfortunate fact of the matter is that former Prime Minister Simpson Miller does not deserve credit for the southward trajectory of violent crime which occurred on her watch.
The single defining event of the security forces storming Tivoli Gardens in 2010 caused a drastic reduction in murders and other violent crimes.
That event demonstrates how violent criminals should be handled as long as the security forces are resolute and are in it for the long haul.
The answer to the nation’s murder problem is right there in the 2010 security forces response to Christopher Coke’s militia.
Violent thugs ran away and scattered like the vermin they are. However, once they realized that the Simpson Miller government was more intent on playing politics with the issue by setting up the Kangaroo Tivoli Inquiry, the dispersed criminals who were laying low in rural communities attached their tentacle into those communities.
Jamaica by then had a nationwide Gang problem, no one in the Simpson Miller administration would do anything about it.
It is now the single largest driver of the nation’s murder problem.
Carolyn Gomez would later be exposed for who she truly was, but the damage was already done.
Others like Horace Levy,.….……oh, they are still there, like termites eating away at the woodwork of our country’s rule of law.
Yup, the [bigger heads], the mulattos and the uptown crew, they damn sure have made a mockery of our country and the people who placed their trust in them.
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Mike Beckles is a former Jamaican police Detective corporal, businessman, researcher, and blogger.
He is a black achiever honoree, and publisher of the blog chatt-a-box.com.
He’s also a contributor to several websites.
You may subscribe to his blogs free of charge, or subscribe to his Youtube channel @chatt-a-box, for the latest podcast all free to you of course.
If The Govt And Judiciary Do Not Care About Crime, Prosecutors And Police Should.
Not having worked in law enforcement for a long time, I am restrained in my comments as it relates to specific protocols and individual cases before the courts.
Nevertheless, I cannot help but wonder about the number of cases before the courts, (serious cases) in which criminal defense attorneys are able to make successful no-case submissions.
If there is enough evidence for a competent prosecutor to present a case to the courts for trial, how can that case end up being tossed by a magistrate or judge for lack of evidence?
The default response is usually to blame the police, I get that, but these cases are given to prosecutors who are all lawyers.
I assume they have to read the case files, look at the evidence, see what is missing, (if anything), talk to investigators to see how outstanding bits of evidence may be secured in time for the trail, and tighten up whatever loose ends may exist.
These are not examples of police incompetence, they are prosecutorial incompetence.
“There is no greater task given any man, than to bring the murderer of the innocent to justice.“
That line stuck with me, it was a line delivered by Instructors to the small class of young officers, of which I was a part, during Detective training at the Police Academy, the year was 1991.
All these years later, one of the most burdensome thing for me, is to know that there are murderers walking around among law-abiding citizens having taken innocent life/lives.
In a perfect world, we expect that all murderers will be brought to justice, at least that’s my expectation. We live in a world that is far from perfect, but that does not preclude us from striving for the best that we can do. Which brings us to the quality of the prosecutors.
They are the ones who are supposed to vet the cases they are presenting to a judge or jury. How can they not say to investigators, “could you go back and secure this, and this bit of evidence before we go forward”?
Whenever possible, it is always better when investigators sit with prosecutors and go through the evidence before making an arrest.
By doing so Police do not find themselves backed up against the clock to either charge or release an arrestee.
There is no denying the fact that the Island’s criminal defense lawyers are hardly any better than the criminals they defend.
It is also well known that the majority of the magistrates and judges are woefully inadequate when it comes to the fair and equitable dispensation of justice. Simply put, the Islands judges are not generally on the side of crime victims.
Like so many other areas of civic life, the Island’s triers of facts have not demonstrated that they understand the harm violent criminals are causing the society.
With that said, poor case preparation is the prerogative of the prosecuting Attorneys and police investigators, not judges and defense lawyers. Even in cases presented to the courts which were investigated under the new enhanced anti-gang legislation, we see dangerous criminal accused, one after another, peeled off from the list of accused on trial, and let go by the courts.
Since the Government and the Judiciary do not care enough about the nation’s crime emergency, prosecutors and police must.
In one of the most shocking displays of investigative and prosecutorial incompetence, three people, including a former soldier, were freed of murder charges on February 6th, after their lawyers made successful no-case submissions on their behalf.
The case involved the killing of Oshane Burke on September 15, 2009. Eleven years after the police arrested one accused at the body-disposal site justice delayed was justice denied.
Oshane Burke was employed to former JDF soldier Kareem Campbell, and Nadine Moore, who operated a business. They were charged with the murder of Burke along with an employee, Damion Smith, whom the crown allegedly conspired to kill Burke for stealing cash and bottles and liquor from Campbell and Moore.
The body of Oshane Burke was allegedly found with multiple stab wounds along the Port Royal main road, where a police patrol team spotted a man acting suspiciously in close proximity to it.
Prosecutors used the man as it’s star witness, but the witness admitted in court that bloodstains were found on his clothes when he was apprehended by the police, and that he attempted to flee on the approach of the officers.
There was no evidence led as to whether the blood was that of the decadent, even though that would have been one of the easiest things for the prosecutor to nail down from the start.
According to local reporting, [the defense also brought to the prosecution’s star witness’s attention that he had told one of the police officers on the spot that he never meant to commit the crime. He denied telling the police this. However, the police gave evidence to the contrary.
If the police testified that the witness admitted to the crime, how could they not have charged him as the principal killer?
If he was the actual killer, why would they bend over to make him a prosecution witness in order to haul Kareem Campbell, Nadine Moore, and Damion Smith into the net?
It seems that investigators and prosecutors gambled on getting everyone they could and ended up losing everything.
As such, four potentially guilty accused may have been set free by the courts when all should have paid for their crimes.
This is not the way that participants in crime are supposed to be handled.
It seems to me that if prosecutors had charged the witness with the murder and offer him a lighter sentence, it is quite possible that they would have nailed the other accused and they would have nailed him as well.
Worst-case scenario, even if the three other accused, who were able to pay for high profile criminal defense, were able to beat the case, the man caught on the scene would have paid for the murder of Oshane Burke. A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush.
Oshane Burke may have been less than an ideal human-being/citizen, none of us is perfect, and so no one deserves to be murdered and discarded like garbage, while the killers are allowed to walk free.
The killers have the system on their side, it is time that those tasked with bringing the murderers to justice remember the charge, ““There is no greater task given any man, than to bring the murderer of the innocent to justice.”
Mike Beckles is a former Jamaican police Detective corporal, businessman, researcher, and blogger.
He is a black achiever honoree, and publisher of the blog chatt-a-box.com.
He’s also a contributor to several websites.
You may subscribe to his blogs free of charge, or subscribe to his Youtube channel @chatt-a-box, for the latest podcast all free to you of course.
The Evidence Was Clear, Officers Not Trained/Perpetuating A Monumental Fraud On The Public…
Over the years we have all seen evidence that the police are timid, unsure, and unprepared for what they are facing on the streets.
I have personally asked the police for evidence that the incidents we see of the police acting like keystone cops, is not indicative of poor training. Time and again we have been told that training is top-notch.
I have consistently pushed back at that notion, having served and having seen the training. Moreover having had to create my own protective mechanisms, I was absolutely sure that young officers are not being remotely properly prepared for the streets.
In yet another example of its old plantation mentality, the Jamaica Constabulary Force is demonstrating that despite ad-hoc cosmetic changes, the JCF is still the same decrepit and dysfunctional old house that cannot stop the water seeping in.
Blustery, bullying and sensible sounding explanation have replaced blustery, bullying and dumb sounding explanations.
Sure, the leadership of the Force has more degrees today, but are they any smarter, are they any more educated than in the past? Their explanations sound more plausible but the truth of the matter is that it is the very same bullshit wrapped in a shinier package.
Student Constables in training in batches [121 and 122] have become restive, because they have no idea when they will be allowed to graduate or (passed out) from their long training.
According to the trainees they completed four months of training and have been sent into divisions from July 2019.
According to the student constables, at the time of their enlistment, they were told that they would be doing four months basic training and four months in several divisions across the island, in addition to three weeks preparing for graduation.
To date, they are still working in the police divisions across the country, without having completed their training, without a police officer’s salary and they have no idea when the situation will end.
Now I gotta tell you, I did not know that the salaries of student constables are less than that of a graduated constable.
I do not recall that being the case, but they may have made those changes on the backs of these poor young people who have stepped up to serve their country, while duplicitously keeping them from graduating to maximize exploiting them.
Now consider that the JCF cannot find quality recruits to fill the ever-changing demands of the force. Also consider that Jamaica has one of the lowest officers to population ratio anywhere in the world, which puts the lives of Jamaicans in danger and makes the job of the police that much more dangerous, and the risks to their persons exponentially greater.
Also, consider that Jamaica is one of the most violent nations in the world, and that the murder rate is the second-highest in the world.
Consider that approximately 600 officers resign from the force each year, and that number does not include those retiring, or those who are fired.
When all of the foregone is considered, the question becomes why would the JCF exploit and abuse the young people who have stepped forward to serve their country by using these archaic tactics which clearly places them at a disadvantage on so may levels?
The information emanated from a letter written by one or more student constables who are concerned that they are in limbo and the police department is not giving them the answers they are entitled to.
The constables outlined just how uncertainty is negatively impacting their lives.
Welcome to the JCF young people,[sarcasm].
In an article I wrote a few months ago, I repeated that given a chance I would take the young officers and dump the entire high command, with the exception of a few here or there.
In the manner that has become the modus operand of the JCF, the leaderships pushed back on the claims of the young officers to be, arguing that there are no financial constraints preventing their graduation as some have speculated.
Said the [plantation owners], (sorry), I meant the high command;
“These batches [121 and 122] were initially designated to be passed out in December of 2019.
They were trained at the staff college for an initial period of four months, after which they are sent to the training division for a four-month period of training in the live environment. It is after this period which they would be graduated or ‘passed out’.
“However, due to the realities of violence and crime facing the country, coupled with the challenges to law and order in our main urban centers, the JCF and – more importantly – the nation needed them to remain deployed. Their continued deployment carried over into the new year as the conditions on the ground remained largely the same.”
So here is the reality, from July to February is roughly 8 months. The sounds you hear, that’s me slapping my chest and counting my fingers.
Add that to the four months they did at the staff college, that’s a whole year. and remember they will still have to go back and do fieldcraft, and prepare for graduation.
Why would the police commissioner not communicate the reason for the delay to these young people?
The reason is simple, as the multitude of people who have passed through the JCF has maintained all along, the agency is incompetent and it’s leadership arrogant, unresponsive and ignorant bullies who have no leadership skills.
Having young untrained people doing police work is a danger to both the public and to the students.
Over the last couple of years that the Government has initiated the policy it labels ZOSO, Zones Of Special Operations, and has included States of Emergencies as part of its crime-fighting efforts, I have argued that what the Government is doing is to use the bodies of police and soldiers as a form of crime data suppressant, rather than develop a sustainable and coherent plan of action.
This statement from the high command is proof that this is all about boots on the ground and taking a chance to see if the higher visibility of security personnel will have a deterrent effect on the crime producers.
Well, we all have seen that it doesn’t work, those of us who have worked in the business saw it for what it was, a three-card-monte.
The Government of the day has been playing a dangerous game with the lives of the nation’s most vulnerable and exposed citizens. It is no better than the incomprehensive incompetence displayed by the former PNP administration as it relates to crime.
The strategy of appeasement to the Criminal rights fraternity at the expense of the lives of ordinary Jamaicans, have had disastrous consequences.
Last year we had well over 1300 Jamaicans murdered and this year is already on pace to see an eight or so percentage point increase over last year.
What has become manifestly clear is as I have warned, the intent is to secure votes, and appease the criminal rights fraternity at the expense of the security forces. This administration, like the one prior, and the one prior, has no intention of rolling up its sleeves and taking on the nation’s criminals.
Criminals know it, and as such the killings continue.
Let me be clear, there is only one strategy that will work and that cannot be whitewashed or papered over, it cannot be couched in hifalutin legalese.
The police know who the murderers are, and so does the people in the affected communities across the country.
Administrations of the two political parties have abdicated their oath to defend the Jamaican people in order to please the United States, Canada, and The United Kingdom.
They do not want Jamaican criminals dealt with as they deal with their criminals, or even the innocent people they execute who have not committed any crimes.
At the same time, the three countries are the largest depositors of criminal deportees in Jamaica.
The so-called police watchdog groups are in fact foreign agencies dedicated to the continued slaughter of our people.
Notice that they are eerily silent regardless of the gruesome nature, or the number of people killed each day?
They don’t care, what they are focused on is ensuring that criminals are kept alive to disrupt the Island’s potential of becoming a self-sufficient developed state.
This Government has repeatedly stated that it does not want the police to kick doors in and go after criminals. This means that the administration is quite comfortable with the murderers existing as long as they do not make the administration look bad.
Please do not smile comrades. I am not making a political statement. I am making a Jamaican statement. Neither political party wants the crime epidemic in the country solved.
Unless the Police are freed up to go in guns blazing to eradicate and exterminate these killers there is no hope that this totally preventable bloodshed will dry up.
Both political parties in government and in opposition, understand that for the most part, the people being affected by the violence are the poorest citizens, politicians have police details, their rich upper Saint Andrew cabal can afford to live in gated communities with private security guards, some better armed than the police.
On the other hand, they are quite comfortable having untrained people out in the public giving the public the false impression that they are being protected.
It is a monumental fraud and it has been exposed for all to see.
Mike Beckles is a former Jamaican police Detective corporal, businessman, researcher, and blogger.
He is a black achiever honoree, and publisher of the blog chatt-a-box.com.
He’s also a contributor to several websites.
You may subscribe to his blogs free of charge, or subscribe to his Youtube channel @chatt-a-box, for the latest podcast all free to you of course.
Rapper Gets 99 Years In Prison For Hiring His Friends To Kill His Mother(video Inside)
Chicago, IL — Qaw’mane Wilson, a rapper from Chicago known as Young QC, who reportedly hired his friends to kill his own mother has been sentenced to 99 years in prison. He thought that by having his mother killed, he could get her life insurance money and savings to spend on his luxurious lifestyle.
Wilson, the only child of his mother Yolanda Holmes, was apparently used to getting everything he wanted. His mother would spoil him with clothes, jewelry, car, and even helped him get a steady job.
However, Wilson wasn’t content. He wanted to flaunt more money in hopes to get more fans as a budding rapper. To achieve that, he decided to kill his mother.
In 2012, Wilson, who was then 23-years old, hired Eugene Spencer to kill his mother. Spencer rode with Wilson’s girlfriend when he went to Holmes’ apartment to carry out the crime.
According to police reports, Spencer shot Holmes as she slept in her bed. Holmes’s boyfriend tried to stop Spencer but fell unconscious after a physical struggle. Spencer then stabbed Holmes after calling Wilson who told him, “make sure the b — - is dead.”
Wilson eventually withdrew money from his mother’s bank account. He used the cash to customize his Mustang car. At one point, he went to a local nightclub and threw money in the air for his fans to collect, as seen on a YouTube video posted on his account in May 2013.
Wilson, who is now 30-years old, recently received a 99-year sentence. Before the ruling was made, he told the judge, “I just want to say, nobody loved my mother more than me. She was all I had. That’s it.”
The gunman, Spencer, was sentenced to 100 years.
Family Of Gay Black Teen Killed Wants The FBI To Investigate
Washington Parish, LA — Ja’Quarius Taylor, a gay teen from Louisiana, was reportedly found dead near a lake with a shot to the head. His family is urging the FBI to get involved with the investigation as they believe that his death was a hate crime.
On January 12, a person who was checking the water levels of the lake called 911 after noticing an unresponsive body. An hour before the discovery, Taylor’s mother noticed he was missing and called 911 as well. Police eventually identified that the body was of Taylor, who also lived near the lake.
Taylor, who is a senior student at Varnado High School, was gay. Taylor’s family believes that because of his sexual orientation and race, his death was an anti-gay and anti-Black hate crime.
His family said they are not satisfied with the investigation being done by local authorities. They are hoping that the federal government will get involved “because of the perceived conflicts of interest and family relations the local sheriff may have,” his family said in a statement.
Taylor’s death is currently being investigated as a homicide, according to the Washington Parish Sheriff’s Office, citing that it could be investigated as a hate crime if appropriate evidence will be found.
Last week, a significant piece of evidence in connection with the crime was found by a dive team from St. Tammany Parish Sheriff’s Office in the lake near where Taylor’s body was found. The evidence, which has yet been disclosed, is being processed by a federal law enforcement crime lab.
“We have reached out to our law enforcement partners on the local, state and federal levels,” Sheriff Randy Seal told Fox8. “Our intent is to leave no stone unturned as all agencies work together to solve this senseless murder.”
Moreover, no arrests have yet been made in the shooting death. A $5,000 reward has been offered for any information about the suspect or the incident.
Many Cops Given Up On Ending Murders/Pols Stand In The Way Of Real Fight…
Every day we read about the murders in JAMAICA, yet to some, it is no big deal. “People die every day, people die everywhere”, they say.
I am a lot less sanguine about these killings than the average Jamaican. I find it appalling that life is so devalued, that people just step over the dead bodies and continue partying.
The Government and Opposition party has found in the crime issue, a useful political football. Blame the party in Government for the high levels of crime, and when it is their turn in government, they do the bare minimum, so as not to change the paradigm.
The unfortunate thing for the country is that while the two political parties play politics with this issue, the dead bodies of Jamaicans are piling up across this beautiful country.
The question for those who say people die everywhere is. “how in God’s name can you be comfortable with Jamaica being the number two country on this planet for murders and violent crime”?
How could people become so desensitized to the shedding of blood?
And then it hit me, we have already witnessed the shredding of our cultural norms, our country has become a place for gladiators and bloodsuckers.
We have already lost the soul of our nation.
Yesterday I received a phone call that sent a chill down my spine while simultaneously evoking the twin demons of anger and despair in me.
My childhood friend was murdered in Saint Mary.
He had gone to do business I was told, as he always does as he tries to make a living.
It was not enough to just rob him of his money, taking his life was necessary to satisfy their blood-lust.
Elvis Richards was born roughly a month before me, we went to school together and we competed at everything.
In class, he was a maths whizz who was very useful in helping me understand mathematical concepts.
On the field of play, whether it was soccer or my beloved cricket, we always had a blast.
He married his childhood sweetheart and I was honored to be at his wedding to see him and Gene wed.
We separated as he returned to the United States where he had earlier migrated to, and I continued on with my life, making my contribution to the crime fight in Jamaica.
Years later our paths crossed again as I moved to the United States and he went back to Jamaica. We spoke on and off, every time we spoke he would encourage me to return so that we could continue to enjoy the beauty of Jamaica as we did previously.
I always told him I would love to, but I was uncomfortable with the Government’s attitude toward violent criminals. He would laugh and say “bway das why mi live inna di kuntry.“
The last time we spoke was just before Christmas of last year. We both wished each other well.
It was the last conversation we would have. Living in the country could not save him from the demented monsters. They took his property, but it was not enough to simply take what he had. They wanted his life, and so they took that away from him as well.
A Government’s number one responsibility is to keep the people safe.
If a government fails at its primary function, nothing else it does that may be construed to be positive matters.
The government cannot stop people from killing each other. The government can put in place laws which make it abundantly clear, that if you kill another human being, you will be found, and when you are caught you will wish that you were dead.
The Governing Jamaica Labor Party under Andrew Holness has been way out on his skis, he believes that the dirty business of reining in the Islands bloodthirsty murderers can be done with velvet white gloves and top hat.
For its part the Opposition People National Party has no plan to deal with the menace, it positions itself in opposition to everything the Government does, which includes proposals on how to deal with crime.
The Honorable House of Representatives is used to display classless, boorish verbal clashes between the two groups of low-class [Mongrels] who pretend to be leaders.
Dealing with criminals is dirty work, it is not pretty, but it is necessary if Jamaica wishes to maintain its status as a functioning democratic society. By its continued refusal and lack of will, Jamaica has continued to degrade as a society, while still persisting in creating a thicker veneer of pretense.
Given time the whole façade will come tumbling down. Sure the cruise ship arrivals are cool. New all-inclusive hotels and lots of tourists crammed into protected spaces will fool the world for a little while, but the country is being destroyed from within.
Murderers know that when the rubber meets the road both political parties are hand in glove with them and that’s the bottom line.
As homeowners lose the value of their homes more and more extortionists make it difficult for people to live in once-pristine neighborhoods.
The system is more interested in jailing police officers for taking out the murdering scum, than it is in jailing the scum who take innocent life.
We need a radical change in Jamaica, that change may have to come at the expense of both the JLP & PNP.
One way or another, since both parties have positioned themselves as agencies against progress and change.
Mike Beckles is a former Jamaican police Detective corporal, businessman, researcher, and blogger.
He is a black achiever honoree, and publisher of the blog chatt-a-box.com.
He’s also a contributor to several websites.
You may subscribe to his blogs free of charge, or subscribe to his Youtube channel @chatt-a-box, for the latest podcast all free to you of course.
Bryan Sykes Barking Up The Wrong Tree…
Last week Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, Justice Bryan Sykes, berated the Police for what he sees as a perpetual problem of inefficiency and tardiness.
Chief Justice Sykes spoke specifically of what he construed to be the tardiness of police witnesses to turn up for hearings and give testimony in cases before the courts.
“I can’t understand how the police keep the same level of inefficiency day in, day out, year in, year out.”
“From I started working in the system, it has been the same issues every single day. They are late, more often than not. The court hasn’t moved, the places haven’t moved, and they can’t be in place. Thirty years, and when I talk, people get upset. This does not require special genius; all it requires is common sense.”
I’ve known Byran Sykes from the late 80s when he was a low-level clerk of the Courts at Half Way Tree; he was a rather soft-spoken, unassuming man who made mistakes like the rest of us.
Sykes did not stand out enough then to warrant attention as an enthusiastic man about prosecuting criminals.
Simply put, Byran Sykes was a regular cog in the slow, inefficient wheel of justice at the time, nothing more, nothing less.
With that said, the police department, like every public sector body, has its own share of deadwood. If Chief Justice Sykes wishes to speak the truth, he will agree that many of his colleagues in the judiciary are misfits as well. Some Magistrates and Judges should hardly be magistrates and judges in the same way that many cops should never don a police officer’s uniform.
Chief Justice Sykes blasted the police as he waited for a police witness to appear for a case he was hearing.
“This is really incompetence of the highest order. The date for trial has been set in excess of several months; this is not new. I’ve been sitting here for nearly 70 minutes now, waiting for the police to be at the remote location. That is incompetence, not even inefficiency. So if the police force cannot, after a hundred years, have a constable at a remote location, what else can they do?”
I do understand the frustration of the Chief Justice, and to some degree, I subscribe to some of his comments. On the other hand, I wonder whether or not the learned Chief Justice had bothered to get one of his aides to find out the reason the officer was late?
After all, being a police officer is no easy feat. Being a police officer in Jamaica is doubly and triply more difficult than being an officer elsewhere.
“Are we going to do any work, or are we going to sit here the whole day? I need to know what the position is. It is now 10 minutes to 11. We can’t sit here waiting and waiting and waiting with no end in sight; no witnesses, none here to testify, not one. No court can operate like that; something needs to happen. This is absolutely outrageous.” Sykes lamented.
I hope the leadership of the police department sees these comments and, for the love of God, makes a change. Not to bully the people they supervise, but to work toward greater efficiency and competence.
As the Chief Justice lamented, courts cannot operate without witnesses in place. Neither can everyone be available, and police officers fail to show. There have to be ways to make police witnesses more available to the courts when they are involved in investigations.
A senior prosecutor with the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions, in providing the judge with an update, then said:
“I cannot say when they will arrive, but about 15 minutes ago, I was told the witnesses were on the toll road.”
This means that the officer was in communication with the Prosecutor and was not shirking his obligation to be in court.
Said a far-from-pleased Justice Sykes: “So, in other words, we are just going to wait and wait and wait; same occurrence last week. This is a recurring problem, and it is not just this court; it is happening across the island.”
It happens across the Island because we have one police department which services the entire Island.
The JCF, which has one of the lowest officers to citizen ratios in the world, is overworked and underpaid.
The JCF has approximately 11,000 members but loses about 50 officers each month to attrition, and that figure does not represent people who are retiring.
According to a 2012 study by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) of seven Caribbean countries, including Jamaica, the ratio of police officers to civilians in Jamaica was one officer per 273 inhabitants, which was the lowest police presence per capita of the seven Caribbean countries surveyed (UN 2012, 95)
Let that sink in, mister Chief Justice.
It seems to me that you are barking up the wrong tree here.
At 10:58 am, a court officer indicated to prosecutors that the witnesses were in the parking lot.
At 11:04 am, the first witness was called.
The fact that the force is so short-staffed and overworked as a result of normal duties, State of Emergencies, and having to man Zones Of Special Operations is no small matter.
I have no interest in making excuses for the Constabulary, but those who work within the system must understand the limitations of the system.
Chief Justice Sykes is frustrated, there is nothing wrong with that, but the Police are also frustrated with Chief Justice Sykes’ colleagues turning loose the criminals they arrest and bring before the courts.
His colleagues commit gross malpractice daily across the country, under the guise that the bail act forces them to let loose violent offenders and that they have a duty to try to reform violent murderers.
I suppose the Chief Justice (a good man), but he should pay attention to his dirty yard before he criticizes his neighbor’s yard.
Violent murderers are given bail up to six times, killing each time they are given bail, arrested, and given bail by Sykes’ morally bankrupt colleagues.
Police officers who interact with crime generally come from a small pool of overworked officers bearing the title “Detective.” At every scene of crime, it is the very same people (in the particular division) that a criminal act is committed who show up.
Generally, those Detectives handle an inordinate amount of cases which puts them under severe pressure to cope. This limits the quality of their work; it influences their ability to show up to court on time. It also affects their family life, something the nation and Chief Justice Sykes do not consider.
Jamaica is not a developed country; as such, Sykes’ fight is not with the police department; it ought to be with Government.
Sykes cannot be a bully and take his frustrations out on the weakest link.
He either knows that these issues exist, or he is simply pontificating for the media.
Many years ago, a bully, Lensley Wolfe, who was on the high court, was hearing a case in which I was the Detective handling the case.
I arrived at the Gun court five minutes after the case was called, and Wolfe lit into me.
I am sure he believed that the fact that most Jamaicans call them [mi lord] clown suit and all, I was intimidated or afraid of him.
As he began to berate me for being late. He could not bother to call me up to speak to me respectfully. Nah, he was the mighty Judge, and I was a mere foot-soldier cop.
I stopped him dead in his tracks, “stop”! I told him.
” I am not the prisoner in the dock; if you were a judge of any stature, that is where your ire should be directed not at me.”
“I am not intimidated by you,” I told him.
He commenced arguing in a typical infantile bully-like fashion. “I am not afraid of your Federation.” I laughed in his face and informed him that I did not care about the Federation either, but I thought that the Privy Council might have something to say about his ignorance.
All of the officers in the courtroom ran outside, hands on their heads; never in their lifetime had an officer so dressed down an ignorant judge.
Lensley Wolfe was known as a disrespectful bully; many officers were afraid of him. I guess that may have played a part in my desire to bust him down to size bloody his nose.
I doubt that he ever tried to disrespect an officer after that incident.
On that occasion in question, I had worked from 7:45 am to 1:00 pm the previous day, then resumed duties at 6:00 pm, worked all through the night until 8:00 am on the morning of our clash.
I then went home to shower (remember no sleep), got dressed, then stopped at the Half-Way Tree Court’s office to submit charging information in another case.
Since the Gun court was a higher court than Half-Way-Tree Magistrates court, I had to be absent from Half-Way-Tree court in order to attend the Gun Court and, God forbid, be five minutes late.
My travels to court were in my private car; I received not a single penny from the Government for the extra hours I put in or for gas for my car.
Exhausted, I was not about to take no shit from a pompous fool in a clown costume.
Chief Justice Sykes occupies a distinguished and elevated office from which he can, and should, use his influence to effect change.
Nevertheless, as the Rt Honorable Robert Nesta Marley said, ” wid di abundance of wata di fool still ded fi turs,” with all the powers at his disposal, if the chief justice does not know how to use it, it is still power in the hands of a fool.
Mike Beckles is a former Jamaican police Detective corporal, a businessman, researcher, and blogger.
He is a black achiever honoree and publisher of the blog mikbeckles.com.
Former Cop Who Raped Woman During Traffic Stop Exposed Her To HIV
Capitol Heights, MD — Martique Vanderpool, a 30-year old former police officer from Maryland, was arrested for allegedly raping a woman after conducting a traffic stop. He is facing additional charges since it has been determined that he is also HIV positive.
In September 2019, Vanderpool stopped a woman for speeding in Capitol Heights. He allegedly forced the woman to have sex with him at the police station or else, she will be jailed. Vanderpool, who resigned from the police department after the incident, was recently indicted by a grand jury on 11 counts, including first-degree rape, reckless endangerment, misconduct in office and knowingly attempting to expose someone to HIV.
He was initially arrested in December but was later released on bond. He was arrested again on Wednesday and is now being held without bond. The authorities are worried that there could have been others who were victimized by Vanderpool. They are asking the public to report any other incident that involved him. “This conduct creates in me concerns that we have other people that may have been impacted whether as the victims of crime or in relationships with the individual in question,” Prince George’s County Police Chief Hank Stawinski said at a news conference.[BN]
Trinidad: Two Die As Gunmen Shoot Up Port Of Spain…
Just two weeks after five people were wounded and one killed in Port of Spain, the capital city recorded another multiple shooting this afternoon. This time, three people, including an 18-year-old woman, were shot.
The victims are Aaron “Max” Broomes, who was shot in the head, Shakira Mona, who was shot in her leg and arm, and Kayode “Toes” Donawa who was shot multiple times to his chest. Broomes and Donwa, died at the Port of Spain General Hospital.
Mona is listed in serious condition. A fourth man was injured as he ran from the gunfire. The Express was told that the gunfire erupted at around 2:25p.m. along Queen Street, in the vicinity of Nelson Street. The men walked to a northern area off the roadway where they opened fire on a group of people. They then returned to the Tiida and drove away. The police and emergency health services were immediately notified and the injured parties were rushed for medical treatment at the General Hospital. An All-Points Bulletin was issued and a vehicle was spotted along the Eastern Main Road, Laventille.
Officers attempted to intercept the vehicle, but its occupants opened fire on them. Officers fired on the suspects but they ran into the hills of Laventille, one of them carrying an automatic rifle. No police officer was injured during the exchange, but investigators believe that the gunmen were wounded. The vehicle was subsequently impounded. An active search is underway for the gunmen.
Where Do Politicians Get The Multi-million US$ Accounts From…
If you can’t beat them join them, or better yet, if you see that a system can be financially lucrative, cash in.
Either one of those mindsets could define the way the Jamaican crime fight has been viewed by the people with the power to change the system.
Who says crime does not pay, it is certainly not true in Jamaica?
In a country that is deemed to be 84% corrupt by rating agency [Transparency International], it is important that we understand that political corruption has served as a shining beacon for our nation’s youth to look at and decide,” we want our share.“
Most of our people have surrendered our sense of outrage on the altar of hopelessness.
We see resignation and apathy, we see a sense of surrender to the status quo. Have you noticed that the two political parties cannot find common ground on anything except on things that are bad for the country?
Things like an increase in their pay. INDECOM, no prosecutorial power for the Contractor General, etc.
The people see the outrage but they say they cannot do anything about it so they accept it is par for the course.
They see the politician who has never had a job outside of politics. Not a single day of gainful employment, yet he/she has a huge mansion and a multi-million US$ bank account.
Where did they get the money from? We can do the math, we can calculate how long a person has been a member of parliament. We know what a member of parliament earns. Where have they gotten the US$ multi-million-dollar bank account from?
No, mister and miss political toadie, we do not envy them their ill-gotten wealth, maybe you are impressed by that, but we aren’t.
If we are to build a country we must demand honesty and integrity from those who have stepped forward to lead.
It cannot be that we brush these important questions aside, then expect the very corrupt people we allowed to slide through, to represent our best interest.

How many trillions have politicians in both political parties siphoned away from the people without consequence? Yet you gleefully don your orange and green regalia and cheer them on as they lie to you and you vote them into office to steal from you some more.
They do nothing about crime, because a corrupt society that is inundated by corruption and violence will not be focused enough to pay attention to what they are doing.
They import white overseers from England supposedly to help with modernizing our police department, playing into the stereotypical perceptions that we cannot govern ourselves.
So we asked [Massa] to come down and show us how to do it. Of course [Massa] came saw and conquered, but that is what [Massa] have always done right?
He couldn’t, wouldn’t, and certainly didn’t do shit about changing the paradigm, but he sure disrespected our officers and… aah hell.….why not take a bride and monetize the carnage? Why substantively change the situation when it is easier and more profitable to benefit financially from it?
It made perfect sense to cash in on the insecurity and anxiety, why not invest in a security company?
As a nation, we keep making the same mistakes while expecting different outcomes. Our laws are heavily slanted toward the protection of criminals instead of the protection of the law-abiding.
We dutifully allow foreigners to infiltrate our very law-making bodies until now every bit of legislation that passes the parliament has foreign influence in every word.
How can a nation claim to be independent when it is incapable of governing itself?
What country in the world would accept any Jamaican interference in its law enforcement or legislative process?
Why then does Jamaica allow foreign groups and local groups funded by foreign countries to influence our criminal code?
It is so much easier and more lucrative to be a criminal in Jamaica than it is to be a law-abiding citizen. That is the reason no one bothers to tell the police anything.
The failure of leadership in both parties on the issue of crime and corruption may not be incompetence at all.
Dirty money funds political parties and enrich politicians.
The deeply entrenched crime factions in the society have deep connections uptown, the political leadership cannot bite the hand that feeds them.
That’s the bottom line, the dead and dying are mere collateral damage.
Mike Beckles is a former Jamaican police Detective corporal, businessman, researcher, and blogger.
He is a black achiever honoree, and publisher of the blog chatt-a-box.com.
He’s also a contributor to several websites.
You may subscribe to his blogs free of charge, or subscribe to his Youtube channel @chatt-a-box, for the latest podcast all free to you of course.
Palmyra Man Found Guilty Of Threatening To Kill Comm. Gary Griffith
It is shocking that in this day and age, even when criminals who make terroristic threats are caught and convicted beyond a reasonable doubt Caribbean magistrates and judges continue to turn these monsters loose to continue with their criminal ways.
Take the case of this scum who threatened to behead the Trinidad & Tobago police commissioner and also kill his wife.
The braindead magistrate gave him a slap on the wrist and turned him loose back onto the streets.
A 35-year-old Princes Town man was found guilty last Friday of threatening to behead Police Commissioner Gary Griffith and murder his wife Nicole Dyer-Griffith. Police said Mahindra Ramdath appeared before magistrate Sarah Da Silva in the Port of Spain Magistrates Third Court charged with the misuse of a telephone contrary to section 106 of the Summary Offences Act 11:02. Ramdath was found guilty and bonded to a sum of $10,000 to keep the peace and be of good behavior for two years. Ramdath made the threats when he called the E999 hotline in November 2018. The call was traced and Ramdath was arrested at his Palmyra Village home hours later. He was charged by acting Insp Rajesh Gokool of the Port-of-Spain CID. Ramdath was sent for a psychiatric evaluation at the St Ann’s Hospital after he appeared before magistrate Sanara Toon-McQuilkin in 2018.
So what happens now if this man murders Gary Griffiths, or worse kill his wife who isn’t even a police officer, would it be fair to expect an eye for an eye with this magistrate who clearly should be somewhere in a daycare center where she would be better suited?
You decide.
Miller’s Sentence Though Laudable Is Not A Touchstone For The Justice System…
Yesterday I wrote about the systemic failures that are costing Jamaicans their livelihoods, quality of life, and their lives even.
I laid out the ways that a lack of will to tackle crime head-on has stymied growth nationally and has kept the country collectively, and Jamaicans individually, from reaching their full potential.
Amidst those comments, came the news that Gangland figure, and head of the Spanish Town Klans Man criminal gang, Tesha Miller, was sentenced to 38 years and 9 months in prison for being an accessory to murder before and after the fact. Miller was found guilty of the aforementioned charges last December.
West Central St Catherine Member of Parliament, Dr. Christopher Tufton was quick to use the sentencing of Miller to argue that the Justice system is working.
One would have thought that maybe that statement would have come from the National Security Minister Horace Chang, or the supposed Minister of Justice, Delroy Chuck, but I digress.
Tufton, a Saint Catherine MP has demonstrated some character in speaking out on Miller’s sentencing, even though I disagree that it represents any kind of watershed for the success of the country’s criminal justice system. Or that it represents a signal that it is indeed working properly, even a broken clock is right twice per day.
Nevertheless, without a change of leadership in Jamaica house, this murderous thug, would likely never have been prosecuted for his crimes.
Said Tufton.….
” I have seen first-hand the burden that the scourge of crime places on Prime Minister Andrew Holness, as he seeks to find ways to remedy the country’s crime problem”.
Miller’s [criminal lawyers] have already started complaining that the sentence is unfair. And we all know that the Appellate court has a history of reversing the findings and sentences of the lower courts.
Tesha Miller has been operating as the head of the infamous Klansman gang for a very long time, every police officer who has worked in Jamaica over the last two decades ought to know about him, if they don’t, they do not deserve the title of a police officer.
Additionally, based on the level of criminality in Jamaica and the number of violent murderers running around without any consequence, this is really a tiny drop in a large bucket.
As elated as every law-abiding Jamaican may be at these developments, regardless of where they live, this is an important win for the people of Jamaica, but it is not a touchstone for the effectiveness of the justice system in Jamaica, not by a long shot.
No one talks about a striker who scores one goal per season, or a starting batsman who scores 10 runs and is bowled out time and again, placing his team in jeopardy.
If the Prime Minister is as concerned about the killings as Minister Tufton says he is, then action, is what is needed from jamaica house, not words or weeping and wailing, not thoughts and prayers.
Table legislation that has teeth and forces the opposition to vote to keep murderers in prison. If they refuse to support legislation of that sort, take the results to the people in every nook and cranny, and let them see that there is one political party that refuses to ensure their safety and security.
We need truth in sentencing. We need to have one set of laws that govern every Jamaican, rich or poor, connected or unconnected. Powerful or powerless. We need mandatory minimun sentences for violent crimes. We need politicians out of law-enforcement. We need the dismantling of the garrisons. We need to repeal the INDECOM Act and redraft a law that protects both citizens and officers alike. We need to throw out the training manual being used by the police. We need to begin the comprehensive retraining of the officers in the detective bureau. We need to educate the public, starting in the schools about the importance of obeying our laws.
These bullet-points are not a panacea to the nation’s crime problem but they represent a great place to start.
Mike Beckles is a former Jamaican police Detective corporal, businessman, researcher, and blogger.
He is a black achiever honoree, and publisher of the blog chatt-a-box.com.
He’s also a contributor to several websites.
You may subscribe to his blogs free of charge, or subscribe to his Youtube channel @chatt-a-box, for the latest podcast all free to you of course.
First Black Woman In History Hired To Lead Philadelphia Police Dept
Philadelphia, PA — Danielle Outlaw is the first Black woman ever to become Philadelphia’s police commissioner. Her recent appointment came just a few months after the department started dealing with several controversies including the involvement of its former commissioner in sexual harassment scandals.
Outlaw, who is from Oakland, previously served as chief of police in Portland, Oregon since 2017. She is now the first Black woman ever to lead the Philadelphia police department, and the second woman overall, following Christine Coulter, who served as the acting commissioner since August.
In August, former commissioner Richard Ross, who is also Black, was forced to resign when a lawsuit surfaced accusing him of ignoring sexual harassment claims of an officer against a fellow officer. He was with the department in the last 30 years and was the commissioner since January 2016.
Aside from the several cases of gender and racial discrimination and harassment in the department, the crime rate and poverty level also continued to increase, pushing the authorities to appoint a new police commissioner in hopes to curb it.
“I am very qualified to make the jump,” Outlaw said in her introductory press conference. “The issues remain the same. I am very experienced in each of them.”
Outlaw was chosen from 31 candidates, 18 of which were from the Philadelphia force. When Mayor Jim Kenney announced her appointment, many have been glad that the city chose a woman of color for the job.
“Most of us are very encouraged,” Philadelphia city councilwoman Jannie L. Blackwell told the Philadelphia Inquirer about her fellow council members. “They’re especially happy that she’s a woman — and happy of course that it’s an African American woman — but especially happy that she’s a woman.”
Federation Head Was Correct To Blast POA, Whose History Is Well Known…
michael beckles
The Police Federation which represents the rank and file police officers from constables to Inspectors have every right to vigorously defend the interests of those officers through the charter under which it operates.
As a union, the police federation cannot, and should, not be constrained by the post-colonial mindset which still guides Jamaica’s decision-makers and opinion-shapers.

For its part, the Police Officers Association is headed by Superintendent Wayne Cameron whom I believe is an exemplary officer, despite not having worked with him.
On more than one occasion I have pointed to Cameron’s leadership as Parish Commander in Portland and Saint Ann as the type of leadership senior officers should emulate.
With that said I have vociferously argued that for the most part many of the senior officers of the JCF have been dead weight.
Over the life of the Jamaica Constabulary force and in recent times, there is a treasure trove of evidence that the failures of the JCF, at least to train, supervise and retain young officers has been the failure of its senior officers.
It is incomprehensible that any person in this day and age would suggest that the young men and women at the bottom of the force are to be blamed for the problems that have plagued the force personnel-wise.
A team is judged by its leaders, it is, and has always been, the failures of the senior cadre of the force which has been problematic.
Poll any past member of the force about the reason they left the force early, and the leadership at the officer’s level will take center stage.
That anyone would pretend that the salient points raised by Federation Chairman Detective Sergeant Patrae Rowe are somehow new, unknown, or unfounded is the personification of [bull-shittery].

Some of the very members of the officer corps will attest to the laziness, incompetence, and sense of connivance, (politically and otherwise), that is inherent in that part of the force.
The high attrition in the force is directly attributable to the corrupt, malfeasance and poor leadership skills of the senior officers of the JCF.
It always has been, and will be, for a long time to come until a real merit-based system of advancement is developed and adhered to strictly. And transfers and other internal movements and disciplines are fully done according to established lawful protocols.
The fact that the two groups, the Federation and the POA, emerged from a meeting mediated by Antony Anderson the sitting commissioner, singing the same tune does not negate nor mitigate the pressing and omnipresent problems as outlined by Patrae Rowe.
Some have argued that this should have been dealt with privately.
That idea is in and of itself laughable.
The idea that the police federation sitting down with the POA and saying you need to stop with these practices of punitive transfers, stop with these bad reports on the files of people you do not like, or who you feel threatened by intellectually, you need to stop punishing women who do not want to sleep with you is beyond laughable.
Those suggestions could only come from outsiders who pretend to have a working knowledge of the JCF because they have been invited to speak at some ceremonies, or may have shared some cocktails with members of the POA and the commissioner himself, whoever that person may be at any given time.

This brings us to Orville Taylor’s article in today’s Sunday Gleaner in which he inserted his nose in this matter. Taylor a PhD. is head of the sociology department at the UWI, many of you know this place as the (Intellectual ghetto).
In reference to federation chairman Patrae Roe’s name, Taylor said, “Apparently only the E at the end of his surname is silent but Sergeant Patrae Rowe, chairman of the Jamaica Police Federation, has paddled publicly his boat upstream, supporting the commissioner but vilifying the layer of management which directly supervises him in his substantive post”.
That kind of ad hominem cheap shot is clearly what we have come to expect from these[ little ticky-ticky] ground gods who actually shape opinions on the Island.
Taylor was not done, despite sugar coating, the article as one which supports the right of the rank and file to speak out against the perennial injustice meted out to them, he showed his dirty drawers eventually.
Quote: My first question for the chairman and those who elected and support him is, what is to be achieved for the Force and its members when he takes to the public grievances, which can be addressed through dialogue and with the full force of his collective bargaining ability?
As I said if you suggest this matter should have been dealt with privately you do not know as much as you think you do, so maybe you should have less to say.
Said Taylor:
He justifiably balks about lower recruitment and training standards, promotion, conditions of work, welfare and many other issues like a good trade unionist should. Many of these misgivings resound very deeply with me. Moreover, the JCF must be seen as a difficult but yet enticing career path.
Some of the areas are directly outside of his remit. However, under the Labour Relations and Industrial Disputes Act (LRIDA), he does have locus standing to have disputes over the employment, non-employment, (non) allocation of work dismissal or suspension of any worker, within or outside of the bargaining unit of workers that he represents. Still, it is a brave analyst who would think that a subordinate, despite his external qualifications, would have the necessary tools to determine that his superiors are competent or otherwise. Simply put, Rowe stuck his neck very far out when he declared to the nation that as a sergeant of police, he is so qualified as to make astute judgments and evaluations of his senior officers, whose jobs he can only imagine or aspire to perform. It is the equivalent of a junior doctor or nurse with graduate qualifications in a medical-related field assessing the performance of the senior surgeons.
Orville Taylor’s comments, as I said, showed his dirty drawers, and to many in Jamaica who are impressed with people like him, this may seem like a really impressive retort to Patrae Rowe’s statements.
However, when you look at the article, point by point, you realize that this is just a bunch of malarky, which puts the author in a light that does him no good.
The idea that the Federation Chairman would not have the qualifications (despite his outside qualifications) to determine that his superiors are competent or otherwise, is the stupidest thing Taylor could have put forward.
Even without outside qualifications the chairman of the federation is imminently qualified to challenge members of the POA on what it clearly has been doing outside best practices.
The idea that Patrae Rowe would be criticized and not the POA demonstrates the level of mental rot that exists on important issues.
By Orville Taylor’s calculus, no one would have the qualification to be Prime Minister, since they have never been PM before.
In fact, Orville Taylor’s Article should be discarded without further thought because of its irrelevance, Taylor has never served as a police officer, therefore he clearly could not be qualified to make the points he is raising.
By this regressive calculus scientists and engineers who make monumental breakthroughs in their respective fields simply could not because it has never been done before. In fact, I have no idea why I wasted so much time on this idiotic article in the first place?
It is that kind of post-colonial neanderthal thinking which continues to impress and dominate popular opinion in Jamaica, to the detriment of solid consequential discussions on topical issues.
Orville Taylor’s article could be seen as supportive of the rank and file officers plight, but when you take a closer look, it demonstrates the same old mindset of the elitist class who clearly still believes that the children of Jamaica’s poorest people should simply shut up, sit down and do as they are told.
The fact still remains that many of the senior officers in the JCF are deadwood, which doesn’t require a Ph.D. to figure out.
The points raised by Detective Sergeant Rowe are older than anyone serving in the JCF today.
The Federation Chairman was right to blast the POA, the POA was right to respond by meeting with the Federation with alacrity.
That is to the credit of both Superintendent Wayne Cameron and Sergeant Patrae Rowe.
Mike Beckles is a former Jamaican police Detective corporal, businessman, researcher, and blogger.
He is a black achiever honoree, and publisher of the blog chatt-a-box.com.
He’s also a contributor to several websites.
You may subscribe to his blogs free of charge, or subscribe to his Youtube channel @chatt-a-box, for the latest podcast all free to you of course.
“Becoming A Force For Good”, Wait, What?
mike beckles
The Jamaica Constabulary Force, (JCF) adopted a new jingle, mantra, a new ideological catch-phrase if you will, by which it wants to be identified. It is part of the supposed restructuring and refocusing of the force and part of the so-called transformation which will propel it into a modern 21st-century law enforcement agency, of which we can all be proud.
The new phrase is .….….
“BECOMING A FORCE FOR GOOD”.
Now, those who follow these pages understand fully well why I’m writing this article. In the 155-year history of the (JCF), thousands of men and women have passed through the doors of the JCF and its fine auxiliaries.
Like the wider society, some of the members have been great human-beings others not so much and others downright criminals, more so over the last two to three decades than any other period in the forces storied history.
Like the wider Jamaican society, it is easy to understand how the quality of applicants accepted into the (JCF ) would have changed over the last three decades to include persons with not so great moral clarity and conviction.
Nevertheless, if we separate out those who entered the agency with mal-intent, from the true believers who may have been looking for a job, but after entering the agency became true believers in the cause of justice and service, the average cop gave invaluable service to our nation.
It is with that understanding that I personally find the phrase “BECOMING A FORCE FOR GOOD” to be such an affront and a slap in the face of the thousands of patriots who served the Jamaica Constabulary Force with dignity and pride of service.
Many gave their lives in service to their country, many have been seriously and egregiously injured and maimed in the process.
As a serving member, I never wavered in my commitment to the people I served, which got me a bullet in 1987.
literally, every batch of student constables that graduated from Port Royal, Twickenham Park and later the Police Academy at the latter location, has had members killed in the line of duty. My batch which graduated in December of 1982 was no different, like a military platoon in battle, far too many of my colleagues have given their lives and are now just a memory.
Every former officer has his or her own story to tell.
Many serving today also have their own story, these stories include horrifying encounters in which they faced down despotic killers, in situations in which they are outgunned.
Despite the many obstacles placed in the way of effective policing in Jamaica, the men and women who served have generally risen to the task like a phoenix and gave of their time, energy and talent, the best way they knew-how.
The (JCF) has always been a force for good. The force of yesterday has done yeoman’s work to provide security to the nation at great cost to themselves. Many members had their family lives ending up in tatters. Stress from the job devastated members’ health, resulting in early death and suicide rates far above the national averages.
Those who decided that the new mantra “BECOMING A FORCE FOR GOOD” was worth adopting, did not do so without knowing full well the connotation, “BECOMING”, added to that catch-phrase.
The word becoming, directly implies that the (JCF)of the past was NOT a force for good.
It is a cheap backhand slap at the thousands who have served that noble institution for over a century and a half.
That kind of backhand disrespect could only come from people with no sense of history, no sense of service and no sense of Esprit de corps.
In other words, it comes from fly-by-night know it all political hacks and the parachuted in protegees, who are given control of an agency in which they never served.
Unfortunately for the nation and the (JCF), many of the poor men and women serving today believe in that affront, becoming a force for good.
They repeat it without an understanding that it flies in the face of all the work that was ever done by those who came and served before them at great cost to their families and themselves.
Those who hate the rule of law, and hate the men and women who enforce the nation’s laws, knew exactly what they were doing when the arrived at ‘becoming a force for good’.
If they wanted to pay homage to the service and sacrifice of the (JCF), all they had to do was drop the word “BECOMING”.
“A FORCE FOR GOOD’ was what the JCF was always about.
No new Administration, no new Government, no new group or entity will be allowed to rewrite the history of service that we have given to nation-building.
There are many in government from the top down who pay lip service to the rule of law but have zero respect for the sacrifices of the (JCF).
They are products of a culture, and an era that simply cannot grasp the concept of the rule of law and fidelity to those principles and their importance to a stable and prosperous society.
Today’s (JCF) is better equipped, better staffed, better paid, better housed, better everything, than just over two decades ago. Yet crime has steadily increased year over year, except for the period after the security forces annexed Tivoli Gardens.
Whatever remains of law-abiding Jamaicans has better recognize real soon, that politicians come and go, but the (JCF), or some other force, must, and will always be there for the protection of the nation.
The leadership of our country has done everything possible to change the mandate of the (JCF), in essence, the force is “now a force for show”. A courtesy corps that finds it difficult to effectively execute a simple arrest.
It is not a reliable force, ready and capable, of taking on the ever-increasingly potent criminal underworld.
By dissing the (JCF) of the past, the nation’s leaders are not only spitting in the faces and on the graves of members past, but they are also pissing on the graves of the over 1300 dead Jamaicans who were slaughtered in just 2019 alone.
Mike Beckles is a former Jamaican police Detective corporal, businessman, researcher, and blogger.
He is a black achiever honoree, and publisher of the blog chatt-a-box.com.
He’s also a contributor to several websites.
You may subscribe to his blogs free of charge, or subscribe to his Youtube channel @chatt-a-box, for the latest podcast all free to you of course.
19-Year Old Woman Facing Life In Prison For Killing Man Who She Says Abused Her
Kenosha, WI — Chrystul Kizer, a young African American woman from Wisconsin, was only 17-years old when she shot and killed Randall Volar in self-defense. She says he was abusing her. But now she is 19-years old and facing life in prison if convicted.
Kizer has been charged with shooting Volar, who is white, and setting his house on fire back in June 2018. She said she did it because he abused her and sold her to other men for sex.
“She had been trying to get out of whatever arrangement that they had, and he was threatening to kill her,” said Ben Turk, who supports Kizer.
Her appointed attorney, who is a public defender, claims that she should be acquitted under the “affirmative defense” state law as she was a victim of sex trafficking. The judge, however, disagreed and said it only applies to prostitution or child trafficking cases.
Kenosha County District Attorney Mike Gravely thought of dropping the charges but he said he found the murder was premeditated and that Kizer even proudly posted about doing it on social media.
Before Volar died, he was being investigated on child sex trafficking, wherein Kizer was apparently one of the victims. However, he was killed and his body was found in his burnt house on the day he was about to be charged with child sex crimes.
Kizer is set to undergo trial next year. She could face life in prison but is trying to appeal the latest ruling.
Police Officer Facing 7 Years In Prison For Urinating On 12-Year Old Girl
Cleveland, OH — Solomon Nhiwatiwa, a 34-year old Cleveland police officer, has pleaded guilty to several charges after a disgusting incident earlier this year when he allegedly urinated on a 12-year old girl whom he tried to proposition as she was sitting at a bus station. He is facing a maximum of 7 1⁄2 years of imprisonment.
On August 16, Nhiwatiwa, who was then off-duty, allegedly asked the girl, who was on the bus stop, if she needed a ride to school. When she refused, Nhiwatawa drove off. However, he returned after a while and did the unthinkable.
According to reports, Nhiwatiwa took out his cell phone to take a video of himself while urinating on the 12-year old girl. He then drove away again.
The victim’s mother called 911 to report the incident around the same time another person in the area called to report a suspicious person looking into cars. Police figured it was the same person when DNA from the girl’s clothes matched Nhiwatiwa’s.
Nhiwatiwa was arrested and his phone was seized, but couldn’t be accessed to check its contents including photos and videos. He was since put in jail on $300,000 bond.
He recently entered a plea deal for felony charges of attempted kidnapping, pandering obscenity, disseminating matter harmful to juveniles, and endangering children. The assault, public indecency, and interfering with custody charges were dropped in exchange for the guilty plea.
Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Michael O’Malley said that because of the plea deal, Nhiwatiwa will surely be sentenced to prison and will not be able to serve as a police officer again.
“He’s now been held accountable, he’s going to be sentenced to prison,” O’Malley told Cleveland.com. “My best wishes for that young child in the future as she goes on with her life.”
O’Malley also thought that Nhiwatiwa is “clearly a sick individual” and shouldn’t have passed the psychological testing in the first place. He said, “You wonder how this individual slid through the cracks. Hopefully, we can improve the testing in law enforcement so that individuals like this never put a badge on again.”
Moreover, it was not the first time Nhiwatiwa has been involved in an absurd incident since he started working as a police officer in Cleveland in 2014. He reportedly once lost his portable radio, he repeatedly called a woman “sir” and erroneously noted her personal info, and responded late to a man lying face down in a field.
Nhiwatiwa is scheduled for sentencing on January 21.
