ZipLaw Jamaica

[ skip to navigation ]
ZipLaw: Imagine the possibilities
« Two murdered in little London | Main | Hinds to take charge of Clarendon »

Kingston crime chief

May 09, 2008

LES GREEN, the assistant commissioner of police who heads the Major Investigation Task Force (MIT), will as of Monday lead a team of 120 police personnel with a specific mandate to cramp the unbridled murder rate in the Corporate Area.

Green and his team have been given the task to probe all firearm-related murder investigations in Kingston and St Andrew, in an attempt to ferret out and arrest persons responsible for the wanton killings.

Deputy Commissioner Mark Shields has overall responsibility for the crime portfolio.

Homicides

For the month of April, the Corporate Area recorded 81 murders or 68 per cent of the total number of homicides islandwide.

The latest move to stem the crime wave comes against the background of increasing calls for the Bruce Golding administration to tackle the escalating problem.

A high-level meeting yesterday, between Golding, National Security Minister Derrick Smith, the acting minister Dwight Nelson, along with heads of the security forces and other senior officers, produced a set of old and new measures to reduce the murder rate.

Marginal success

Green told The Gleaner that although the MIT was asked to investigate shootings and murders in the Corporate Area earlier this year, the unit was only able to reap marginal success because it does not have enough personnel.

He said arrests by the MIT increased from 36 per cent to 49 per cent this year compared with the similar period last year.

President of the Jamaica Chamber of Commerce Mark Myers applauded the measures but argued that long term initiatives, including the creation of jobs and community policing were key elements in efforts to reduce crime.

He said the zero tolerance approach to minor offences was a step in the right direction....

Continue reading this article

Author: Edmond Campbell and Mark Beckford
Source: Jamaica Gleaner

 

Go to top of page