I am again publishing my plan to the Jamaican Government, a plan I believe is not a panacea but one that will begin the slow and tedious process of extricating Jamaica from the jaws of failure.
Each of the pillars of this plan will need discussion, and some will require new legislation to be passed to effectuate the desired outcomes. Additionally, this plan will be most effective if executed with a parallel economic plan that revitalizes depressed areas providing jobs to dispossessed youths.
Jamaican leaders have consistently led the Jamaican people into believing the lie that we can achieve first-world status on old-world infrastructure.
The Soviet Union crumbled when it engaged with America, which had a robust modern economy. The Americans could spend what they wanted; the Soviets couldn’t because their economy was largely propped up by subsistence farming in the satellite states.
Jamaica, too is headed for financial and societal collapse as successive administrations of the two political parties have continued on the same path of lying to the people that we can achieve prosperity on old laws which (a) have little to zero deterrent effect, (b) drives away the private sector, © increases crime, (d) sends a larger share of the diminishing gross domestic product to the fleeting concept of security within the present construct.
We need a new constitution that reflects the Jamaican people’s needs today and for centuries.
We need to extricate ourselves from the colonial shackles still on our brains as we remain tethered to Britain for no reason other than being afraid to be independent.
We need new laws that mandate no zinc fences anywhere as we encourage our people, regardless of their financial standing to learn to live in an open and free society.
Only when we take these rather simple steps will we begin to see a reduction in the number of violent crimes committed in our country.
No plan will be a panacea or a silver bullet against what has been decades in the making, speaking of the entrenched crime situation.
Nevertheless, we need a citizen-focused plan that considers the interest of law-abiding Jamaicans over those of criminals who decide to engage in a life of crime.
MY CRIME PLAN
(1) Strong penalties for violent crimes.
The penalties presently in place for violent crimes, including murders, are far too lenient and offer precious deterrent effects, if any.
Additionally, to clear court docket backlogs, the government has devised policies that offer murder-accused and others a 50% reduction in their sentence in exchange for a guilty plea.
To begin with, the sentences handed down for murder sometimes are as low as seven (7) years; a 50% reduction takes it down to 31⁄2 years. If the accused is already in custody because he wasn’t given bail, they receive consideration for time served. Using this metric, a person finally convicted of murder may walk free from incarceration on the day they have been convicted of the crime.
In response to his sentencing patterns in western Jamaica, one of the judiciary members said the following. “If a rich man’s son “commits a crime, they expect leniency,” but if a poor man commits a crime, they expect me to send him to prison.”
The judge cited probation reports as being vital in playing a role in the sentencing process. He argues that when the reports are looked at in some cases, many of the young boys involved had been involved in sporting activities, including football. “You have to rescue them,’ he said.
This judge spoke about murderers he released back into society after they were convicted, sometimes on multiple murder charges.
Here is an unelected judge that is not answerable to the people supplanting the already lax penalties in the laws with his idea of justice. This must come to an end.
(2) Truth in sentencing.
Murder should carry a penalty of twenty-five (25) years on the low end and the high-end life without the possibility of parole.
Judges should only be given discretion when violence is used to cause someone’s death when there was no intent. As in manslaughter. For example, two people fighting, one pushes or punches the other, who falls, hits his head, and dies.
In such a case, a judge may use their discretion if the offender does not have a verifiable violent past on record.
The police cited hundreds of verifiable cases in which murderers and other felons were released back onto the streets after they were arrested. In most cases, offenders are charged with murder, and sometimes several counts of murder are granted bail. Once released, they continue on their murder spree, which usually ends when they confront the police with guns blazing.
The idea that judges see their roles as social workers instead of the following precedent as stipulated in paragraph(3) above demonstrates the need for mandatory minimum sentences for certain crime categories, effectively removing that function from the hands of judges. The breakdown of law and order and the general lawlessness in the country are directly attributable to the lax, complicit, corrupt, and incompetent justice system led by the Islands judges who refuse to follow precedent.
Instead of fixing that problem as police officers have been demanding for decades [a problem I complained about over two decades ago while I was a serving police officer], they continue blaming the police for complicity while ignoring this glaring problem.
(3) Mandatory Minimum sentences for violent crimes.
The sentences applied for murder and other crimes of violence are insufficient to convey that violence will not be tolerated. As such, violence has become almost the only conflict resolution tool used by citizens who no longer fear the consequences of their violent actions.
Some people talk about human rights whenever the subject of penalties is being discussed for violent offenders as if their victims are not entitled to consideration or have the right to life and freedom from violence.
Our criminal justice system [must] be focused on the rights of crime victims and law-abiding citizens over the rights of crime producers.
Pass laws that protect the population and allow the apologists to do what they do ‑apologize and lobby on behalf of murderers.
(4) Remove from the control of judges the sentence violent gangsters receive.
This sub-section is directly related to sub-section 2 & 3 and is, for the most self-explanatory.
(5) Mandatory minimum of 25 years in prison and a maximum life without the possibility of parole for murder
See sub-section (2)
(6) No bail for accused murderers.
The bail act stipulates that a defendant may be refused bail if he is likely to(a) re-offend, (b) likely to abscond and © likely to interfere with witnesses. Despite these strong points for refusal of bail, the judiciary continues to allow violent murderers back onto the streets after arrest, with devastating consequences to innocent, law-abiding citizens under the guise that bail should not be used as punishment.
When a judge advances this argument, it becomes clear that the life of the accused is more important than the victims they are accused of taking. This must stop.
(7) Speedy trial for murder accused.
The law guarantees an accused person’s right to a speedy trial. A speedy trial is central to the rights of persons accused of a crime and the aggrieved party.
It isn’t easy to make the case that the Jamaican state has fulfilled that guarantee to persons it takes into custody.
The Justice Ministry has embarked on ill-advised measures to free up court dockets, ultimately aimed at speedy future trials.
I’m not convinced that allowing murderers to walk free if they do not receive a timely trial is the way to fix this problem.
But then again, the system was not built to care about crime victims’ rights.
Because this plan espouses no bail for the murder accused, a speedy trial is a critical underpinning of the former.
(8) Change criminal-focused strategy to victim-focused.
Every person has a right to be treated with respect even when arrested and accused of committing a crime. The idea that a person is innocent until proven guilty is not an academic or theoretical concept but a fundamental right that governments must respect.
Even convicted criminals enjoy certain but not all, rights they had pre-conviction. The fact that criminals do not enjoy the same rights they had before they committed crimes seems to be lost on legislators because of powerful and influential lobbying efforts from special interests in JAMAICA.
Lost in the shuffle is the fact that there are victims and their families whom everyone forgets who suffer due to the crimes their assailants committed against them.
At every turn, there are pontificators and self-aggrandizing, self-appointed experts advocating for murderous criminals. The Government has a sacred duty to protect the rights and safety of the Jamaican people.
(9) Create national security policy based on Jamaica’s unique needs, not what foreign interests want.
Jamaica has woven itself into a web of international treaties, making it almost impossible to govern itself. A truly independent nation has no obligation to sign on to every treaty and convention it sees to seem a part of the crowd.
A nation [must] examine each treaty and convention to see whether or not the needs of its people are best served.
A new constitution would allow the Jamaican people to say through a ballot measure whether it approves or disapproves of capital punishment, for example, and not be dictated to by a court of the colonial master.
No independent democratic nation should give away its right to self-govern by signing on to international treaties and conventions that are antithetical to the good of its people.
(10) Invest heavily in criminal investigation techniques.
Two of the more effective things that a police department can do to reduce crime are (1) deter would-be criminals and (2) have the capacity to find and prosecute those who do commit crimes.
Jamaican law enforcement has demonstrated that it can bring criminals to justice if given the proper training and tools to do the job. However, the interest of the force and the Jamaican citizens have not been served as it should for decades, as the JCF has been starved of the training, resources, and remunerations it needs to get the job done.
The JCF, as a law enforcement agency, throughout its existence, has not demonstrated or shown the proper respect detectives deserve. Detectives are not compensated or promoted commensurate with the value of their work.
I know that the same arguments could be made for the entire force, and I may be somewhat biased, having served in criminal investigations.
Nevertheless, those who served in criminal investigations know it is not a department where shifts and clock-watching matter.
The government must show respect to criminal detectives and give them the respect and reward they deserve.
(11) Hire more judges that were former prosecutors.
This plan has components that would remove certain functions from judges’ purview. To effectuate better outcomes with greater clarity, the government should, as a matter of policy, hire more lawyers who come from the prosecution side of the aisle to become judges.
Even with ineffective legal penalties for the most serious crimes, judges continue to mock the criminal justice system through political and corrupt means.
From Parish courts to the Supreme court, judges and’ justices’ continually act as defense attorneys to the most dangerous killers brought before the courts.
Not only are they acting as defacto lawyers for the defense, but they also have, over the decades, gone out of their way to be disrespectful and hostile to police officers and prosecutors.
(12) Build Prisons.
Whenever governments decide to build prisons, it creates a flurry of heated conversations for and against them. However, governing is different from talking. Therefore, as the government has a duty to build schools, hospitals, police and fire stations, roads, and other infrastructure, it is also obligated to build prisons to house serious offenders.
Because Jamaica is forced to accept the dictates of its former colonial master that it cannot hang murderers, it must ensure that they are not released back into society to create the mayhem they have been allowed to create for decades.
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Mike Beckles is a former Police Detective, businessman, freelance writer, black achiever honoree, and creator of the blog mikebeckles.com.