Many Jamaicans Sympathetic To Criminals/​It’s Important To Impose Stiffer Sanctions For Violent Crimes

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I make no apol­o­gy for stri­dent­ly demand­ing that mur­der­ers such as the one in the sto­ry below be sen­tenced to the longest time pos­si­ble. In a coun­try like Jamaica that sup­ports mur­der­ers instead of the deceased vic­tim, the gov­ern­ment must send an unam­bigu­ous mes­sage to the pub­lic that it is seri­ous about mur­der­ers pay­ing for their crimes.
The out­ra­geous calls from the lumpen pro­lif­er­ate to free this mur­der­er and that rapist has become par for the course in our beau­ti­ful coun­try. Calls to free con­vict­ed killers come even from what pass­es for the press and many who should know better.
Worse yet, judges have also fall­en for the sil­ly idea that lenien­cy is a bet­ter approach than a clear and unequiv­o­cal strong sentence.
As the calls inten­si­fy for cer­tain con­vict­ed ele­ments to be freed from prison, it bears remem­ber­ing that the con­vict­ed cretin is being rep­re­sent­ed by anoth­er twice-con­vict­ed cretin who is now oper­at­ing as a crim­i­nal defense lawyer.
Such is the twist­ed state of our jus­tice sys­tem that has, for all intents and pur­pos­es, may now be referred to as an unjust shitstem… 

When soci­ety cares more about the celebri­ty sta­tus of a con­vict­ed mur­der­er than his vic­tim, soci­ety is in deep moral decay.
When the celebri­ty sta­tus of a con­vict­ed rapist takes cen­ter stage over the inno­cent woman whose very soul he vio­lat­ed, it demon­strates the deca­dent state of our moral clarity.
This is the rea­son the penal­ty for mur­der, rape, and oth­er crimes of vio­lence must be set in stone so that no judge gets to impose their opin­ion at sentencing.
Criminal defen­dants already have a huge leg up: (a) Even when they are seen com­mit­ting crimes, it is dif­fi­cult to get wit­ness­es to tes­ti­fy. (b) If they aren’t seen com­mit­ting the act, police must do the painstak­ing and ardu­ous task of col­lect­ing evi­dence, enough to bring it to tri­al. Even so, in our coun­try, huge swaths of the pop­u­la­tion cheer the degen­er­ates who com­mit mur­der and are con­vict­ed of these crimes and demand their release from incarceration.
© At tri­al, pros­e­cu­tors must prove the alle­ga­tions beyond a rea­son­able doubt, a dif­fi­cult and high bar in a nation high­ly sym­pa­thet­ic to crim­i­nals. When the judges love the crim­i­nals, the pros­e­cu­tors are incom­pe­tent, and defense attor­neys are for­mer con­vict­ed felons, it is a case of the Fox guard­ing the Hen-house.
When the dishrags are made into table­cloths, they bring germs and muck onto the din­ing table, con­t­a­m­i­nate the meal, and cause the din­ers to get sick.
When the pres­tige and hon­or of the courts are watered down to accom­mo­date con­vict­ed felons, the courts lose their lus­ter and author­i­ty. The felons are now in charge of the Asylum. (MB).

Man who killed lover in supermarket gets reduced sentence

Andre Bromfield, the for­mer deliv­ery super­vi­sor who was sen­tenced to 18 years and five months at hard labor for the mur­der of his then 24-year-old girl­friend Shantell Whyte just over four years ago, had his sen­tence reduced by two years and 15 months due to what the Appeal Court said were errors in the approach adopt­ed by the sen­tenc­ing judge. 
Bromfield had pumped five shots into Whyte’s head in a super­mar­ket in Mandeville, Manchester, in December 2019. Bromfield had plead­ed guilty to manslaugh­ter dur­ing his first court appear­ance after the killing. He was sen­tenced in May 2022. He will now serve 15 years and sev­en months impris­on­ment at hard labor after the Appeal Court deduct­ed the pre-sen­tence peri­od of two years and five months from the orig­i­nal 18 years and five months. The footage of the shoot­ing, which was cap­tured on a sur­veil­lance cam­era, was wide­ly cir­cu­lat­ed via tra­di­tion­al and social media platforms.
According to the facts of the case unveiled dur­ing the tri­al, both Bromfield and Whyte, who were employed to MasterMac Food Store in Mandeville, Manchester, were involved in an inti­mate rela­tion­ship. On December 31, 2019, at approx­i­mate­ly 6:15 pm, Whyte was seat­ed in the lunch­room of MasterMac Food Store along with anoth­er co-work­er. Bromfield entered the lunch room and told the co-work­er, “Mi a go tell you some­thing weh hap­pen ear­li­er today. Keido come inna the lunch­room and hug har up and kiss har on her cheek.” To which Whyte respond­ed, “A shoul­da pon mi lip him kiss me”.

Bromfield then pulled his licensed firearm, fired sev­er­al shots at Whyte and ran out of the room. Whyte, accord­ing to a post-mortem report, died as a result of the injuries, which were not­ed as cra­ni­um cere­bral injuries and mul­ti­ple gun­shot wounds to the face. The fol­low­ing day, January 1, 2020, Bromfield sur­ren­dered to the police and, while hand­ing over his firearm along with an emp­ty mag­a­zine, said, “Mi nuh know wah come over mi.” Upon being cau­tioned he said, “Mi tek up dis girl and give her every­thing, build her all two-bed­room house, pay off her cred­it card and mi realise seh she have anoth­er man [an audi­tor]. Mi see di youth a kiss-kiss har up. Mi talk to har and she a diss mi up. Mi just snap.” In his appeal Bromfield, who was rep­re­sent­ed by attor­ney Norman Godfrey, argued that his sen­tence was harsh, man­i­fest­ly exces­sive and can­not be jus­ti­fied. Furthermore he con­tend­ed that the sen­tenc­ing judge made sev­er­al errors and had deprived him of the ben­e­fit of a 50 per cent dis­count based on his guilty plea and instead had only giv­en him 10 per cent. The Appeal Court said, fol­low­ing its review of the case it had “iden­ti­fied some errors in the approach adopt­ed by the sen­tenc­ing judge as it relat­ed to the steps to be fol­lowed in the cal­cu­la­tion process, as well as the adjust­ment for the aggra­vat­ing fac­tors. We also iden­ti­fied a minor error in her appli­ca­tion of the mit­i­gat­ing fac­tors”. The court there­fore ruled that the “ulti­mate sen­tence to be imposed would, there­fore, be 15 years and sev­en months”. The Appeal Court, in not­ing the treat­ment by the judge of the mit­i­gat­ing fac­tors in the case, said it had “iden­ti­fied oth­er mit­i­gat­ing fac­tors that were not applied by the sen­tenc­ing judge to adjust the years to be imposed”. These, it said, were the expres­sion of remorse by the appli­cant and his coöper­a­tion with the police after the com­mis­sion of the offence by sur­ren­der­ing him­self to cus­tody, in addi­tion to his good antecedent report and good social enquiry report “In light of all of the above, we formed the view that the sen­tenc­ing process should be recom­menced as the learned judge erred in prin­ci­ple, in respect of some aspects of the sen­tenc­ing process,” the Appeal Court said in its rul­ing. A mit­i­gat­ing fac­tor is any fact or cir­cum­stance that low­ers the defendant’s cul­pa­bil­i­ty for a crim­i­nal offence, there­by result­ing in a decreased sen­tence. Aggravating fac­tors, on the con­verse, refer to cir­cum­stances sur­round­ing a crime that rais­es the lev­el of sever­i­ty, there­by result­ing in an increased sentence.(Observer)

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