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Suh after hearing that in Jamaica there

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  • Suh after hearing that in Jamaica there

    are over 150 gangs, anybody object to this request?

    'Criminalise gang membership'
    Police seek law to deal with group crimesROSS SHEIL, Online co-ordinator rsheil@jamaicaobserver.com
    Friday, June 27, 2008


    THE Jamaica Constabulary Force (JCF) wants the Government to introduce legislation criminalising gang membership.
    Such legislation would enable police to pursue criminals based on their gang-related behaviour rather than specific offences and would increase the number of prosecutions, Owen Ellington, assistant commissioner of police with responsibility for operations, told the Observer during an interview.
    According to Ellington, the move would be similar to the United States Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organisations (RICO) Act, which allows for criminals who have committed two gang-related crimes to be charged with racketeering. Since 1970, the RICO Act has been used by US law enforcement agencies to disrupt several prominent gangs, including the Italian mafia, and seize their assets.
    "We need Rico-like statutes that deal more decisively with group crimes rather than individual offences," he said. "That kind of legislation, where we can criminalise criminal gangs and we can criminalise membership in a gang and therefore where any member of a gang is convicted of any offence we can spread the pain across all other known members of a gang."
    The police say that there are more than 125 gangs in Jamaica, many of which include people who don't actually fire guns or engage in robberies and other crimes. These gang members, the police say, run errands like picking up money at remittance outlets to finance the gangs' operations; stakeout targets; carry guns for gunmen; and serve as lookouts to warn armed gangsters when members of the security forces enter their communities.
    Ellington said that the current approach of the criminal justice system, which focuses on the individual, needs to be urgently updated.
    "Urgent, because there has been a transformation of the Jamaican criminal landscape from individualistic one-to-one crimes to group offences or gang crimes which are responsible for over 80 per cent of our serious crimes - murders, shooting, extortion, contract killings, carjacking, the lotto scam out in St James and enforcing garrisons," Ellington told the Observer.
    The JCF is building capacity in various areas so that once the legislation is passed, the Constabulary will be able to actively pursue the gangs, he added.
    Police say they have already disrupted at least one gang using mathematical modelling techniques, which build profiles of gangs, including membership, activities, assets and local and international linkages. The officer who introduced that approach, Assistant Superintendent Kevin Blake, is also rolling out an islandwide intelligence database for the JCF via his company, Enterprise Technology International.
    Currently operating at a divisional level, the database centrally records all information collected by police, much of which remains limited to paper-based records.
    "As it is now, you lose a register, you lose everything," Ellington said.
    Other information from the criminal justice system can also be stored into the database, including courts and prison records.
    The JCF aims to roll out the system to every station. However, this will depend on the progress of upgrading, including the provision of computer equipment and Internet access.
    "Jamaica's future reflects its past, having attained only one per cent annual growth over 30 years whilst neighbours have grown at five per cent." (Article)

  • #2
    "Police say they have already disrupted at least one gang using mathematical modelling techniques, which build profiles of gangs, including membership, activities, assets and local and international linkages. The officer who introduced that approach, Assistant Superintendent Kevin Blake, is also rolling out an islandwide intelligence database for the JCF via his company, Enterprise Technology International."

    -So exactly how do you prove membership in a gang? through a mathematical modelling technique??

    pr
    Peter R

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    • #3
      Take that, HL!


      BLACK LIVES MATTER

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      • #4
        Originally posted by Lazie View Post
        are over 150 gangs, anybody object to this request?

        'Criminalise gang membership'
        Police say they have already disrupted at least one gang using mathematical modelling techniques, which build profiles of gangs, including membership, activities, assets and local and international linkages. The officer who introduced that approach, Assistant Superintendent Kevin Blake, is also rolling out an islandwide intelligence database for the JCF via his company, Enterprise Technology International.
        He must be white

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by Peter R View Post
          "Police say they have already disrupted at least one gang using mathematical modelling techniques, which build profiles of gangs, including membership, activities, assets and local and international linkages. The officer who introduced that approach, Assistant Superintendent Kevin Blake, is also rolling out an islandwide intelligence database for the JCF via his company, Enterprise Technology International."

          -So exactly how do you prove membership in a gang? through a mathematical modelling technique??

          pr

          Comment


          • #6
            "gang membership" is way too fluid......what dem expect to find membership application and dues?

            should be more based on assorting, consorting and conspiring to commit certain activitity that would be loosely defined as gang activity

            Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

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            • #7
              How much PHD yuh have?

              Not many of you would single out the Jamaican policeman as the smartest of workers, in which case you probably haven't met Assistant Superintendent Kevin Blake.

              Blake, 36 years old, has completed his first of three years study leave towards completing PhD in computing at the Univsersity of the West Indies (UWI) Mona. Attached to the Jamaica Constabulary Force (JCF) anti-organised crime Kingfish unit, his mathematical modeling skills have been used on an experimental basis to help break-up criminal gangs.

              His company, Enterprise Technology International is implementing a database it designed to connect all JCF operations and by the time he completes his doctorate, aims to have developed software to enable police to most efficiently deploy patrols.

              It's the kind of thinking that contributes to the ongoing modernisation of the JCF. Already new Commissioner Hardley Lewin has announced the closure of several stations and their personnel put back on the street.

              The future of Blake, a 2002 JCF graduate entry candidate, looks bright. That of organised criminal gangs, potentially less so.

              "Ordered sets theory allows you to organise networks, a criminal network or a terrorist cell, and mathematically calculate the chances of successfully disrupting the cell upon capturing a number of those individuals," he explained.

              The theory enables mathemiticians to determine the hierachy, inter-relationships and functions of a group. The approach was introduced to him by Jonathan Farley, Professor of mathematics at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) and formerly of UWI Mona.
              Farley is a leading advocate of using mathematical modeling in counter-terrorism; chiefly lattice theory, which is a combination of ordered sets and algebra.

              "The idea, in a nutshell, is that people who share many of the same characteristics are grouped together as one node, and links between nodes in this picture — called a "concept lattice" — indicate that all the members of a certain subgroup, with certain attributes, must also have other attributes," wrote Farley in the New York Times.

              While all this may sound like an overblown approach to policing under local conditions, the intention is simply to better allocate the JCF's scarce resources, said Blake.
              Jamaica has one of the lowest ratios of police to citizen among Caribbean nations, despite having the dubious reputation of the world's highest murder rate (inadequate training resources have held up the scheduled increase of JCF personnel from 8,500 to 12,000).

              Blake’s work has already contributed to the disruption of one criminal gang, which he declined to name, but outlined the process nonetheless.

              "If you have a gang of say 20 persons, if you can seriously disrupt that gang by removing four or five persons then you'd want to concentrate your resources there. Not to say you're not interested in apprehending the others but with a certain amount of resources you want the best results,” he explained.

              The Royal Dutch Defense Academy is one security force to have adapted a mathematical approach, using graph theory - the studying of graphs and mathematical structures - for counter-terrorism

              "Jamaica would be ahead of every other country if it used order theory to fight crime," said Farley. "I cannot say (how) valuable ordered sets will be in fighting crime, but I am impressed that a man who carries a gun feels these techniques might be valuable."

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              • #8
                depends...what does "PHD" mean?

                Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

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                • #9
                  PumPum Hin Droves

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                  • #10
                    i refuse to answer that question.......

                    Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

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                    • #11
                      hahahahahahhaaaaa...extremely funny indeed!!!!!!!!
                      The only time TRUTH will hurt you...is if you ignore it long enough

                      HL

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                      • #12
                        Ah who fambily tree dat?

                        pr
                        Peter R

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                        • #13
                          Lets hope the gangs don't read the papers or Rbsc.com

                          pr
                          Peter R

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