O'Gilvie taken out of Tivoli by senior police officer
JUSTIN O'Gilvie, the business partner and confidante of Tivoli Gardens fugitive Christopher 'Dudus' Coke, was escorted out of Tivoli Gardens by a senior police officer and taken to the Central Police Station for questioning, after last month's stand-off between law enforcers and criminals, the Sunday Observer has learnt.
O'Gilvie, who was detained at the Central Police Station lock-up for over a week, is associated with the Presidential Click organisation run by Coke and is also a partner in the company Incomparable Enterprises, which among other things is involved in entertainment promotion.
Word reaching the Sunday Observer is that O'Gilvie survived days of shooting in Tivoli Gardens and remained in the inner-city community undetected, as several police personnel and soldiers did not know what he looked like.
Police later issued an appeal for him to turn himself over to them for questioning in relation to a range of issues, including how a large number of sand bags were stored on a property under his control, along Spanish Town Road, opposite to Tivoli Courts where law enforcers and gunmen battled for two days in 2001, which left 27 people dead.
"He called a senior police officer, who himself could hardly believe that O'Gilvie was actually in Tivoli during the commotion and had stayed there throughout the excitement and the security personnel did not know," said a security source. "The senior police officer, who has over 30 years' experience as a crime fighter, drove into Tivoli, picked up O'Gilvie and took him to the Central Police Station where he was detained," the source said.
Police said that they wanted to question O'Gilvie regarding his association with Coke, who remains on the run since police May 24 when the security forces clashed with gunmen loyal to Coke in Tivoli Gardens.
The law enforcers went into the heavily barricaded community to restore order and serve an arrest warrant on Coke who is wanted by the United States to answer gun-running and drug-trafficking charges.
Police said that they were also investigating whether or not O'Gilvie was associated with the infamous Shower Posse, which they said is now headed by Coke and which was responsible for over 1,600 murders during the cocaine wars in North America during the 1980s.
O'Gilvie, who was kept in the same cell as Arnett Gardens People's National Party activist George Phang, was later released. The police force have still not confirmed that it assisted with the detention of O'Gilvie. Police Commissioner Owen Ellington declined to say how O'Gilvie was placed in police custody when he met with Observer editors and reporters at his office on June 1. "Let us say that he is in custody," was all Ellington offered.
At the weekend, police that Coke has been moving around the island with the assistance of some of his close associates. Officials said that 73 civilians and a soldier were killed during three days of fighting in Tivoli Gardens, a West Kingston enclave that fiercely supports the ruling Jamaica Labour Party and from which Coke is said to have run an alternative government with its own laws and clearly defined methods of punishment for transgressors.
JUSTIN O'Gilvie, the business partner and confidante of Tivoli Gardens fugitive Christopher 'Dudus' Coke, was escorted out of Tivoli Gardens by a senior police officer and taken to the Central Police Station for questioning, after last month's stand-off between law enforcers and criminals, the Sunday Observer has learnt.
O'Gilvie, who was detained at the Central Police Station lock-up for over a week, is associated with the Presidential Click organisation run by Coke and is also a partner in the company Incomparable Enterprises, which among other things is involved in entertainment promotion.
Word reaching the Sunday Observer is that O'Gilvie survived days of shooting in Tivoli Gardens and remained in the inner-city community undetected, as several police personnel and soldiers did not know what he looked like.
Police later issued an appeal for him to turn himself over to them for questioning in relation to a range of issues, including how a large number of sand bags were stored on a property under his control, along Spanish Town Road, opposite to Tivoli Courts where law enforcers and gunmen battled for two days in 2001, which left 27 people dead.
"He called a senior police officer, who himself could hardly believe that O'Gilvie was actually in Tivoli during the commotion and had stayed there throughout the excitement and the security personnel did not know," said a security source. "The senior police officer, who has over 30 years' experience as a crime fighter, drove into Tivoli, picked up O'Gilvie and took him to the Central Police Station where he was detained," the source said.
Police said that they wanted to question O'Gilvie regarding his association with Coke, who remains on the run since police May 24 when the security forces clashed with gunmen loyal to Coke in Tivoli Gardens.
The law enforcers went into the heavily barricaded community to restore order and serve an arrest warrant on Coke who is wanted by the United States to answer gun-running and drug-trafficking charges.
Police said that they were also investigating whether or not O'Gilvie was associated with the infamous Shower Posse, which they said is now headed by Coke and which was responsible for over 1,600 murders during the cocaine wars in North America during the 1980s.
O'Gilvie, who was kept in the same cell as Arnett Gardens People's National Party activist George Phang, was later released. The police force have still not confirmed that it assisted with the detention of O'Gilvie. Police Commissioner Owen Ellington declined to say how O'Gilvie was placed in police custody when he met with Observer editors and reporters at his office on June 1. "Let us say that he is in custody," was all Ellington offered.
At the weekend, police that Coke has been moving around the island with the assistance of some of his close associates. Officials said that 73 civilians and a soldier were killed during three days of fighting in Tivoli Gardens, a West Kingston enclave that fiercely supports the ruling Jamaica Labour Party and from which Coke is said to have run an alternative government with its own laws and clearly defined methods of punishment for transgressors.
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