In light of recent remarks by the National Security Minister Peter Bunting, the National Democratic Movement would like answers to the following simple questions:
Is National Security Minister Bunting suffering a meltdown or mental fatigue? His wild, angry, emotional outburst over the weekend, as he lashed out at the Opposition spokesman for his ministry, would suggest that all may not be well with him. Or is his tasteless, inappropriate rant and rave mere arrogance as is typical of the “dutty politricks” normally used by desperate tribal gang members?
Is he overwhelmed by the rigours, stress and challenges involved in running such a serious portfolio? Is shooting the messenger a good strategy at crime-fighting, or should he and his Administration focus on solutions to the country’s spiralling crime problem, particularly on the heels of recent reports that Jamaica was ranked third most murderous country in the world for 2014 and another report that a member of the ‘Klansman’ gang — which is known to support the PNP — ended up as a part of the party president and prime minister of Jamaica’s security detail?
Is Bunting’s substantive role and function as a servant for the Jamaican people his first duty and priority? Or is it about mud-slinging and fighting, as carried by ‘hostile tribes perpetually at war’, to keep his party in power?
The NDM supports the following policy positions:
1. We propose constitutional changes which would result in the “best minds forming the Cabinet” and not mere politicians and party stalwarts who are not technically competent to handle complex matters and the proper running of the substantive ministerial portfolio.
2. That the Jamaica Constabulary Force be renamed the Jamaica Constabulary Service.
3. That the commissioner of police report to a special committee of Parliament, instead of the minister appointed by any politician.
As Jamaicans continue to be slaughtered in unprecedented numbers the Country’s National Security Minister fresh from overseas took immediate action. Unfortunately the actions Peter Bunting took was not huddling with heads of the Island’s Security Agencies to figure out a way forward. Bunting instead unleashed a venomous attack against the Opposition Party for daring to criticize the Government on what is clearly it’s failure in all areas including keeping the Jamaican people safe. Bunting claimed that he has tried to keep National Security out of the political fray but he lamented that approach can only work when you have an enlightened Opposition,” Ironically, even as Bunting made those spurious claim he was engaged in addressing Party Loyalists of the Eastern St Andrew conference at the University of the West Indies in St Andrew, the “Intellectual ghetto” (according to the late Wilmott Perkins) and a hot-bed of failed left wing ideological-policy-thought long discarded by the rest of the world.
Score one for Peter Bunting and his ability to keep his ministry apolitical.
In a scathing attack one expects to see on the eve of elections on a platform somewhere in the three miles area, Bunting blasted the political opposition’s concern, for the demise of over three Jamaicans per day at the hands of criminal. Bunting charged: “Some in the Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) leadership have been behaving like a set of John Crows, like vultures, gleefully reacting to every loss of life as an opportunity to gain political mileage.”
One would have thought that after that parochial outburst the Minister would have sobered up and realized that even though he is acting as a piece of carcass for the political Vultures , he ought to represent the Ministry and the men and women who are answerable to him in a more dignified manner. This was not to be, not wanting to be outdone by AJ Nicholson’s inebriated outburst last week , Bunting dived even deeper.
File photo: Portia and comrades having a good time
“Like the cowards that they are, they wait until my back is turned, until I’m out of the country, to launch their most recent attacks,” he said. “That man is Derrick Smith, the perennial opposition spokesman on national security, I believe the longest-serving opposition spokesman on national security in the history of Jamaica,” declared Bunting. “The way he speaks, you would think that if only he became minister of national security Jamaica’s crime problem would be solved.”
Buntings comments should have been enough to cause offense to reasonable Jamaicans regardless of their political stripe. If not for the Political sniping, but at the fact that the Minister having no answer to the crime situation chose to attack his political rival without laying out a single policy solution for the spiraling crime wave. Instead the brain-dead ignoramuses in attendance broke into raucous applause.
At a time when the mildly aware Prime Minister and others withing the delusional People’s National Party Administration in Kingston are trumpeting passing IMF tests, Jamaicans are being slaughtered in groups of threes and fours while survivors cannot afford to purchase basic food necessities. Reasonable observers already knew Bunting was over his head as far as solutions are concerned on stopping the bleeding. However, Bunting’s infantile response to criticisms are a tell-tale sign this corrupt Administration is running on fumes.
Derrick Smith Opposition Spokesperson on National Security
From the retarded insistence of the clueless Prime Minister in not speaking to the Media , to AJ Nicholson’s inebriated response about a Jamaican National incarcerated abroad , to Bunting’s mouth-full of cow-feces tirade, it is abundantly clear this Government needs to be retired to obscurity. These responses are symptomatic of a tired, clueless, bunch of low-level tribalists who have had responsibility thrust upon them they cannot handle. When will the people realize this bunch of self-serving miscreants are only there to fatten their own pockets?
Whether one is particularly fond of Holness or Smith has no bearing on the serious crime problem facing the nation. Blowing smoke up people’s behinds is a not a solution. Bunting cannot be that stupid he must know this horse and pony show will come to an end soon. It is indeed a sad testament of the depths to which our Country has sunken, when these are the people tasked with it’s care.
‘John Crow Politics’ — Bunting Lashes JLP, Accuses Opposition Of Seeking Mileage From Crime
Published:Monday | July 13, 2015
Peter Bunting National Security Mnister
Derrick Smith Opposition Spokesperson on National Security
National Security Minister Peter Bunting went on the warpath yesterday, but his venom was not unleashed on criminal elements wreaking havoc in society.Fresh from his overseas visit and back on the job, Bunting served notice that he would be speaking comprehensively on plans to wrestle with crime during tomorrow’s sitting of the House of Representatives. Conceding that the Government would be responding to the 19 per cent increase in murders, Bunting echoed last week’s pronouncements of Police Commissioner Dr Carl Williams.But for last night, Bunting’s verbal fusillade was aimed at the parliamentary opposition; its leader Andrew Holness; and its spokesman on national security, Derrick Smith, whom he described as rejected, discarded, and recycled. “I have tried to keep national security outside the partisan political fray, however, that approach can only work when you have an enlightened Opposition,” said Bunting as he addressed the Eastern St Andrew conference at the University of the West Indies in St Andrew. “One hand can’t clap. It is now clear that they are making the issue of crime a central plank of their political platform.”
As he unleashed volley after volley, Bunting charged: “Some in the Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) leadership have been behaving like a set of John Crows, like vultures, gleefully reacting to every loss of life as an opportunity to gain political mileage.” Bunting told supporters that the JLP had left him no choice but to respond to its underhanded tactics. “Well, I have a message for them,” he said. “I’m back, and I’m going to respond comprehensively and devastatingly.” In launching another round of verbal missiles, Bunting declared: “This man, him never trouble no one, but if you trouble this man, it will bring a bam-bam,” added Bunting to the obvious glee of cheering PNP loyalists. Describing the strategy of the Opposition as that of a political dunce, the national security minister’s most scathing tirade was aimed at Smith. He charged that the JLP had brought Jamaica to the brink of infamy by turning the system upside down during the extradition saga of 2010. Bunting charged that Smith was “jumping up every day”, excited and seeking to create panic.
COWARDS
“Like the cowards that they are, they wait until my back is turned, until I’m out of the country, to launch their most recent attacks,” he said. “That man is Derrick Smith, the perennial opposition spokesman on national security, I believe the longest-serving opposition spokesman on national security in the history of Jamaica,” declared Bunting. “The way he speaks, you would think that if only he became minister of national security Jamaica’s crime problem would be solved.” Noting that Smith was national security minister for an eight-month period when there was an average of nearly seven murders per day, Bunting said: “This is the same man now jumping up and down over three murders per day, less than half of what occurred when he was in office.” Bunting charged that in Smith’s final month in office alone, there were more than 200 murders. He charged that Smith did not table a single piece of legislation or initiate a single new policy during his tenure.“Derrick Smith’s brief stint as security minister can only be described as an unmitigated disaster,” said Bunting. Read Original story here :‘John Crow Politics’ — Bunting Lashes JLP, Accuses Opposition Of Seeking Mileage From Crime
Since the United States, Supreme Court’s declaration on the status of same sex marriage, there has been interest and concern, from some nations. Naturally, given the US’ influence on the geopolitical landscape, the spotlight and focus has been intensified on countries like Jamaica, where there is open disagreement with the concept. But should the Jamaican people and its government be concerned at all about the implications of this turn of event? To answer this question, we look briefly on a number of related issues to establish a basis for the discussion.
The Jamaican society and culture was initially, officially structurally framed by its colonial masters, Great Britain. It’s out of this cultural adaptation that laws against certain acts which were deemed antisocial were enacted. Among these, was the offence against the person act? This statuary provision is very wide, and includes, inter alia, the buggery act. Interestingly, this section is listed and captioned in the preamble as an unnatural act. Given the influence the church had on the culture of Great Britain, one should not be surprised that the act of buggery would be included in the provisions. Perhaps Leviticus 18: 22 might shed some light on this. “Thou salt not lie with mankind as with womankind, it is abomination.” You got the picture?
If we understand how laws are created, we would appreciate that societal norms and religious practices contribute immensely to its creation. The buggery act remains on the Jamaican law books to this day because of adapted societal norms and the lack of interest on the part of any political party, on either side of the political fence, be it the Jamaica Labor Party (JLP) or the Peoples National Party (PNP), to initiate any changes to the law.
Of interest too, is the fact that, although these laws have been on the books for years, there has not been any significant arrest of anyone who has engaged in Homosexual activity, at least not during my life time. This has been the case, despite the fact that practitioners are known, even at the highest echelon of our society. Many have only been open to the realization of their existence when they are killed, which in most instances were at the hands of other persons who engaged in similar activity, these are the facts. Although empirical data is available to demonstrate this, human rights and gay rights advocacy groups, in Jamaica, have engaged in a smear campaign against the state and its people, on the basis, that homosexuals are being ostracized, marginalized and targeted, because they are “different”. This truly is unfortunate, given the facts available, which obviously indicate the contrary.
One needs not to look too far, to conclude why objectivity is lacking from these groups. Well for one, their major sponsors or either based in the US or in Europe. Jamaica gets grant or aid from these region, which have immense influence on investment and trade in the island. The heavily indebted Jamaica, have to trod lines carefully and not be too critical of policies to which they are in disagreement. Given that this is the situation it would come as no surprise that the US and Great Britain has been critical of the buggery laws.
Great Britton’s PM had declared in their Parliament, that they would go as far as withdrawing aid to countries who demonstrate anti homosexual sentiments. The US has in recent times sent envoys to Jamaica in an effort to influence changes in its buggery laws, and there will be more pressure, given the paradigm shift on the issue.
A nation like Jamaica which has wasted its resources and have to rely on grants and loans from organization such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and other multinational organizations , have very little wiggle room to make unilateral decisions without considering how the US and the UK would perceive it . The reality is, our determined economic path is reliant on these economic powers, and that places us in a rather precarious position.
While same sex Marriage might not be a reality in the near future in Jamaica, relaxation of our buggery laws is truly a likely possibility. It is not a question of if it will happen but when it will happen.
Over the years in these pages I have spoken out against the Liberal slant of Jamaica’s courts which in many cases causes even those without legal training to gasp at the outlandish results which come out of them. One of the reasons for the high crime rate in the country and the break-down of social order may exactly be laid at the feet of the country’s activists Judges, some of whom have been corrupted. In instance after instance there evidence emerges of galling disparities in the dispensation of justice, depending on who one knows or is affiliated with. Most shockingly however , is the blatant contempt many of the country’s judges have for the people’s cause. I have argued stridently that the vast majority of the Nation’s Judges who graduate from the Norman Manley law school are indoctrinated, leftist ideologues. They are heavy on criminal rights and light on personal responsibility and adherence to the rule of law. Many use the Courts as a platform as a medium to promote their own agendas
As Major crimes continue to rise, judges continue to use their office to subvert the process of law and empower those who would create mayhem and chaos in our country It is time they are held accountable.
Evan Brown a Justice on the High Court recently awarded Forty Five Thousand dollars for one hour and $100,000 for four and a half hours – this was part of the $225,000 awarded to a former delivery man for false imprisonment after a high court judge found last month that he was held in police custody for more than five hours on a charge that was later dismissed by a lower court. Winston Hemans was also awarded $80,000 for malicious prosecution in a civil suit he filed against the State arising from an incident at the Norman Manley International Airport (NMIA) in Kingston in July 2005.
Brown, however, dismissed Hemans’ claim for aggravated or exemplary damages against the arresting officer, identified as Constable Andrew Anderson. “There was … nothing in the circumstances of the arrest of the claimant [Hemans], whether at the arrival area [at NMIA] or at the police station, that suggested that the first defendant [Anderson] behaved in a highhanded, insulting, malicious or oppressive manner,” Brown wrote in his ruling. Hemans claimed, in court documents, that he parked his motor car at the NMIA on July 19, 2005, and was heading to the arrival area to deliver a package when he was approached from behind by Anderson and asked to go with him to the police station located at the airport. The former delivery man said when he got there, he was arrested and charged with the offence of failing to leave the airport. Hemans said he was placed in custody and remained there until he was granted bail some time after 6 o’clock that evening. After three court appearances between July and August that year, prosecutors decided to drop the charge against him in September. But Anderson, in his witness statement, said he saw Hemans at the arrival west terminal area – clad in blue jeans and a white shirt – illegally soliciting passengers and collecting money. Anderson testified that he told the delivery man that he was committing an offence and ordered him to leave the airport. “Upon being so ordered, the claimant walked away,” the cop said.
HELDFORFAILINGTOLEAVEAIRPORT
However, he said that later that day, he again saw Hemans soliciting passengers at the airport, and it was at that time that he decided to arrest him for failing to leave the airport. Anderson said a search of the delivery man after the arrest revealed “money the claimant told him was collected from soliciting passengers”. Brown, after hearing both sides, said the question became whether Hemans was the person Anderson spoke to earlier that day.
“Did he [Anderson] make a mistake? In his witness statement, the first defendant [Anderson] described the person he told to leave the airport as a man dressed in blue jeans and a shirt. However, in the entry made … in [the] station diary, the first defendant described the claimant [Hemans] as a man dressed in black pants and a blue shirt,” Brown noted. “The first defendant did not say anything to the claimant aside from asking the claimant to accompany him to the police station, although the claimant required of him a reason. He, thereby, robbed himself of the opportunity to confirm his earlier observations and ground his action in law,” the judge continued. Brown also raised questions about the constable’s claim in his witness statement that the person he warned about soliciting passengers at the airport walked away. He said an entry in the station diary revealed that “that person was escorted to the bus stop”. “This is the incongruity … neither account made any reference to the claimant’s [Hemans] car, which he, admittedly, had at the airport. It strains the limits of the imagination to accept that the claimant would have walked with the first defendant to the bus stop without once mentioning that he had his own mode of transportation to leave the airport,” Brown underscored. See story here:Costly Lock-Up — Court Awards $225,000 For Wrongful Detention .
Here’s the Issue: Brown, dismissed Hemans’ claim for aggravated or exemplary damages against the arresting officer, identified as Constable Andrew Anderson. “There was … nothing in the circumstances of the arrest of the claimant [Hemans], whether at the arrival area [at NMIA] or at the police station, that suggested that the first defendant [Anderson] behaved in a highhanded, insulting, malicious or oppressive manner,”. In other words the Officer did absolutely nothing wrong beyond what he is tasked with doing, which is enforcing the laws. Police are placed at Airports to do specifically what this Officer did, keep terminals clear. All across the World in Nations which does not practice back-water justice as Jamaica does, Police officers are very keen about keeping Airport terminals clear for various reasons >
Jamaica is no exception. like other Nations Jamaica has a responsibility to adhere to International standards which Govern International Airports,. Those standards include but are not confined to ‚ensuring that terminals are kept as clear as possible so that rapid access may be available to emergency vehicles and first responders. Officers also have to be mindful of Terrorism in all forms when they are tasked with being vigilant at International Airports. What is abundantly clear is that this officer was vigilant and did his job. What is also clear is that even if there was an error in the perception of the Officer as far as the identity of the offender is concerned, there was no malicious intent. If the Officer acted without malice and made a genuine error in the identification process, where are the grounds for an award. It wasn’t even clear that the offender hadn’t simply changed his clothes.
This young police officer may have made the simple mistake of using clothes to identify a suspect. But that mistake ‚not a maliciously act, did not warrant a dismissal of the case and certainly did not justify a civil award. Clearly the court in this matter bent backward , contorting itself into a pretzel , in an attempt to find a way to award this offender. What the ding-bat leftist judge said was that basically the officer acted appropriately with no malice, his own words. Quote;“There was … nothing in the circumstances of the arrest of the claimant ‚whether at the arrival area [at NMIA] or at the police station, that suggested that officer Anderson behaved in a highhanded, insulting, malicious or oppressive manner,”.
Yet he awarded this offender money. This guy was there doing exactly what Constable Anderson observed him doing . It is a grave miscarriage of Justice that this back-water operative acting as a legitimate trier of facts can arbitrarily subvert the course of justice and get away with it. For our part we will continue to highlight these instances where these Judges whom are sworn to uphold the law , usurp their authority in order to inject their personal beliefs and biases into the process.
Photo Illustration by Alex Williams/The Daily Beast
PHILADELPHIA — The Philadelphia Police Department says up to 20 officers were justified in beating and possibly tasering a black man, while calling him a “piece of shit.” Furthermore, officers had probable cause to charge him with assault and said he deliberately injured himself after getting beaten. Video of 22-year-old Tyree Carroll’s beating was posted online Wednesday by Los Angeles-based journalist Jasmyne Cannick. The video’s release has triggered an investigation by the Philly PD’s Internal Affairs Division. Police spokesman Lieutenant John Stanford said it was a drug bust in which the suspect violently resisted and even bit several officers.
“Beating someone while you call them a piece of shit, there’s no explanation for that, unless you want to admit you’re a racist,” Cannick told The Daily Beast. On April 3 Carroll was riding his bike to his grandmother’s home in the northwest Philly neighborhood of East Germantown, where he lives, before officers said they stopped him for drugs. The official, preliminary police version of events released Thursday afternoon is as follows: Undercover narcotics officers say at 11:44 p.m. they attempted to stop Carroll for an unspecified “narcotics violation.”
“As the officers stopped the defendant, he began to fight with the officers, biting one of the officers a total of three times.” The video doesn’t show Carroll starting the virtually one-sided fight. Police say Carroll bit another officer during the mêlée, and that eventually “other responding officers arrived on location and were finally able to get the male into custody.” According to police, Carroll was carrying more than 5 grams of crack cocaine. Police claim that Carroll was transported to the hospital to be treated for self-inflicted wounds “after intentionally striking his own head against the protective shield located in the police vehicle” —just like the spurious claim made against Freddie Gray. Carroll is in jail awaiting his next court appearance on charges of aggravated assault, simple assault, reckless endangerment, resisting arrest, and possession of crack cocaine. (Carroll is ineligible for bail because he was on probation at the time of his arrest.) A family spokesperson told CBS News that Carroll admits to biting officers because they had him in a chokehold, which as an asthmatic caused him to fear for his life.
Regarding the use of Tasers, the police said: “The information that we have at this time indicates that use of force reports were completed at the time of the incident, indicating the strikes and control holds attempted during the incident. At this time there is no indication that an electronic control weapon was used despite hearing the officer state ‘here comes the taser.’” There are serious questions about the police statement, not least of all that it is flatly contradicted by the narrator of the video, who says officers used their Tasers several times on the already-subdued Carroll. “For hundreds of years, nothing has changed about how police treat black people,” Cannick said. “The only thing that is different is that now there is a mechanism, now everyone and their grandma is taking video, so now the public at-large has to see it.” That’s exactly what happened in the case of Najee Rivera. Last February, Officers Kevin Robinson and Sean McKnight were charged with brutally beating Rivera after they knocked him off of his scooter with their patrol car in 2013. Then the officers filed charges against Rivera — who was still in the hospital for an orbital fracture – for assaulting officers during a lawful stop.
It was not until Rivera’s girlfriend brought video of the beating to authorities that the charges against Rivera were dropped and the district attorney and a grand jury began investigating the officers. When The Daily Beast asked the D.A.’s office if it had reviewed the Carroll video, and if it had any plans for its own investigation, spokesman Cameron Kline responded succinctly: “The easy answer is, no.” Kline explained that the D.A.’s procedure was to wait until Internal Affairs had completed its own investigation or until Internal Affairs or the department asked the district attorney to assist. Simply put: The police department is being left to investigate itself by the district attorney despite clear video evidence of excessive force. The video of Carroll’s arrest proves at the very least that Philadelphia cannot simply take the word of its police or even trust the D.A. to watch the watchmen. An external review, perhaps by the U.S. Attorney’s Office, may be Carroll’s only chance of being cleared of trumped up charges and getting justice against the men who are sworn to protect and serve. Read more here: http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/07/10/20-philly-cops-beat-him-blame-him-for-injuries-and-charge-him-with-assault.html
In yet another response to the confusing saga regarding the incarceration of a 40 year-old Jamaican pilot jailed in Qatar, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs released a statement saying that Paul Stephens is still in prison. This more sober response came only a day after Minister with Portfolio for Foreign Affairs AJ Nicholson gave what appeared to be an inebriated and disrespectful response to the Media Interest in Stephens incarceration quote: “Who is this man by the way, Is he king, Who is he, What is all this interest about?” “I am saying nothing further about this man or about this case”.!! SEESTORYHERE: Jamaica’s Minister Of Foreign Affairs Regarding A Jamaican Citizen: “Who Is This Man By The Way, Is He King, Who Is He, What Is All This Interest About?” “I Am Saying Nothing Further About This Man Or About This Case.”!!! Social media backlash against Nicholson’s caveman’s response was swift and brutal, no doubt prompting a more respectful yet mundane response from the Ministry.
“Whenever Jamaican nationals are arrested and/or held in custody overseas, the policy of the Government of Jamaica is to allow the legal processes to run their due course. It is not the policy of the ministry to intervene in the judicial processes of other countries or to publicly impugn the integrity of these processes without authoritative justification,” the ministry said. In other words the Ministry is doing nothing toward securing the release of this Jamaican national innocent or not. This statement though reasonable sounding, masks a serious flaw in the way the Jamaican Government sees it’s citizens. Though different than Nicholson’s outlandish response a day earlier, both responses shows a fundamental lack of respect for their own citizens.
Minister of Foreign Affairs AJ Nicholson…
It is remarkable that the Ministry would release this response regarding a citizen of our Country particularly against the back-drop of criminal Justice systems in places like Qatar where their concept of the rule of law differs significantly from ours and the rest of the civilized world. If Mister Stephens is guilty of molesting a minor-child he deserves whatever justice that jurisdiction meted out. Conversely , we must ask ourselves whether we are comfortable with the notion of one of our countrymen being held in a Qatari prison for a crime he potentially did not commit, yet receiving no help from his own Government?
As in many cases where crimes are alleged, supporters line up on both sides. Nevertheless we can ill-afford to allow the barbarity of criminals to create a sense of apathy within us which numbs us to Injustice and robs us of our humanity. That is why it is important that our Government do all it can to assist our Nationals whenever they are incarcerated abroad . It Is important that we allow the system of Justice to take it’s course in Sovereign Nations. But we must never lose sight of the fact that in many places some are more equal than others. That includes our very own precious Island Home>
Edmund Bartlett Opoosition Spokesperson on Foreign Affairs
Lost in this confusion is the announcement from Shadow Minister on Foreign Affairs Edmund Bartlett that mister Stephens was released from Prison according to his Qatari sources in the United States. If indeed Mister Stephens is still in Prison, Mister Bartlett may want to reconsider his sources as well as the degree with which he makes announcements without proper verification.
FBI Director James Comey testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on Going Dark: Encryption, Technology, and the Balance Between Public Safety and Privacy July 8, 2015 on Capitol Hill. AFPPHOTO/MANDEL NGAN (Photo credit should read MANDELNGAN/AFP/Getty Images)Ryan J. Reilly
WASHINGTON — FBI Director James Comey said Thursday he’s still not sure whether the killings of nine African-Americans inside a church in South Carolina last month meets the legal definition of terrorism.
The FBIdefines terrorism as “the unlawful use of force or violence against persons or property to intimidate or coerce a government, the civilian population, or any segment thereof in furtherance of political or social objectives.” Dylann Roof, 21, who is charged in the fatal shootings of nine people during a prayer service at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in downtown Charleston, apparently wrote aracist manifesto saying he wanted to “protect the White race” and had “no choice” but to kill innocent worshipers.
“I am not in the position to, alone, go into the ghetto and fight,” the manifesto says. “I chose Charleston because it is most historic city in my state, and at one time had the highest ratio of blacks to Whites in the country. We have no skinheads, no real KKK, no one doing anything but talking on the internet. Well someone has to have the bravery to take it to the real world, and I guess that has to be me.”
Before the manifesto surfaced online, Comey said he was unsure whether the shooting was a “political act.” An FBI spokesman said Comey’s comments were made while the situation was “still fluid.” But now that Roof’s motivations are more clear, Comey said he’s still not sure.
“I don’t know yet,” Comey said Thursday, when The Huffington Post asked him whether the Charleston shooting was an act of terrorism. “I was asked about that a day or so after and said that, based on what I knew at that point, I didn’t see it fitting the definition. Since then, we’re found the so-called manifesto online, so I know the investigators and prosecutors are looking at it through the lens of hate crime, through the lens, potentially, of terrorism.”
The label “doesn’t impact the energy that we apply to it,” Comey added.
“Given the nature of my business, I only operate in a legal framework,” Comey said. “I know there’s a definition of terrorism that all of us carry around as a colloquial matter. I know from having talked to them the investigators and prosecutors are looking at it through a bunch of different lenses to figure out what, if any … federal charges might make sense.”
Comey said investigators “work very hard to try to understand the facts, and then Justice will figure out what charges to bring. So the answer is I don’t know yet, but I know that our folks will look at it from all angles.”
Comey’s view contrasts with that of former Attorney General Eric Holder, who told The Huffington Post this week that Charleston was “clearly an act of terrorism.” It was a “political-violent” act, Holder said.
“With a different set of circumstances, and if you had dialed in religion there, Islam, that would be called an act of terror,” Holder said. “It seems to me that, again on the basis of the information that has been released, that’s what we have here. An act of terror.”
The Huffington Post asked Comey whether there would be a hesitancy to call the Charleston shooting terrorism if Roof’s manifesto had indicated his attack was inspired by the Islamic State.
“I’d investigate it I think probably just as we’re investigating now, to understand what his motivation was and whether it was designed to coerce a civilian population,” Comey said. “So we’d investigate it the same, and then in deciding what charges to bring, we’d look at it through the framework of the individual statutory provisions to see whether they’d apply.”
Comey objected to the suggestion that there was hesitancy to call the Charleston attack terrorism based on the accused killer’s white supremacist views that wouldn’t be present if the suspect were a Muslim extremist.
“Where’s the hesitancy?” Comey asked. “This is where I struggle a little bit. The only world I live in is when you bring charges against someone and charge them with something under a particular provision that is a terrorism statute, and so that’s the framework through which I look at it, and I think that makes sense for someone in the government who is doing an investigation to look at it through that framework.
“So I’m not hesitating to define it in any way, except to say that that we want to gather the facts and then find out which statutes make sense,” Comey said. “That would be the same whether his manifesto was written in Arabic or in English.”
“Within the bureau, we have a pretty rigorous process to try and assess threat and press resources against that threat, and I am confident that we are putting the resources against both of these threats that make sense,” Comey said. “We try, as you know, to be very careful and respectful of free speech, but we also try and understand when speech crosses the line of First Amendment-protected activity to action or exhorting action that is in violation of the law.”
Comey said a “whole lot” of FBI analysts and agents “wake up every day” and focus solely on domestic groups.
“One of the reasons that maybe the ISIL threat gets more attention is that there really isn’t a domestic terrorism threat that poses the risk of actors in every state engaging in random, nearly random acts of violence coördinated in the way that ISIL is attempting to inspire direct activities,” Comey said. “So there isn’t a comparable threat actor in the domestic scene. It’s fragmented. There’s lots of different groups that are potentially worrisome that we focus on.”
Commissioner of Police Dr. Carl Williams is lobbying to again change the laws allowing police to arrest people they suspect of committing crimes even without enough evidence. Williams reportedly said “We want to, hopefully, get an amendment to the Bail Act, so that even persons who are not charged for criminal offences can be arrested and bailed prior to charge,”
Dr.-Carl-Williams Commissioner of Police
What does that even mean? So the Commissioner is seeking an amendment to the Bail Act. So that persons not charged with an offense may be arrested and Bailed prior to being charged? Simply put, the Commissioner seeks a return to the days of the Suppression of Crimes Act which allowed Police to just gather up huge groups of young men from certain deprived areas and throw them in Jail sometimes for weeks on end. I must confess that the duration of my 10 years of service was under those special powers and yes crime was lower across the board. However it cannot be said that locking up dozens and dozens of young men from a particular area is the way to go strategically if the goal is to have crime trend down on a continuüm.
The Gleaner reports that; In 2011, the Supreme Court struck down amendments made to the Bail Act which were made by Parliament the year before. Among other things, the amendments provided for the detention of a suspect on gun and murder offences for 60 days without bail. Additionally, accused were being required to satisfy the court as to why they should be released on bail, a provision which runs counter to the Constitution. They could be held for up to 72 hours before being charged, instead of the 24-hour provided for by the Constitution.
Supreme Court Jamaica
I am tempted to blast the Liberal Supreme Court for standing in the way of anything which would alleviate the crime problem and I would be on the mark . Nevertheless the Supreme Court has a duty to follow the Constitution. This brings us to the question of constitutional reform. Jamaica needs a new Constitution. I believe the time is right for either a new Constitution or major overhaul to the present one geared at protecting the citizens of our Country. The Commissioner is seemingly at a loss as to the way forward ‚. Recently I saw something in the papers about old retired Detectives willing to offer their expertise toward solving the Nation’s crime problem. The commissioner should take them up on their offer. The JCF must extricate itself from the ancient thinking of brutality and mass incarceration without charge, as a way of addressing crime.There are no substitutes for… ♦ Good Detective work. ♦ Scientific evidence. Improvements in Forensics. ♦ Bringing communities along on strategies. ♦ Community Policing. ♦ Developing and executing effective crime strategies.
Commissioner Williams is a PhD. We were told that what we needed to adequately fix our crime problem were no more big ‑foot-fool-fool-police bway. The Force has undergone much supposed improvements since my departure over two decades ago,still the nation is yet to realize much in the way of returns on investments. Sorry Commissioner this is not the way forward, whether you were joking about your performance being 10 out of 10 or not , this latest strategy has you batting 0 – 2 . Will you strike out? Time will tell.…..
It took all night, but eventually South Carolina’s stubborn politicians voted to remove the Confederate flag from the State House.
More than 150 years after Robert E. Lee surrendered at Appomattox, defenders of the Confederate flag in South Carolina finally lost their battle when the South Carolina House voted 94 to 20 to move the Confederate battle flag from the lawn of the Capitol to the Relic Room in the state museum.
The House vote to officially deem the flag a “relic” came after 15 hours of heated, often emotional debate throughout the day and night on Wednesday, when flag supporters argued for what they said was a symbol of their families’ Civil War bravery, while opponents called it a modern-day emblem of hate, rage and racism.
But alongside those decades-old arguments sat the black-shrouded Senate desk of the late Clementa Pinckney, one of the Senate’s own and one of the nine worshipers at Emanuel AME Church murdered last month by a white supremacist who proudly displayed the Confederate flag on his social media pages.
“What’s different? We all know what’s different,” said Rep. James Smith, a Democrat from Columbia. “What’s different are the nine hate-filled murders in Charleston. The murders committed under the banner that flies in front of our state house.”
Tami Chappell /Reuters
With Gov. Nikki Hayley having called on the flag to fall, the Senate passed its bill earlier in the week swiftly, cleanly, and eloquently in a process that nearly all agreed would be a small, but symbolic gesture of healing for the state after the horrors at Mother Emanuel.
“This is a symbol, regardless of what you believe it means, that divides us, and we can’t afford to be divided anymore,” said Sen. Vincent Shaheen, the Democratic sponsor of the bill. “What happened a couple of weeks ago opened the eyes of the people on this chamber. I believe that out of horror can come healing and I believe it will.”
Sen. Chip Campsen, a Charleston Republican, said he would also vote to move the flag, as a tribute to Rev. Pinckney and his ministry. “I do not find the flag offensive but I know that some do,” Campsen said. “This is the least that I can do. This is the least I think the state should do.”
After the Senate’s 36 to 3 vote, the bill went to the House, where it needed to pass without amendments in order to be signed quickly by the governor and avoid delay or defeat in a later legislative session.
“This is the least I think the state should do.”
But it quickly became clear the House would prove a higher hurdle as Republican Rep. Mike Pitts assembled more than two dozen amendments to do everything from removing every monument from the state house grounds to requiring that a field of yellow jasmine be planted if the Confederate flag were to be removed from where it had flown since 2000.
Suspicions that Pitts was trying to filibuster the bill grew as he spoke at length during the debate and veered off to tangents about his hearing aids, duck calls, indoor plumbing and his ancestors, who did not own slaves, but did, he explained, take up arms for the Confederacy during what he called “the war,” “the war between the states,” and “the war of northern aggression where the Yankees attacked the South.”
The debate grew more personal as more amendments were added and the day bled into evening. Rep. Joseph Neal, a Democrat from Hopkins, reminded Rep. Pitts that his family had its own history during the Civil War. “My heritage is based on a group of people who were brought here in chains, who were denigrated, demagogued, lynched, and killed, denied the right to vote and the right to even start a family.” Neal called for the Confederate flag to come down. “That flag that stands outside has stood as a thumb in the eye to the families in Charleston and we all know it.”
One by one, the House voted down or dispensed with Pitts’ amendments, but a noncontroversial measure from Rep. Rick Quinn asking the Relic Room’s staff to provide the Senate with its proposed budget by January, ground the chamber to a halt as Quinn argued his amendment was harmless and Democrats, who has been mostly silent to that point, began to worry that the effort to bring down the flag would die yet again, despite the nine murders that had preceded the legislation.
“I cannot believe that we do not have the heart in this body to do something meaningful such as take a symbol of hate off of these grounds,” Rep. Jenny Horne (R‑Charleston) said through tears. “For the widow of Sen Pinckney and his two young daughters, you will be adding insult to injury. I will not be part of it.”
Rep. David Mack called Quinn’s effort to amend the Senate bill and endanger the prospect of removing the Confederate flag from the Capitol “disgusting.”
“Any black person born in South Carolina hates the sight of that flag,” Mack said. “We thought we could get a clean bill out of here and we would have done right by South Carolina and those families, but we did not. We kept our record in tact and we said clearly, ‘This is who we are.’ And it’s a shame. It’s a shame.”
Rep. Lonnie Hosey, a decorated Marine veteran, said he had not intended to speak on the amendment, but was struck by the indifference he was seeing in his colleagues toward the memory of Rev. Pinckney. “I sat there thinking, what if it had been me who went to my grave? These same people who say they love me, they care about me, would they be doing this same kind of thing?” Hosey then turned to Quinn and asked him to drop his amendment. “Mr. Quinn, please sir, we need you to be the hero.”
Just before 1 a.m. Thursday, Quinn did drop his effort to amend the bill and explained that he was only trying to build a large enough majority to give the bill the two-thirds majority it needed to pass. He added that the Democrats who painted him as heartless were liars.
Change did not come easily to the South Carolina legislature, but it did come. The House passed the bill in the early morning hours Thursday, ending what might finally be the last battle of the Civil War, but acknowledging that like any war, there were no winners and no losers in an event that was preceded by so much tragedy ahead of it.
Correction: 7/9/15, 12:16 PM: A previous version of this article referred to Rep. Jenny Horne as a Democrat. She is a Republican. Read more here: http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/07/09/tears-in-the-state-house-as-south-carolina-votes-to-take-down-the-confederate-flag.html Tears in the State House as South Carolina Votes to Take Down the Confederate Flag
“Who is this man by the way, Is he king, Who is he, What is all this interest about?” “I am saying nothing further about this man or about this case.”!!!
These were the words of Jamaica’s Foreign Minister Senator A J Nicholson, when Journalists questioned him about the release of a Jamaican National Paul Stephens,who was locked up in Qatar for over three years. Stephens a 40 year-old Pilot have been incarcerated on a charge of sexual molestation of a minor. Opposition spokesman on Foreign Affairs Edmund Bartlett revealed days ago that through his efforts Stephens was released. At the time the Information came to light regarding Stephens release from Prison, Nicholson admitted he had no knowledge of it , citing the difference in time zones between Jamaica and Qatar as the reason he could not verify the report.
Conversely Bartlett stated that his liaison with Qatari officials in the United States confirmed the release of Stephens. Other entities have also been lobbying for the release of Mister Stephens whom they claimed was unjustly incarcerated. Bartlett also acknowledged that the Ministry of Foreign Affairs was indeed involved in trying to secure the release of mister Stephens. So what then is the reason for this caustic and disrespectful response from AJ Nicholson?
Is it that Nicholson is pissed that Bartlett preempted him by coming out and announcing the release of Stephens? It may very well be juvenile political malice. In fact when previously told that Bartlett had announced the release , Nicholson allegedly said ” who wan tek credit can go ahead and tek credit”.
Pickersgill
Juvenile tantrum aside regarding who should be credited, Nicholson’s tirade on this issue involving a Jamaican citizen shows the deep disrespect these Politicians have for Jamaicans. Nicholson’s salary and perks are paid by Jamaican tax-payers. Yet the level of disrespect coming from his mouth regarding exactly what he should be looking about is rather illuminating. Shocking as this tirade is it is the norm of PNP politicians to show disdain for Jamaicans. Robert Pickersgill once asked a male audience member whether he was “having his period” because the member dared question him. In other some places Nicholson would have been asked to resign . However when we look at who holds the top spot in the echelons of elected power that thought dissipates rather quickly.
AJ Nicholson has always been a self-serving Arrogant piece of filth when he practiced as a Defense Lawyer. In many cases his impressions of himself as a criminal defense lawyer was not borne out at the disposition of cases in which he was involved. As the Nation’s top Diplomat there is no place for that type of arrogance and disrespect. Then I’m reminded it’s only Jamaica , anything goes. These ass-wipes are only there to fatten their pockets.
Former head of the National Solid Waste Management Authority and Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) member, Joan Gordon-Webley, has confirmed that she has joined the ruling People’s National Party (PNP), saying that she is willing to face whatever criticism that may come as a result of the move.
Just last year Webley resigned as the JLP’s caretaker for St Andrew East Rural. At the time there were speculations that she would be joining the People’s National Party. As a result the Jamaica Labor Labor Party must have seen this coming. Generally if you hear something in Jamaica if it’s not the truth it’s usually close to the truth.
On that basis I believe the hierarchy of the Jamaica Labor Party (JLP) to which Webley belonged must have expected this from the time she resigned last year. In fact there were rumblings that there were disagreements which precipitated her resignation as caretaker of the St Andrew East Rural Constituency.
Without speculating on the details surrounding Webley’s exit from the JLP and her subsequent alignment with the failed PNP , it is fair to say her departure is no great loss for the Labor Party. It may also be fair to say that the PNP is a better fit for her. Webley comes from a different time in Jamaican politics . A time of Garrisons and guns. It is unclear whether Webley eschewed those old style Politics as the younger less tribal Andrew Holness has. Whatever the reasons for her departure, they are immaterial at this time. For anyone steeped in Jamaica’s political history, it must amaze that in light of the less confrontational style and direction of Holness , that Gordon Webley would seek to join the PNP.
Opposition leader Andrew Holness.…
This is no loss for the Labor Party despite the imminent noise which will emanate as a result of the optics. Holness must steadfastly continue to rebuild the Labor Party on the market style principles of Bustamante. Bustamante was a Business-Owner and a Trade Union Leader, those disciplines uniquely prepared him to launch the Labor Party on the principles of Education, love of Country and hard work . Those are the bedrock principles which lead individuals and Nations out of poverty. Much unlike the Government-dependency mantra of the other party created by his more glib cousin Norman Manley.
The Labor Party should not bad-mouth Joan Gordon-Webley, members should simply thank her for her service and wish her well while continuing the work of developing strategies and policies which will rescue Jamaica and return it to a path of growth and prosperity. Adiós Joan.….…
Baltimore Police Department Commissioner Anthony Batts announces that the department’s investigation into the death of Freddie Gray was turned over to the State’s Attorney’s office a day early at a news conference, Thursday, April 30, 2015, in Baltimore. Pictured at right is Deputy Commissioner Kevin Davis. Batts did not give details of the report or take questions. He said the department dedicated more than 30 detectives to working on the case and report. ( (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)
BALTIMORE (Reuters) — Baltimore Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake has fired Police Commissioner Anthony Batts, the mayor’s office said on Wednesday.
Batts will be replaced on an interim basis by Deputy Commissioner Kevin Davis, the mayor’s office said in a statement.
Government MP, Lloyd B Smith, says corruption in the PNP-administration and the wider society has forced him to reconsider his future in representational politics. The Central St. James MP says he’ll shortly tell Prime Minister and PNP President Portia Simpson Miller whether he intends to contest the next General Election. Dennis Brooks reports: Nationwide News sources say Mr. Smith is considering his future as he and key members of the governing party are at odds. Contacted this afternoon the Central St. James MP said he’ll decide his future in two weeks time. Mr. Smith says corruption in the wider society, including the Government, is among the reasons he’s contemplating stepping aside. In December 2011, Mr. Smith overcame the JLP’s Heroy Clarke by 98 votes in the General Election. Meantime .. as word is circulating that Lloyd B. Smith is on his way out as MP for Central St. James, some PNP delegates in constituency say they’ve asked western Jamaica-based attorney, Ashley-Ann Foster, to consider being the PNP’s flag bearer for the area. Efforts this afternoon to contact Miss Foster were unsuccessful. But Nationwide News sources say on Sunday, Foster indicated in writing that she does not intend to seek re-election as Chairman of the PNP’s East Central St. James constituency executive or apply to be the party standard bearer for that seat. It’s understood that Miss Foster will be vying to replace Mr. Smith as the PNP’s standard bearer for Central St. James. Read more here: CORRUPTIONPUSHINGLLOYD B OUT
The Jamaican Government said it is working to secure more convictions in Human Trafficking in the Courts. Chairperson for the National Task Force Against Trafficking in Persons (NATFATIP), Carol Palmer, who made the disclosure to JIS News, said the Government intends to deal harshly with persons engaged in human trafficking. Palmer made the comments against the backdrop of Jamaica gaining it’s very first conviction in the Courts for Human Trafficking. Palmer lauded all the entities , including the Police and Prosecutor for their work in securing the Conviction of Indian businessman, Rajesh Gurunani, who operated garment stores in downtown Kingston and in St Catherine, was found guilty of trafficking in persons, facilitating trafficking in persons, and withholding travel documents between May 2008 and March 2011.
As a little boy we used to go bird shooting using catapults (sling-shot), I was a horrendous shot. Any Bird I fired at was sure to escape I was that bad a shot with a sling-shot. Usually I ended up shooting parts of my own hand rather than hitting the bird. I was such a horrible shot that on the one occasion I actually did shoot a bird my entire family laughed at me so badly I was embarrassed. Everyone said that the Bird must have been sick, on it’s way home from the Hospital in order for me to actually shoot it. I was so embarrassed that I believed that maybe the Bird was indeed sick, I did not eat it despite my love for Bird-meat.
With the Incompetence of the Criminal Justice System in Jamaica it is incomprehensible that they would actually show their faces to celebrate the Nation’s first conviction in the Courts for something which has been going on for years. Mister Rajesh Gurunani was the proverbial sick bird. His level of carelessness, incompetence and maybe arrogance must have been monumental for the Jamaican system to figure out his transgressions. All of these people Jamaicans or others, regardless of where they come from understand the inherent weakness and utter incompetence of the Jamaican Security and criminal apprehension apparatus. Chairperson Carol Palmer was quick to point out that the Government will be seeking to secure more convictions. This prompts me to ask,“Why does the country need a Task-Force Against Trafficking in Persons”? Aren’t these Police Responsibilities? Palmer brags that the Government intends to deal harshly with persons engaged in Human trafficking. How exactly will the Government do this? Will there be an edict from Jamaica House with the Queen declaring (“off with their heads”) ? Or are there clear, decisive and unambiguous laws which sends offenders to prison? This is really much to do about nothing. It really is not that complicated to investigate these matters. The Ministry of National Security’s Website states that For the period April 2012 to March 2013, two hundred and thirteen (213) police raids were conducted and 23 human trafficking victims were rescued. Over 100 persons have also been interviewed by the JCF Trafficking in Persons Unit in relation to human trafficking, 90 of those being since January 2013.
If you thought I was being unreasonable in my criticism of the single conviction this alone ought to give you pause. In one year 213 raids were conducted by Police. Twenty three (23) victims released. One hundred persons interviewed.
Yet the Government celebrates a single conviction in the courts. Many of my former colleagues in law-enforcement criticize me for being too hard on the JCF with my criticisms. Those with whom I worked understand full well what I am talking about. If criminals broke the laws we went after them. When we went after them ‚we got them. When we got them, rest assured they were convicted. What the Courts did with them was not our business. Jamaica’s hopes for a reduction in crime is not based on any realistic , or reasonably-attainable metric beyond Divine Intervention. As a Christian I can tell you, God helps those who help themselves. The Jamaican Government and it’s lackeys in the Police Department chased effective police officers from the Force and replaced them with pencil-pushing desk-warming wannabes, mainly their cronies from the University of the West Indies (UWI) who needed work. Platitudes, Promises and Pronouncements are the order of the day as the Crime wave rages. As one person puts it Nero twiddles his thumb as Rome burns.
Williams calls for partnerships to fight crime .jis file photo
Youth Unemployment is roughly twice the National Average in Jamaica . Youth Unemployment Rate in Jamaica decreased to 5.70 percent in May of 2015 from 5.90 percent in April of 2015. according to the Ministry of Internal Affairs & Communications. According to the same reporting the very same Ministry reports that Youth Unemployment in 2015, reached an all time high of 13.20 percent in March of 2003. To Jamaicans familiar with the number of young people with absolutely nothing to do these numbers are beyond laughable. Despite this, I am not talking specifically about youth unemployment in the abstract but as one of the reasons for the Country’s high murder rate. Youth Unemployment. Deportation. Lack of adequate Laws. Lack of laws with teeth. Police Incompetence. Lack of support for the Rule of Law. Lack of support from the Political Directorate to Law Enforcement, are only some of the issues fueling the Nation’s burgeoning crime wave.
WHATISCOMMISSIONEROFPOLICECARLWILLIAMSSMOKING ? Commissioner of Police Dr Carl Williams yesterday gave himself a perfect rating of 10 out of 10 as he launched what he said were a number of new and tweaked initiatives to go after criminals who are responsible for almost 90 per cent of the 602 murders recorded in the island over the first six months of this year , according to the Jamaica Observer. SEESTORYHEREPerfect 10.
According to the reporting , that figure represents a 19 per cent jump (98 more) in the number of murders committed over the corresponding period last year. The Article theorized that Williams is seeking to allay the fears of Jamaicans.
I am unsure to what extent another pronouncement from the Police High Command offering grand platitudes and making promises it cannot and has no capacity to fulfill will do that. Williams argues that at the top of the list of initiatives to stem the tide of deadly crimes was a new program called ‘Get the Guns Campaign’, which will offer monetary incentives to citizens who provide information that lead to the confiscation of deadly weapons. “In light of this and the increased use of guns in murders, I am here introducing the ‘Get the Guns Campaign’,” the commissioner told journalists at a news conference at his office in Kingston. “This campaign is designed to one, intercept illegal guns coming into the country; two, seize illegal guns in the hands of the criminals; and three, ultimately reduce the number of gun murders in the country,” Williams said.!!! Call me uninformed and silly but I have to ask this of Commissioner Williams. If the program is to quote : Offer monetary incentives to citizens who provide information that lead to the confiscation of deadly weapons.! How will the very same program quote: Intercept illegal guns coming into the country; two, seize illegal guns in the hands of the criminals; and three, ultimately reduce the number of gun murders in the country,”? Hence my question to the goodly Dr. What are you smoking?
Erecting crime scene tape and collecting names does nothing to reduce crime or alter the mindset of criminals. It simply does not work.
Essentially this is just another Gun Amnesty which generally does precious little to reduce Crime but provides a stream of income to those already immersed in criminal conduct and more specifically those engaged in the gun trade. Generally, Criminals do not give up their guns, they will turn over unused or unusable old weapons to the police while holding onto their stash of real weapons. Probably more consequential, a gun amnesty opens up new opportunities for gun traders to source weapons illegally then simply sell them to the Police/Government at a profit.
As a former front line street cop I was never particularly enthused about gun amnesty. They never realize the intended results. In the end they offer pay-offs to citizens who should have called police about their knowledge of illegal weapons for their own good to begin with. Good citizens call police about criminal activity, including the whereabouts of illegal weapons. Jamaicans must understand the lives they save may be their very own. As a supporter of the Rule of Law, and a Jamaican who yearn for the Police Department to be an efficient entity which produces results, I am pained at the Commissioner’s statements. This statement is a clear indication that on the merits the Police has no real strategy to push back against serious crimes in Jamaica.
In the end the bodies pile up…
I am aware that the Government has not supplied nearly enough resources to do the Job. We are also aware that to some extent The Administration is heavily invested in Criminal conduct through surrogates who are well placed in critical areas of the society. I am also aware that the Administration has a network of Garrisons throughout the Country in which Criminal behavior is nurtured and encouraged . Despite this, it is important that the Police employ more strident and workable strategies geared at providing returns on Investments for the Jamaican Nation. I fully understand that the Force is largely demoralized as a result of the foregone and other issues, however the Commissioner must use the tools he has at his disposal more effectively. A gun Amnesty is not the answer real and tangible strategies are ..
(1)Training Detectives to Investigate Crimes. (2) Using your Office to push the Administration to pass Laws putting criminals behind bars and keeping them there. (3) Use Officers more efficiently by having very visible , coördinated presence in high risk communities . (4) Having yourself and the rest of the Gazetted Ranks stand firmly and unequivocally behind Officers until they are proven to have broken the laws. Over the decades Commissioners and the Gazetted Ranks have been nothing but boot licking lackeys when it comes to supporting police who do the real work. (5) Be professional take no bullshit from neither the Administration nor the Opposition. In order to effect change the Police must become an equal opportunity offender in support of the Nation’s Laws. (6) Stop being subservient and deferential to Politicians.
Over the years this publication has made real and substantive suggestions which if adopted would have seriously placed serious crimes in remission. Many years ago while I was a young Constable stationed at the Mobile Reserve criminals would terrorize Brook Avenue and other parts of the community of Duhaney Park. Armed with high-powered weapons they used the high ground at the back of Brook avenue as a staging ground from which to launch assaults on the Community. A single Police Unit with four officers, appropriately armed, strategically placed brought those attacks to a halt. These are not new strategies. They worked in the Eastern St Andrew communities of Nannyville, at the foot of Wareika Hills, and in other locations all across the corporate area. As a young officer I was part of similar strategies all across the Country as we were airlifted into communities like Hayes and adjoining communities in the Parish of Clarendon. Flankers in St. James and other communities all across our country. The placement of well trained , well equipped officers who are unafraid to take action is the best way to tamp down on serious crimes. Placing band-aid on gunshot wounds is a fool’s errand. Commissioner Williams may have spent too much time behind desks to fully understanding crime fighting techniques. Empty out the Police stations, flood the communities with uniformed cops . The best deterrent against criminals is catching them when they commit crimes. If officers are placed and their placement strategically coördinated with appropriate reinforcements crime trends down dramatically. As I have said before there are structural and geographical challenges to efficient policing in Jamaica, despite those challenges, sustained ‚coördinated intelligence-based policing is possible. It’s time the Commissioner and his cohorts above Cross Roads realize that PhD’s are good but they do precious little to impact crime . Flowery goobly-gook sounds good but real policing from real cops has no substitute. That is the job of real dedicated crime fighters who know what the hell they are about.
Photo by: Dennis Van Tine/STAR MAX/IPx 6/16/15 Donald Trump announces his Candidacy for President of The United States of America at Trump Tower. (NYC)
So far, Donald Trump’s presidential campaign has lived up to, and arguably exceeded, every expectation for self-beclowning while also simultaneously having detonated a 50 megaton crazy bomb inside the GOP. Indeed, every time he’s opened his yap since announcing, something horrendous has spilled out. Whoever started the rumor that Trump might be a Democratic Party apparatchik sent to infiltrate the GOP nomination process and detonate one crazy-bomb after another might actually be onto something. Trump’s been acting erratically enough to merit some serious questioning not only about his party loyalty, but also whether he’s caught in the throes of a nervous breakdown. Maybe it’s both.
Trump might very well be the least self-aware politician in the history of modern campaigning, not only because he stupidly grappled onto the third and fourth rails of Republican politics — rape and race — but in the wake of doing so he can’t stop responding to the predictable backlash, thus keeping the story about calling Mexicans “rapists” alive for much longer than it otherwise would’ve been. If he was half the politician he thinks he is, he’d simply shut the hell up and allow the story to fade away. By now, and due mostly to his total lack of self-control, everyone knows what he said about Mexicans, and they’re verbally and deservedly smacking him in the back of his clownish head.
Let’s first recap some of the most recent responses to Trump’s Mexicans-are-rapists statement, then we’ll get into Trump’s responses:
• Mitt Romney, who deafeningly tooted nearly every imaginable racial dog-whistle during his 2012 campaign (remember “Obama Isn’t Working” and Obama’s policies are “foreign?”), denounced Trump’s rapists remark at an Independence Day parade in New Hampshire, saying, “I think he made a severe error in saying what he did about Mexican-Americans.” Trump was talking about undocumented workers, so it’s refreshing that Romney would add “Americans” to that title.
• George Pataki, meanwhile, referred to Trump’s remarks “divisive rhetoric,” which is clearly soft-pedaling what ought to be described as “unforgivably stupid and offensive.” But we’ll take it.
• On Fox News Sunday, George Will couldn’t stop talking about Trump’s awfulness, going so far as to compare Trump to the notorious Todd Akin, who infamously described rape as “legitimate rape.” Ouch.
Said Will:
“Picture him on stage in [the GOP debate in] Cleveland,” Will said on Fox News Sunday this morning. “He says something hideously inflammatory — which is all he knows how to say — and then what do the other nine people on stage do? Do they either become complicit in what he said by their silence, or do they all have to attack him? The debate gets hijacked. The process gets hijacked. At the end of the day he is a one-man Todd Akin. He’s Todd Akin with ten different facets.”
I’m not sure what exactly Will means by “Todd Akin with ten different facets,” but sure. Why not.
• The reigning Miss Universe, Pauline Vega, called Trump’s remarks “hurtful and unfair.”
“To make these extraordinarily ugly kind of comments is not reflective of the Republican Party,” Mr. Bush said about Mr. Trump, whose comments caused NBC, Univision, Macy’s and others to cut ties with him. “He’s doing this — he’s not a stupid guy, so I don’t assume he thinks that every Mexican crossing the border is a rapist. He’s doing this to inflame and incite and to draw attention, which seems to be the organizing principle of his campaign,” Mr. Bush said.
• But, actually, the most remarkable attack on Trump came from this guy:
Rick Perry and Sean Hannity
That’s Rick Perry aboard a border patrol gun boat practically dry-humping an automatic rifle aimed at Mexico, which, come to think of it, might actually be moreoffensive than what Trump said. And yet, the guy who dressed up in border patrol regalia with Sean Hannity ripped into Trump’s statement about Mexicans, saying:
“Donald Trump does not represent the Republican party,” Perry added. “I was offended by his remarks. Hispanics in America, and Hispanics in Texas, from the Alamo to Afghanistan, have been extraordinary people… they have served nobly. To paint with that broad a brush — he’s going to have to defend those remarks. I never will.”
Nope, Perry won’t defend Trump’s remarks, but give the former Texas governor a big ass machine gun and he’ll annihilate Mexican immigrants by the boat load. But calling them “rapists” is indefensible to Perry. Don’t get me wrong, they’re both demons on immigration, but it’s hilarious to observe a guy who wants to shoot Mexicans scolding another guy who believes Mexicans are rapists.
The only two candidates to rush to Trump’s defense have been, naturally, Ted Cruz and Chris Christie. Clearly none of these guys got the GOP memo about Latino outreach. And you know what? Great. There’s really nothing wrong with the Republican Party committing political suicide. Along those lines, Trump is the first to tie cinder blocks to his feet and jump head-first into the Hudson. Trump, suffering from an almost Tourettes-like compulsion to counter-attack, has responded to all of the attacks.
So how did Trump respond to all of this criticism? Let’s review:
• Trump called Pauline Vega a “hypocrite,” saying on Sunday: “Miss Universe, Pauline Vega, criticized me for telling the truth about illegal immigration, but then said she would keep the crown. Hypocrite.”
“Today, Jeb Bush once again proves that he is out of touch with the American people,” Trump wrote Saturday. “Just like the simple question asked of Jeb on Iraq, where it took him five days and multiple answers to get it right, he doesn’t understand anything about the border or border security. In fact, Jeb believes illegal immigrants who break our laws when they cross our border come ‘out of love.’”
Maybe Trump is right and Bush doesn’t know anything about border security or, for that matter, Iraq. But what does Trump calling Mexicans “rapists” have anything to do with border security?
• Trump also went ad hominem against Rick Perry, criticizing the former governor’s trademark smart-guy glasses:
• And finally, during an interview on Fox News (Trump’s best friend right now), he lamented why-oh-why everyone thinks he’s a racist:
“It seems like I’m sort of the whipping post because I bring it up. And I don’t understand whether you are liberal or whether you are conservative or whether you are Republican, Democrat — why wouldn’t you talk about a problem?” Trump said Saturday. “The crime is raging. It’s violent, and people don’t want to even talk about it. If you talk about it, you are a racist. I don’t understand it.”
Aww. Poor you. I’ve said this about celebrities who market in controversial statements, and it totally applies here: if you deliberately say something outrageous, don’t act all shocked and hurt when people become outraged. It’s part of the game. If Trump doesn’t want to be a “whipping post” then stop saying things that incite people to whip him. There’s this little thing called accountability, and, frankly, I thought the Republican Party is all about taking personal responsibility. Not Trump, though, who thinks everyone is stupid except him.
But as Trump ricochets around the GOP field, wreaking mayhem and undermining the party, allow me to join the chorus of liberals who are hoping he’ll just keep going. Because in terms of annihilating the GOP brand, he’s doing a fantastic job. In fact, I might actually donate some money to his campaign today.
In a recent (United States State Department) Report on Human Rights the Agency alleged that “The (Jamaican) Government did not restrict or disrupt access to the Internet or censor online content. There were credible reports, however, that the Government monitored private online communications without appropriate legal authority.”
Jamaica’s Government does not spy on it’s citizen .. America does
The United States State Department is in brackets because I believe there is a misguided notion in the United States that the American State Department is the State Department for the rest of the World. Last time I checked Jamaica was a small but Sovereign Nation, having to find it’s own way in the world amidst the inherent disadvantages it faces against larger Nations, economically and otherwise. Jamaican Authorities have angrily pushed back against this assertion by The United States State Department allegations. In a strongly worded response Junior Technology Minister Julian Robinson challenged the US authorities to provide proof of the allegations laid against the Jamaican Government. Yesterday, the American Embassy in Kingston responded with a release saying that an inaccuracy had been published. Now lets be reasonable it is quite normal for humans to make mistake. It is certainly not Okay or cool for Nations to illicitly obtain information, then smear and malign other Nations with what amounts to nothing but lies. Then to add insult to Injury simply say “whoops we made a mistake”. What right did you have making the assertion in the first place? How did you acquire the information? The fact is, all of this information, correct and incorrect are gleaned by CIA operatives , many of whom are brushing shoulders with Jamaicans at every level of Jamaican society. They operate out of the United States Embassy, where they conduct illicit and un-authorized spying. It’s not okay to simply say …
The US Department of State has now corrected the report and, as part of its process to develop these reports, the US Government wanted “a robust exchange” between civil society, the press, and government leaders on the issue. “We welcome feedback on the report, with the objective of maintaining the most authoritative, comprehensive and factual review of the global state of human rights,”
Jamaica is not America’s 51st state . The United States needs to pay attention to it’s own transgressions and breaches of Human Right which are many , varied and egregious, particularly under the Patriot Act. Torture. Extra-judicial killings by Police. Illicit spying on it’s own citizens. And it’s total un-restrained big Government control of it’s own citizenry. How dare the United States continue to inject itself into the affairs of other Nations under the guise of International Human Rights when right here in America the Government engages in illegal and unconstitutional surveillance of it’s own citizens. Engages in Drone Killings(Innocent Casualties be damned). And other tactics designed to silence anyone opposed to it’s operations. Under the Obama Administration, Whistle blowers like Edward Snowden and Wiki-Leaks’s Julian Asange have had to seek Sanctuary in exile to avoid prosecution. Why ? Because they dare reveal what the Government is doing against it’s own Constitution, and people. Under Obama more whistle blowers have been prosecuted than under any other Administration. Those who stand in defense of the Constitution against Government illicit behavior do so at their own peril. Speaking out against the American Government is not exactly advisable unless one is prepared for the consequences. Where does the State Department gets it’s gall criticizing other Countries in light of these truths without first fixing it’s own injustices and Governmental intrusions into people’s lives?
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