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Fingerprint breach frees accused burglar of charges

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  • Fingerprint breach frees accused burglar of charges

    Published: Sunday | June 14, 2009


    Barabara Gayle, Senior court reporter

    Marva McDonald-Bishop (left) and Tamika Harris


    THE TRIAL of 29-year-old Kirk Salmon of Port Royal took an unusual turn last week when Supreme Court Judge Marva McDonald-Bishop stopped the case because of unfairness in the police investigations.

    The judge directed the jury to return a formal verdict of not guilty, freeing Salmon of the burglary and larceny charges.

    After the Crown closed its case, which was riddled with discrepancies and breaches of the Fingerprint Act, the judge said she had to look at the whole fairness of the case.

    startling revelations

    The startling revelations were made under cross-examination by defence lawyer Tamika Harris that the police had breached the Fingerprint Act because Salmon's fingerprints were taken without his written consent while he was at the Elletson Road Police Station. Salmon was not represented by a lawyer or a justice of the peace when his fingerprints were taken.

    It was also disclosed in the Home Circuit Court that the fingerprints which were taken at the Elletson Road Police Station were not served on defence counsel until June 2, the second day of the trial, although they were taken on March 5, 2006.

    The court was told that they were mislaid and were not found until June 2, 2009.

    Defence counsel had no opportunity to get the opinion of a fingerprint analyst to compare those taken from the crime scene with the ones taken by the police at the police station.

    The prints were lifted from the crime scene on December 21, 2006, and were not handed over to the trained fingerprint analyst for comparison until January 5, 2007. A written statement in respect to the collection of the prints from the crime scene was not prepared until eight months after its collection, in August 2007.

    The policeman who took the lifts from the crime scene said that on the day he collected them, he spoke with the female complainant who took him to the rear of the premises where the fingerprints were taken.

    However, the female complainant said in evidence that she did not speak with any of the policemen on the day the fingerprints were collected and she did not take any policeman to the rear of the premises. She said she stayed in a bedroom in the house with the sick elderly man whom she was taking care of.

    conflicting testimonies

    The policeman said the male complainant stayed in the living room, but the male complainant said otherwise. The male complainant testified that he was the one who escorted the officers to the rear of the premises and showed them the window blades.

    The cop testified that the window blades were on the ground but the complainants said the blades were in place in the window and they did not see when the police dusted the window blades for fingerprints.

    The allegations were that on December 20, 2006, Salmon made a forced entry into a house in Port Royal and took out a case of Tropical Rhythm and a component set.

    Salmon denied the allegations when he was questioned by the police.
    "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
    Can our police do anything right? What good are they? Really?!


    BLACK LIVES MATTER

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    • #3
      So true....

      Originally posted by Mosiah View Post
      Can our police do anything right? What good are they? Really?!
      You are so correct with this statement!! In fact, this incident shows at least two negative procedural things: (a) lack of knowledge by certain members of the police force of the requirements of the very law which they enforce, and (b) general incompetence!

      We were speaking recently of the shortcomings of the education system in Jamaica, and we can see that either many of our policemen are recruited from the ranks of the new secondary school dropouts, or else they are a living testament to the failures of the education system which we discussed on this forum!

      I strongly suspect that, the prevalence of the “informer-fe-dead” culture notwithstanding, the rate of violent crime solving in Jamaica is probably very low even by the underdeveloped standards, generally speaking, of the Caribbean! I guess, though, that we should be grateful that this is just a fingerprint-related incident and not another case of guns being fired at a packed, fleeing public minibus or taxi in an effort to get the driver to stop!

      Comment


      • #4
        Almost reads like they were trying to frame the accused...

        and where did the prints go for the last three years?

        and with respect to the judicial system, why in heavens name does it take so long for due process to take place?
        Peter R

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by Historian View Post
          You are so correct with this statement!! In fact, this incident shows at least two negative procedural things: (a) lack of knowledge by certain members of the police force of the requirements of the very law which they enforce, and (b) general incompetence!

          We were speaking recently of the shortcomings of the education system in Jamaica, and we can see that either many of our policemen are recruited from the ranks of the new secondary school dropouts, or else they are a living testament to the failures of the education system which we discussed on this forum!

          I strongly suspect that, the prevalence of the “informer-fe-dead” culture notwithstanding, the rate of violent crime solving in Jamaica is probably very low even by the underdeveloped standards, generally speaking, of the Caribbean! I guess, though, that we should be grateful that this is just a fingerprint-related incident and not another case of guns being fired at a packed, fleeing public minibus or taxi in an effort to get the driver to stop!
          At least they are trying to get back to the idea of lifting prints.
          The same type of thinking that created a problem cannot be used to solve the problem.

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          • #6
            I have seen them do that. There is absolutely no effort to do a good job. Raise a pay my as s!


            BLACK LIVES MATTER

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