I totally understand how the sheer number of unsolved murders and militaristic assaults occurring in the country can cause apathy and a sense of numbness. After all what exactly can the average law abiding citizen do if there is no meaningful attempt to end the reign of terror which has engulfed the country?
The sheer volume of the killings has now become almost benign, people talk about seven killed in one assault as they would about a single case. Simply put there is a new normal, a sense that the numbers really do not matter, they have accepted that Jamaica is now at war with itself and there is nothing they can do about it.
Generally, the raw organic sounds from the streets around these killings do not get seen or heard by the Government or others in the country except for those who are lucky enough to survive the militaristic assaults on their communities. Furthermore, the macabre gruesome images from the scenes of those massacres almost never get seen by those outside law enforcement circles or those who manage to film these scenes after the massacres occur.
Ladies and gentlemen, we are at critical mass, you may not know it but we have long passed the stage where it is just a high crime rate. It is not a high crime rate there have long been bands of 20 and 30 or more heavily armed men attacking whole communities and laying siege to those communities, killing whom they wish.
These militaristic assaults from time to time pit them against the lesser armed police who do not have the resources to engage them at the appropriate levels. As a consequence, of the weaponry in the hands of the gangs, the endless supply of ammunition they possess and the uniqueness of the terrain, the outmatched, unsupported police are generally at a disadvantage resulting in gunbattles lasting for hours. Those shootouts tend to end at the discretion of the gangs rather than anything the security forces are able to counter with.
The country is in crisis. It is so because for the past several decades the emphasis has been decidedly placed on the protection and preservation of the rights of criminals rather than an unvarnished approach toward enforcing the laws. That has been the strategy of both political parties to some extent as a result of the culture they created in our country from as far back as the 1960’s. As a means to attaining and holding state power, the garrison culture was born, the delivery of huge blocks of votes was more important than the overall preservation of the country. The chickens have simply come home to roost.
It is absolutely stupid, yes stupid, to be worrying about how law enforcement treats and respond to violent mass murderers rather than ensuring that we give them the tools and supplies to uproot and eridicate them. These killers have guns, many guns, they have money, lots of it, they can amass huge amounts of mercenaries to their causes at any given time. In fact, word on the streets is that that very scenario is playing out in Westmoreland as we speak. These Gangsters are able to amass the muscle they need to lock down entire communities and kill whomever they wish without any worry or fear of the nation’s security forces.
This is happening today as we speak, it happened years ago with Zekes, it happened with Christopher Dudus Coke and there have been no lessons learned from it. We are losing Jamaica and no one is giving a shit about this dangerous state of affairs. Are the people too dumb to realize that they are been and have been fed total baloney on crime? Or are they more preoccupied with their fake uptown accents hiding behind the grill fortifications and pretending they are something they are not? What we damn sure aren’t is a developed country, so the shit for brains powerbrokers who decide public policy ought to understand that first world solutions are totally unworkable for our raw, third world situation. Yet they continue with their pretentious attitudes and it’s only the little people who are dying.
The tragedy in all of this is that speaking out about it elicits crickets from Jamaica house regardless fo which of the two lame political gangs occupies it. They don’t care, they have set a course which is persecution of the police, despite the 8 or so oversight agencies which have police oversight responsibility and the plethora of self-serving special interest lobbies which militate against the police department.
For years I have warned that this is not just crime as we once thought about it. It is a form of insurgency which requires a strategic yet militaristic response which will send a clear message that the state will not tolerate any such behavior. States of emergencies and Zones of special operations cannot and will not solve this, this is no game. Instead of using the army to go after these murderous gangs the idiotic desk bangers in the stupid parliament sit and pontificate about who will oppose what emergency declaration and who won’t.
While they are worrying about the watchmen the burglars have taken over the building. Sooner or later all of this will come to a catastrophic end and out of it will emerge a new beginning. Like a Phoenix rising, life will emerge out of whatever remains, like the green foliage which emerges from volcanic ash hopefully, those who had the power to effect change but have not will be consumed in the inferno and the innocent will be spared the wrath so that life can continue better and smarter.
According to eyewitnesses a woman who had exited the Sovereign Supermarket in Liguanea St. Andrew was waiting in her SUV for security to lift the barrier so that she could exit the complex, suddenly stepped out of her vehicle covered in blood took a few steps then collapsed.
The initial reporting indicates that the woman was hit after a man fired his weapon at a windscreen wiper and missed. There are allegations that the gunman may be a member of the security forces. More to come …
The police have confirmed that the shooter is a member of the JCF. They have also confirmed that the Bureau of Special Investigations (BSI) and INDECOM are investigating. Updated:
Having written a number of articles explaining why the Zones Of Special Operations (ZOSO) would at best be stop-gap, I believe wasting more time talking about it would be counterproductive. Nevertheless, I was not opposed to the ZOSO as a model concept, even though I was under no illusion that the nation had the resources to build out the concept to scale.
If the goal was to demonstrate that someone within the administration understood how peace and some semblance of normalcy could be returned to some depressed communities then the administration may take a bow. As a matter of urgency and national import, however, the creation of ZOSO was the equivalent of using a band-aid to stop the bleeding of a severed arm.
The incomprehensible preoccupation with using the advice of doctors, pastors, lawyers, farmers, and others to shape national security policy has had devastating consequences for the country, yet the same methodology is applied over and over with the expectation that we will end up with different results somehow.
The question of the nation’s approach to crime fighting is not necessarily about resources or the lack thereof but rather it is intrinsically more to do with a different attitude. As long as the nation’s leaders tap their elitist friends for solutions to a problem they have no solutions to, the people of Jamaica can expect a continuation of the massive loss of life which has become a staple now for decades.
As long as the Government and opposition party refuses to give the police the respect it deserves. As long as they continue to make laws which are demonstrably harmful to the police. As long as they continue to create agencies and support the anti-police activities which go on in some of its own ministries. And as long as the emphasis is on the protection of the rights of murdering scumbag criminals then expect that this Island will continue to denigrate into a totally failed state.
The problem of the educated dunces added to the regular dunces who all have become sudden experts on crime policy and crime fighting is the Achilles heel of this beautiful country. The obsession of these leaders far exceeds the stupidity of those mythical Trojans who paid attention only to the magnificence of the horse never bothering to see what was inside, allowing the Greeks to enter their city and eventually overtake them while they slept.
A friend remarked days ago that its just a matter of time before some of the heavily armed mercenaries invade the parliament and take over the country. I thought about it and in fact, I have been warning about that very same prospect for years. The events of 2010 ought to have been a warning but alas both the Government and opposition party has doubled down on stupid. If past is prologue then my friend may very well be onto something, maybe it is not such a bad idea to simply wait and see then.
If a farmer wants to produce good crops he has to undertake a series of events before he can reap the rewards of a bumper harvest. He must first clear the brush which may be the laborious process of countless strokes of many machetes, or it could be the scorched earth assault using gramaxone or some other brand of weed killer. Then comes the plowing, sometimes furrowing, irrigation, fertilization, sowing seeds, waiting, and a lot more. The idea that we can administer community policing in areas which are lawless without first doing the hard work as in the case of the farmer, is something only the elites who graduate from the intellectual ghetto would conceptualize out of their stupid self-absorbed asses.
The evidence is clear that the type of criminals who are committing the heinous acts they commit are not ordinary criminals and that the approaches to combatting them cannot be ordinary approaches. Yet the Government is constrained by its own creations from empowering the security forces to go after these sub-human killers/. And so it requires special emergency declarations for the security forces to go after and eviscerate them and in the process send clear and unequivocal messages that their actions will not be tolerated.
Imagine the FBI or any other agency of government hampering local and state law enforcement agencies from going after dangerous killers? The mass killings in varying parts of the tiny Island defies the stupid conventional lack of wisdom that crime is everywhere. The Security forces finally neutralizing mass killer Nico Samuels is a testament to what the security forces face daily, yet there are those who question the police version of events even though the killers themselves brag about their trade without care.
This is what Jamaica has become and it is not getting better. The focus is not on the rule of law it is an upsidedown cart dragging the asses type of approach which favors those who kill and their sponsors and the vermins and parasites who have relevance as a result of their anti-police stances.
A Jamaica Defence Force Corporal 33-yr old Jeremy Campbell who was attached to the Engineering Regiment at Up Park Camp died suddenly on Tuesday at about 7:10pm. The deceased and a female companion were at Rajmaville Gaming Louge in Spanish Town where they had drinks and were reportedly later engaged in intimate relations.
The soldier reportedly went into the bathroom after which his companion heard a loud noise consistent with someone falling and went to investigate, upon which he was found lying face up in the bathtub.
The deceased was a licensed firearm holder, his Glock 9mm pistol and fourteen (14) 9mm cartridges were found lying beside his body on arrival of the police.. The scene and body was processed by Det. Sgt. R. Robinson and Det. Cons. P. Miller of the St. Catherine Scenes of Crime unit.
It is incredibly hard for Law Enforcement officers to make a difference in Jamaica’s culture of lawlessness and wanton murder. It is so because truthfully the present Administration lacks the backbone to break the back of serious crimes as a result of local lobbies which are being funded by International powers who have a heavy hand in the determination of how our laws are made and enforced.
Listen to directives here.
As a small developing country, Jamaica is heavily dependent on foreign countries for funding. This makes it incredibly vulnerable to the dictates of those lender nations which generally do not always have our nation’s interest at heart. In fact, to suggest that large and powerful countries do not have the interest of smaller dependent nations at heart may be stating the obvious, nations do not have friendships they have interests.
As a young cop back in the 80’s to early 90’s I recall the emphasis placed on the eradication of Ganga because the United States wanted it so. Today Jamaica is flooded with guns which are largely seeping in from the very same United States. The US has almost infinite resources, yet we have not seen a sustained or meaningful campaign to stem the flow of guns into the Caribbean region or Jamaica in particular.
Simply put, the United States is a large manufacturer of guns and those guns have to be sold. In fact, despite the wanton slaughter of innocent children in what should be the sanctuary of their classrooms across America, there is zero effort to stop the mass production and proliferation of guns unto the streets of the United States.
For these reasons and others, I ask the JCF rank and file officers to take the directives outlined in the audio above seriously as they go about their daily routines. It is clear that what is called the high command which passes for the leadership of the hard-working men and women is incapable of giving leadership. These simple yet critical processes are tried and proven to work if they are applied professionally, consistently and across the board.
Adhering to these established protocols are known to work in reducing risk to officers and simultaneously eliminating dangerous confrontations between citizens who are pulled over by police.
According to sources reputed Gang leader Nico Samuels o/c Bowsa was killed in a confrontation with the security forces on Saturday in Ironshore St James.
No mas Bowsa
Reports are that the security forces went to a house as part of an operation and were greeted with heavy gunfire. Sources say two police officers have been shot and injured and two weapons recovered in the process.
The exchange of gunfire has been reported to have gone on for over two hours.
Reports from the police indicate that the decomposing bodies of four 94) unidentified males were found buried in three separate shallow graves in Pennants Clarendon. The discovery coincides with the mysterious disappearance of four St Elizabeth farmers whose rented car was found abandoned on Foga Road, Four Paths in Clarendon more than a week ago. The four missing men were reported to be Kevon and Clinton Hutchinson, cousins from Rocky Hill district and Shawn Thompson and Alwyn Griffiths of Schoolfield, Malvern.
The report cannot say at this time whether the four bodies are confirmed to be that of the missing men.
Police in Green Island Hanover is reporting the triple murder of a mother and her two young children April 25th. Abanique Cunningham age 38-yrs old date of birth,(dob) 23/12/78 unemployed of Dixon Wharf, Jayanna Coote 7‑yrs (dob) 9/6/2010 student of G/Island Shanique Coote 4‑yrs old (dob) 11/3/14 student both of back street basic school.
The grisly scene of the triple murder of a mother and her children.
According to sources, Abanique who is the mother of the children went to prepare them for school at the home of Paul Coote their father when a dispute developed between her and mister Coote. During the dispute mister, Coote is alleged to have chopped all three multiple times. The police were summoned and on their arrival, all three bodies were seen lying in the yard. Paul Coote was caught running away from the scene was held with a machete believed to be the murder weapon.
Scene of the triple murder in Green Island Hanover
Abanique who is reported to live elsewhere was said to be pregnant.
Police Sergeant takes the keys in the process of seizing a minibus the driver grabs the keys from the police motorcycle and walks away while threatening the officer.
The question is this where else on this planet could this happen except in Jamaica?
The problem of corruption of one kind or another exists in Jamaica as it does in every other police department in every country across the globe in which humans are the police officers. It does not mean however that we should not continue the quest for a more perfect resolution to this vexing issue. As we seek to bring greater accountability, transparency, and fidelity to public institutions.
With that said, were we to give credence to the Jamaican naysayers who criticize the police one would walk away believing that the police department is so rotten that the only solution is to scrape it all up and put it in a garbage bin to be picked up for the Riverton dump.
Sure they want you to believe that the police is totally and completely corrupt. When they tell you that, put up a hand and say “hush” to the blathering gibberish and actually look at the facts for the real story. The cynics and detractors will tell you that doing a comparative analysis is the equivalent of supporting slackness in the JCF. Of course, that kind of nonsense is a part of the cycle of unwillingness to deal with issues of this nature objectively and honestly.
The truth of the matter is that police corruption is a serious degenerative cancer which diminishes the moral high ground officers of the law must have in order to effectively do their jobs. Unlike in any other discipline, the stain and stench of corrupt police officers tend to stain and stink their colleagues with potentially greater consequence.
In the United States, for example, a cop asking an errant motorist for a couple of dollars to purchase lunch is literally non-existent, because they are not destitute or unable to find money to pay for their own lunch. That is not to say that in many cities across the United States police officers do not rob drug dealers of their illicit gains, but they are generally paid enough of a living wage so they do not have to scrounge illegally in order to survive.
A cop who ask a motorist for a bribe is an embarrassment to himself and to his department, a cop who falsifies a report and sends an innocent person to prison for a crime he never committed wrecks lives, families, and destroys communities. And so when we hold both scenarios up neither is good but one is far worse than the other.
In a perfect world, I prefer not to have an officer who pulls me over try to shake me down for money, but I would much rather a cop asks me for lunch money because he is hungry, rather than a cop who planted drugs on me because he did not like the color. of my skin. Now that we have done the parallels I hope you at least understand that in the greater scheme of things the JCF is not irredeemable,despite what the naysayers tell you.
Listen as Mike break this issue down in a simple yet honest and precise way.
BERATINGTHEPOLICE
Former Minister of National Security Robert Montague would certainly not have been my first choice for Minister of National Security at the time he was given the job. I guessed Montague realized that he did not bring much if any expertise to the job, and so he set out to learn on the job. He did stumble like we all do, but if Bobby Montague did nothing else, he certainly endeared himself to the average cop and he absolutely endeared himself to this ex-cop. Bobby Montague understood the importance of morale in a job like policing and he worked to restore morale with marked success before he was moved to a different job.
Speaking on the constant bad mouthing of the police Bobby Montague spoke to a truth that many do not want to hear in our country. The Inspectorate Branch of the JCF, Montague argues, estimates that the JCF is 5% corrupt. conversely, the darling of the elitist class INDECOM, assesses that the JCF is 3% corrupt. Now we all would like to have a police department that is 0% corrupt but since we no longer source our officers from the planet Utopia, we take the 3% and work to lower that number. So much for the notion police cannot police itself, nevertheless, that is not the point of this article. It is important to understand that unless we fix some of the structural deficiencies in the police vis-a-vis low wages, poor leadership, and lack of resources as they also exist across the wider society, corruption will persist and will be exponentially difficult to eradicate.
Former national security minister Robert Montague
As was to be expected, Bobby Montague’s call fell on deaf ears. In our country which is essentially one of the most, if not the most anti-police countries in the world, hating and berating the police guarantees instant fame and success. Given the high crime rate, the continued tearing down and disrespectful behavior directed at the police is directly tied to the trajectory of serious crimes. The Government has not led by setting an example. It has not devised a strategy for the country to follow by supporting the police unequivocally. In fact, the Minister of Justice is openly hostile to the police and the rule of law despite cosmetic appearances which seek to give an illusory effect that his ministry does.
Not only that, shockingly, there are agencies within the Government which are actively hostile to the police, something literally unseen in any other country. It defies logic that a Government would tolerate one agency actively militating against another agency of the said government. Least of all, one as critical as the agency tasked with national security.
Not only is INDECOM antagonistic to the police department, the justice ministry, under the leadership of Delroy Chuck is inherently hostile and dedicated to being injurious to the police. Additionally, the office of the public defender, another agency of the government is openly hostile, that agency is conspicuously and gleefully works against the police department. The Government does nothing. It is the classic personification of an entity cannibalizing itself to the detriment and chagrin of the country and its law-abiding citizens.
Jamaican police officers
In recent times the Appeals Court ruled that INDECOM has no power under the statute to arrest police officers. That ruling also stated correctly that INDECOM must investigate and submit the findings of it’s investigations to the Director of Public Prosecutions. At the same time, the courts opined that INDECOM’s agents may arrest police officers using their common-law powers of arrests. The same powers every citizen has to arrest an offender if he/she observes a crime being committed.
The latter part of the ruling which speaks to common law arrests was indeed asinine as ordinary citizens may only arrest if they see a crime being committed. INDECOM’s agents cannot and do not observe police officers being committed in their view and so whatever arrests they may have made are illegal. Immediately after the ruling the commissioner of INDECOM, Terrence Williams argued that the ruling was a win for him and his agency as they had only arrested on common law. It is important to understand that since INDECOM’s agents cannot and have not seen police officers committing crimes then the arrests they made were illegal arrests and were a clear infringement of the constitutional rights of those officers.
Since then Terrence Williams has filed a motion to the Judicial Committee of the Privy council in England to stay the Appellate court’s decision and has reversed his original statements to the local press that the ruling was a win for him and INDECOM, stating that he spoke too soon after the ruling. INDECOM as an agency of the Government is clearly a rogue agency which does not answer to the Government or is going about this clearly with the blessings of the Andrew Holness Administration.
Justice Minister Delroy Chuck.Inherently anti-police. In no other country would a person hostile to police officers be a minister of justice or allowed in government, except in Jamaica.
Immediately after the ruling Delroy Chuck the minister of Justice jumped into the fray, stating categorically that the intent of the parliament was to give the power of arrest to INDECOM at the time the legislation was drafted. That statement cannot be true, regardless of the incompetence of the framers of the legislation, if the intent was to give powers of arrests to INDECOM, which would essentially be an act of creating another police force, the language would have been clear and unequivocal.
Since then a few legal minds have argued that investigators should not prosecute their own investigations. Despite the statement of intent coming from Delroy Chuck that he intends to see that the power of arrest is given to INDECOM, Terrence Williams has stated that he cannot wait for that to happen. This is a serious breach of protocol if ever there was one. It seems that INDECOM is operating without any oversight or supervision. A super agency answerable to no one, all while using the tax-payers money, almost $300 million of it per year, in addition to the slush of foreign money which pours into the agency’s coffers to mount legal battles and challenges in court.
PRECEDENTFORTHIS
Far from being an authority on this, I have decided to look at other countries in our hemisphere to see whether there exist any police oversight Agency which investigates arrests and does its own prosecution. In New York city the Civilian Complaints Review Board (CCRB)is staffed by lawyers who hear complaints against the city’s 36’000 plus officers but charges are referred back to the police Commissioner for disciplinary action. In cases where there may be criminal conduct by police, investigations are carried out and dealt with by the District Attorney as in all other cases.
According to the Observer.com, shockingly, the main reason police in the UK are unarmed is because the officers refuse to carry guns. They have a sensible reason for not wanting guns. Maybe Jamaican police should adopt this posture and not take on the stress of really doing policing the real way.
Every time someone is shot by the police in the UK, the case is referred to the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC). In practice, this means the officer is investigated by his professional standards body automatically and can face the sack and prosecution if it rules against him. These investigations are lengthy, stressful, and carry a huge amount of risk for the officer concerned. In fact, they are so feared that not only do the police refuse to be routinely armed, specialist firearms teams struggle to find candidates willing to do the job.
The INDECOM act was drafted and modeled after this system in the UK, the fact that Hamish Campbell is in Jamaica is a testament to that fact. Nevertheless despite all of the forgone, the Investigative Agency the (IPCC) still does not arrest and prosecute cops who are to be charged with a crime. The report went on to say quote: To be clear, police have worked out that it’s safer to be unarmed when fighting thugs and terrorists than it is to risk being hung out to dry by their leadership and the IPCC. http://observer.com/2017/04/reason-british-police-unarmed/
Hamish Campbell and Terrence Williams
Most violent crimes committed in the UK, even terrorist acts, are carried out by assailants who use knives or vehicles as their weapons of choice to kill and maim. The reason for that is that it is incredibly difficult for people to get their hands on guns in the UK, which has extremely stringent gun laws, as opposed to the US which has more guns than people and Jamaica which is awash in legal and illegal guns. For those advocating for INDECOM, it is important that there is some clarity on this issue as it relates to why that kind of oversight which may work for now in the UK, is extremely hazardous and foolish for Jamaica.
If the Government persists in allowing INDECOM to do as it pleases cops must refuse to carry guns as the British police have done. We cannot ask our officers to go out and face dangerous killers then crucify them when they use lethal force against those same killers.
Recently we have seen a few videos on various social media platforms depicting police officers trying, yes trying, to arrest suspects. I’m not here to look at what the suspect did or didn’t do but let’s look at how the lack of accountability from the police high command over the years is putting officers who are on the front lines lives in serious danger.
Blake and Anderson
In any modern police department, effective communication is extremely important as this helps to with quicker response time to incidents. When the officers go out there and step out of the service vehicle that has the radio that has direct contact with police control and other police units, you are basically on your own because you have no immediate access to control or control has no immediate access to you. When a situation gets to the point where the officers on the ground need assistance a simple push to talk requesting back up which can take less than 10 seconds can be the determining factor if a police officer loses his life while doing his job.
The videos being circulated we see where officers are in uniform doing their lawful duty and face much resistance, threat and assaults from the suspects and citizens who choose to intervene to aid the suspect evade arrest. In the USA those same Jamaicans who readily interfere and obstruct police in the lawful execution of their duties wouldn’t dare do it! No matter how “right” you think you are or even how “right” you are. They know that interference can lead to a quick combination of arrest, serious injury or death.
Now you have a boisterous crowd while you are arresting an offender if each police officer were equipped with a portable radio and the necessary attachments for easy use and flexibility and within minutes you see police units coming out of every nook and cranny people will respond to the effective presence. And yes the show of rapid force and coördination to make even one arrest then people will know to stand back. Of course, they have a right to videotape whatever they want but from a safe distance as stipulated by the officers on scene. However,you dare lay hands on the police trying to stop them from doing their job and that’s another matter.
Others will argue, oh the offense is committed against the state not against you. This kind of thought process is one of laziness and just an excuse to not do the job whoever came up with it. So if the offender committed murder should the officers put it off until a next time because the crowd says so? Police actions must be swift and decisive and this is where effective communication equipment is needed for the front line officers. This takes visionary leadership to see and push it through and it’s apparent that the powers that be do not want a coördinated and effective Jamaica Police Department. The high command can get anything they want from the government just that they have spaghetti backs and tend to feed into this anti-police rhetoric, so not supporting the police even though you are in its leadership is the order of the day.
Equipping the police department with adequate technological tools will cost but this takes strong visionary leadership. Here’s an idea: roll it out in a phased basis through a division that operates in a highly dense area and use that urban setting that the officers frequent as a baseline and see how the system handles the load and do the necessary test and diagnosis, get out the bugs and then scale up throughout the island when you get it right. The country is not short on expertise in this area. There is two major telecommunication company on the island with the right incentive would help implement such system plus its good public relations for their brand.
Contributor ( Truthteller). Contributor Truthteller has chosen to remain anonymous at this time, he is a former member of the JCF who has a wealth of experience as a police officer in Jamaica. We would like to welcome him to our talented team of bloggers who have decided to speak out on topical issues affecting our country.
When a police officer tells an offender that he is under arrest and reads him his rights, the offender must comply with the order of the officer. However, that is not the reality in Jamaica today, there have been myriads of videos circulating on social media, showing police officers being mobbed when they try to make an arrest. Some of these videos depict physical and verbal assault on police officers by people who show no respect to the rule of law.
Compounding the matter is that fact that the majority of the police officers exhibited ignorance and ineptness in effecting an arrest. As a former police officer, I received my basic training on making an arrest thirty-seven years ago, and I vividly remember how to execute it. It confounds me by the actions of these officers who allow offenders in their spaces without any consequence. Many might argue that the officers are scared to use the necessary force to effect the arrest, because they may become another INDECOM statistic, and that may carry some validity.
That said, these videos show the real victims are the officers in these situations. The videos portray violence, threat, and annihilation of police officers for doing their jobs. The videos could be the officer best allies, which could exonerate them if charges are brought and may prevent charges from being brought against them. What is often not discussed is the fact that in most of these situations, the officer’s lives are at risk, when being surrounded by so many angry, boisterous and hateful people, whose objectives are to see their demise.
Sometimes you have to wonder if they are oblivious to their safety and security to be so tolerant of people who want to hurt them. What is shockingly disturbing is the apathy of their colleagues to assist. What happened to teamwork? What happened to having a colleague’s back? Where is the true spirit of comradeship? I am horrified to see an officer being assaulted, and the other(s) just stood there and offered no assistance. During my tenure in the JCF, we looked out for each other especially in those types of situation.
We were not always in agreement on many things, but we still show that we are united when dealing with an adversary. These officers lack the gumption, grit, and determination to stand up these thugs. Honestly, they have become the laughing stock, and get no respect from the people they serve. Stop blaming the government, as police officers they are given powers that other people in society don’t have. If they understand the tenets of the law and they should, then most of these recalcitrant punks should be behind bars. Instead, they continue to perpetuate this type of behavior, and it appears it has become contagious. Obstructing police officer during the lawful execution of their duties has become a pastime, a fad, and a lifestyle for these lawbreakers. And they will continue because there are no consequences for their actions.
A pressing issue which is affecting the rule of law in Jamaica is the public’s interference as police officers try to make lawful arrests. The interference has graduated systemically from trolling and taunts to actual physical help to the person being arrested.
Given the most ideal set of circumstances, the task of effecting an arrest is fraught with danger and risk. An officer does not know how the suspect will respond to losing his or her freedom. As such the officer/s has to contingency plan for all eventualities just to make that arrest. The added danger of a potential outsider who has no business interfering with this most lawful administration of justice is rather dangerous. The danger of a mob interfering with this process should elicit the most extreme of response from the officer/s to ensure that their lives and safety are guaranteed.
For years this most dangerous of practices have endured yet the grossly incompetent so-called high command has done absolutely nothing to educate the public of the perils of interfering in the administration of justice. The Legislature has done absolutely nothing to make it extremely painful under the law to interfere in arrests.
The new occupant of 103 Old-Hope Road is for all intents and purposes mute on this subject, as he is on all other subjects to do with the job which was thrust upon him. You cannot fix what you do not know about, you cannot fix what you have no concept of and so Antony Anderson should be no more ridiculed than the woeful ignoramuses who preceded him. In all fairness, it would be unfair to expect this interloper to have a serious solution to this rather critical issue when his predecessors who rose through the ranks did nothing before him. Nevertheless, this problem to police officers needs a solution immediately.
SOLUTION
So I ask all police officers who have to make arrests to re-examine what your powers are under the JCF Act.
Constabulary force Act.
38. If any person shall assault, obstruct, hinder or resist, or use any threatening or abusive and calumnious language or aid or incite any other person to assault, obstruct, hinder, or resist any Constable in the execution of his duty, every such offender shall be liable to a fine not exceeding two thousand dollars.
There is no right to interfere, even if an honest and reasonable mistake about the lawfulness of the action is made unless there is imminent danger of injury or urgency of a kind which requires an immediate decision. If you are making an arrest and you are being hindered, it is up to you to determine the threat level to yourself and take appropriate action. You have every right if you believe that your life is in danger to use lethal force to repel those who would step in to impede your ability to execute your lawful duties.
If you are an officer who is willing to risk death and or the escape of your prisoner maybe the job is not for you. These anarchists who are always on the prowl to militate against Police will think rather seriously when a serious police officer dispatches one of them with serious precision. You have every right to do your job and go home to your families. You get to decide whether you will allow mob rule to take your life for doing your job. It is that simple.
Police corporal Orane Boothe was seriously wounded this morning when he was attacked by a machete-wielding man. According to reports Corporal Boothe was on duty in the Manchester Town of Christiana when he was attacked. It is alleged that corporal Boothe was able to shoot his attacker before falling to the ground.
He was reportedly aided by residents of the town who assisted the officer to the hospital he was later taken to the Percy Junior hospital where he is in very serious condition.
The cronies of the former murderous monster Ryan Peterkin otherwise called Ratty should be on notice that no matter where they hide, no matter how long they are supported by their criminal loving relatives and friends, the long arm of the law will eventually reach them.
There should be no mistake that there haven’t been police officers who are willing to go the extra mile, take that extra risk, to ensure that our country is not overrun by these demons. These officers, over the decades, have risked life and limb to do their jobs while armchair pundits and prognosticators offer up opinions on subjects they have no idea about. Our country is not going to be made safe by soldiers on the ground it is not going to be rendered safe by some silly perception that soldiers are honest and police are corrupt and incompetent.
Ryan Peterkin o//c Ratty Note the semi-automatic weapon in his right hand
Real officers who served knows what is what, make no mistake the police are not incompetent, they are not scared, they are shackled and afraid to go after these murderers because of Government policies which aid criminals. I call on the government to allow the police to go after these demonic killers with no holes barred. The future of our country is tethered to the demise of these scum. They have made conscious decisions to slaughter innocent people and take what they want without consequence. There should be no support, for these kinds of individuals, tacit or otherwise from any taxpayer agency, civic group, or anyone else. Those who offer comfort, support, and succor to them must and will be exposed for what they are. Be it understood, that as far as is humanly possible we will do our part to expose and flush out those who are offering support to these creatures.
His other weapons
I call on police officers who may be thinking of breaking our nation’s laws, stop it. If you find that you cannot live on the salary they pay you, step aside and find something else which will sustain your lifestyle. I call on the government to rein in its mongrel kennel, yes the one you call INDECOM, we want our nation’s laws respected and observed, we do not want taxpayer resources to go to funding any agency which persecutes and hinders our officers.
A curved magazine usually of the type used in the AK-47 Rifle all recovered by the police
We are calling on the Government to offer leadership, we are calling on the opposition party, stop looking to score cheap political mileage under the guise of looking after the poor. We will have no country if the actions of these murderers are not halted and halted immediately. The greatest right a person has is the right to life. I remind both the administration and the opposition if you are interested in fighting for the human rights of the ordinary Jamaican how about you look to ensure their right to life?
There are those who talk about taking in these demons without firing any shots, and so I call on Terrence Williams, and Hamish Campbell to join the police when they go out to apprehend these killers. Do a ride along, please you don’t need any weapons, these guys will not harm you. I personally support your desire to see fewer police killings and as a consequence, I support your right to help in apprehending them. In fact, I support the right of all people who want fewer police shootings, go on the ride alongs and beg them to surrender. Hopefully, we can solve some other problems by your doing so.
We are tired of the excuses and the second-guessing by the pundits, who benefit from the efforts of the police but have no decency and character to offer support and give thanks. Jamaica is a very small country given enough time it will reach your door don’t you worry. In the meantime, we salute the officers who removed this menace from the streets, and without a doubt saved numerous lives in the process. Thank you.….….….……
St James’ most wanted man Ryan Peterkin 0/c (Ratty) was cut down during a gunfight with Police. He was killed in the New Market area on the border with St.Elizabeth and St. James, according to police sources. Peterkin was allegedly wanted for at least 5 murders.
The police reported that an AK-47 rifle and a .38 revolver were recovered from Peterkin. Peterkin was reported to be the leader of the Ratty Gang which terrorized the area in which he was killed and adjoining areas.
I promised I would keep my mouth shut despite having to place one hand over it and use the other to hold it in place to keep me from breaking my promise not to ask Antony Anderson what his plans are? I made the promise not to talk about major general Antony Anderson’s appointment and tenure as police commissioner, largely for two reasons, (1) to allow time to the members of the public, including police officers past and present, who say give him time and (2) because he needed to get into office and acclimate himself to the job before speaking out on what he intends to do differently.
Nevertheless, I am finding it hard to contain myself a month after Anderson assumed office and all we hear out of 103 Old Hope is an eerie silence. It really is insignificant what I think or says. What is interesting is that the major opinion makers in the country are beginning to question Anderson’s silence since he took office.
The Gleaner’s editorial board one of the most strident anti-police entities in the country lashed out in Friday’s online publication claiming : Indeed, it has been almost a month since he took over as Jamaica’s commissioner of police from the light-footed and unremarkable tenure of the career police officer, George Quallo. Yet, the public doesn’t know what General Anderson’s priorities on the job are and, assuming that he has some, what his strategies are for getting them done. Nor are people aware what specific contributions General Anderson wants from them towards his success.
Rather interesting to read, considering that the elitists on that board would rather see a dog in the commissioner’s chair than a police officer who came up through the ranks. That aside, others are also criticizing the government on what they see as a lack of alacrity and dispatch in mounting an effective strategy to suppress the country’s murder rate. Well- known criminal rights campaigner Horace Levy lashed out at the administration as well:
Isn’t it obvious that two ZOSOs, or even four, as currently constructed to each require 300 to 400 soldiers and police, is not cutting it? Why? Because, to begin with, the human resources are limited. But face it: We are on a path to another 1,600−1,800 murders in 2018. Another route has to be chosen and chosen now. Which brings up the second crazy notion — that it is the advice of the security forces that decides what to do about our violence and murder. The police and the army only knows one kind of solution that is more of only, or chiefly, the tried-and-failed repression.
Well there you have it, where have I heard that logic before?
EVERYONEKNOWSHOWTOSTOPTHECRIMEMADNESS
Why would anyone depend on security officials for security advise, what lunacy? Maybe Mister Horace Levy would be kind enough to explain to the Jamaican people who require a country free from violent crime and the specter of imminent death daily, why they should trust him over trained officials. In the meantime, I’ll call my plumber to see what he can do about my blood pressure which is getting a little high from this lunacy.
In addition to Anderson’s silence and what some are beginning to say is a lack of credible crime-strategy, members of the political opposition have begun to assert that they are considering embarking on street protest as a means to register dissent to what they claim is the lack of a credible strategy to combat crime.
HERE’S THEDILEMMA
The stark reality surrounding the silence of the newly installed commissioner of police is that Anderson who left the JDF and was appointed as the nation’s first national security adviser is using the time to claw his way around the rules and responsibilities of what the job entails. More importantly, what a chief constable does. The stupid idea that because someone has training in a certain field, or may have a degree or two in a particular discipline it qualifies that person as an authority on all other disciplines. It is a remarkably daft millstone around the collective necks of Jamaicans. Anthony Anderson is part of the mentality which fundamentally believes that we must tread carefully around dangerous murderers rather than extinguish them like bugs.
So as Anderson brings himself up to speed on what it is that police do, the bloodletting continues unabated and with no end in sight? I do believe that Major General Anthony Anderson would like to do a good job. After all, it isn’t his fault that he has this momentous responsibility thrust upon him even though he does not have any idea about law enforcement and now needs the time to learn. Fault the system of men which allows it.
Even if Anderson was to fully acclimate himself to his new duties today and was ready to go, nothing would change because the crime rate in our country is hardly a function of who sits in the police commissioner’s chair but a function of the nation’s lax laws and support for criminal conduct. In this very medium, I have personally published several crime plans which I believe given the ideal legislative framework would begin to have a significant impact on crime. Nevertheless, it is almost insane to believe that with the present laws and the mentality in the country, any police commissioner, (much less one who does not even understand what he is supposed to do) will be able to positively change the trajectory of violent crimes.
In all of that, it is remarkable that this Jamaican nation of people who are supposed to be so smart actually believe that it is a good idea to put someone with no training or experience to do a job over career professionals who are imminently qualified. A paradox no different than that which propelled Donald Trump to the presidency of the United States.
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