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  • Mass Burial Grave in Jamaica

    Mass Burial Site Claim
    Police said to be aiding some criminals in the East

    BY HG HELPS Editor-at-Large helpsh@jamaicaobserver.com

    Sunday, January 26, 2014 9 Comments

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    One section of the area in Harbour View called ‘Crusher’, which is said to be a burial ground for some of those executed by gangsters. (PHOTO: MICHAEL GORDON)

    A stunning claim has been made by a former gang member in the eastern belt of the Jamaica capital, that men in the criminal underworld, often assisted by rogue policemen, have been killing people and burying their bodies in the vicinity of a sand mine.

    The practice, according to the man, has been going on for "whole heap a years", and is carried out by individuals who are based between the East Kingston community of Rockfort, and the adjoining Harbour View in East Rural St Andrew.

    The young man, who has been keeping a low profile since the area became tense recently, told the Jamaica Observer that he knew most of what happens in the community.

    Late last week, he accompanied a Sunday Observer team to a section of Harbour View called 'Crusher' and pointed to three spots in the remote community, through which the Hope River runs, where he said he was sure several bodies were buried.

    "Is nearly 100 bodies buried in the river bed. Dem usually use the big tractor dem, but sometimes when the tractors not there, dem use shovel," the man said.

    The Sunday Observer team saw several heavy duty equipment on the way to the alleged burial sites, but had no evidence to suggest that those were at any time used in the activity described by the ex-gangster.

    According to the informant, most of the criminal activities are carried out by members of the 'Mad Ants Crew', which has since changed its name to 'Bay Shore'.

    The man, who cannot be named for security reasons, said that he was initially associated with the gang and saw several things happening around him that had hurt his gut. Now he wants to turn his life around.

    He does not have a criminal record, as he was detained briefly in a police lock-up once for failing to pay his fare on a minibus and was later released. On another occasion, he was held for being in possession of a ganja 'spliff'.

    "I see all the Dons and I used to be around some of the youth dem, because dem look up to me," he said.

    "Things got bad when some youth got guns from overseas (through a now imprisoned Don), and they got unruly and started to rob people and rape the women. Eventually, they got another set of youth to get rid of the first set a youth dem, by sending a vanload of guns to wipe dem out.

    "When they are going to step out and do a thing at night time, the police would pass through first. A certain set of police would go with the men and make sure things allright.

    "When certain shipment of drugs coming out or going in, police escort it. They set up roadblocks ... nutten can't pass, especially on the airport road, and then dem let it go.

    "In the process, the youth dem who dem get to wipe out the first set, start get unruly, so that's how dem started to organise and kill dem and bury dem at the place called Crusher, up past the gypsum site, the same place that PreMix used to run," the former gangster said.

    "Even the teacher from Mona get innocently caught up," he said.

    That January 5 killing of two men, one of them who formerly taught at Mona Primary School, is among several that have gone without the apprehension of those responsible.

    According to the man, the murders of Paul Walker, 26, a grade five teacher at Mona Primary, who lived at Goldsmith Villa in Eastern St Andrew and his friend Omar Campbell, also called 'Biggs', originally of a Clarendon addres, were carried out by a man linked to the same killing ring.

    "Even with the teacher murder the other day over Harbour View, dem have a part inna it. The youth who do the act shot up the wrong people. Is two innocent man them kill. The whole thing stem from a dispute with two man over a woman.

    "The man who do the shooting was sleeping in his bed when a youth come tell him that some man a plan fi kill him over a woman and control of a bar, so him go down the bar and shoot it up, thinking that the people who planning fi kill him was in the bar. But innocent people get shot. The teacher was in the wrong place at the wrong time, because the youth just shoot up everyting in the bar. Him injure three other people. Right now him no hide. Even inna middle day people see him. Police no hold nobody yet.

    "I tell the police that I know where the man who did the killing live, know everywhere him hang out, me know the number a him car ... if dem did a do dem work dem woulda come to me long time to get him registration. Me go as far as tell dem him name and mek dem have him picture because me want dem to lock dem up, but to how me see it, the police dem a work lousy; dem have too much things a do.

    "Dem a tell me dem have that fi do deh so an' all dem things. Dem need some special police to deal with these things, because some of dem mix up and corrupt too," he charged.

    The murder of Detective Sergeant Courtney Simpson, the former bodyguard to Governor General Sir Patrick Allen, and State Miinister for Science, Technology, Energy and Mining, Julian Robinson, is another that the informant said was skilfully planned and carried out.

    "Even the policeman who dem kill in the scheme, dem seh that policeman a get too push up inna dem thing," he said.

    Detective Sergeant Simpson of the Jamaica Constabulary Force's Protective Services division was shot multiple times on the porch of his house, as he exited his vehicle on the night of April 8, last year. He died shortly after 10:00 pm at hospital.

    "Is a lot of other people dem carry weh go kill and this man (East Kingston Don) and a politician involved too. They will beat dem and carry dem to Crusher where they kill dem and then bury dem.

    "Is only a few people know about the burial areas. If dem shoulda dig it up, a whole heap a bodies dem would find.

    "Dem have nearly 100 bodies buried there, because this has been going on for a long time. Even a youth from August Town dem kill," the informant said,

    Two young men had left August Town and headed for Harbour View to watch a Premier League football match last year, and close to their destination, one jokingly tried to catch someone's pig.

    "Him was playing with the hog, trying to back him up, and one of the youth from Harbour View go tell one a di gunman dem and dem kill him and bury him. Dem tie up the other youth, but him escape and run weh naked. It cause the man dem from August Town fi come down to Harbour View and kill two innocent man who come to look scrap metal," he said.

    One high-profile investigator, who is assigned to one of the Constabulary Force's more prominent crime fighting units, told the Sunday Observer that he was not aware of the claims made, although he had heard "whisperings at certain times".

    The senior investigator, who asked not to be named, as he was not geographically responsible for the area under the microscope, also opted not to touch on the circumstances surrounding Detective Sergeant Simpson's death, nor delve further into what has been behind the killings in the general East Kingston/Harbour View area.

    "This one is bigger than me. I suggest you go to the very top," he said, referring to Commissioner of Police Owen Ellington.

    But the informant insisted that ghastly activities occuring in the area were still going on.

    "Round that side a dem favourite burying ground ... inna the river bed," he said, pointing to an area covered with stagnant water.

    "Dem have backhoe, which dem use to dig up the place. They will dig up a lot of sand and throw a whole heap a bodies down there, cover it back and nobody can't know," he said.

    "I saw them bury a man one time. I was sifting sand to sell a woman one late evening going into night and me see a car shot past and then me hear some gunshot fire. After that, two of the man them, who go up inna the car, walk come down and me ask dem is wha happen, and dem say nutten.

    "But me know them and them know me. When me go up there me see a trail a blood, and the next morning police come up to the spot and say dem kill man up dey last night and dem dig up one body, that of 'Feggie', from down Red House. That was the only body dem find. Dem dig further and find skeleton, but where dem dig is not there the rest of the bodies deh... A no deh so the burial ground deh.

    "Feggie get a early grave because a the night before dem kill him. A nuff time me see dem come round deh wid youth inna car tie up and gone with dem, and is not hide dem a hide because people see and know dem, but nobody nah say nutten."

    The young man said that the involvement of the police in the killings was startling.

    "Whenever anything happen, police come and have the area under quarantine and then when things done, police gone. The police come help cover up the crime. Even police catch man and come hand him over to dem," he claimed.

    "Dem have a set of police who work wid dem. If you do anything, a dem same one dem a sen' a yu yard fi yu and seh dem a carry you go a station. Me know police specifically who do that, some come from Harbour View station, Bull Bay station, Port Royal, Vineyard Town, Airport police and up a Mountain View. Dem have connection a Elletson Road police too, but not like the other stations," he alleged further.

    "Police and dem a friend. Police know bout it. I went to Elletson Road Police Station and tell dem that police a work wid the man dem, and dem want me to call name, but the little one who tell me that don't even have a stripe, so what him can do?" he said.

    "It is going to take a lot. People who have lost their relatives to these murderers need to come out and say we need to put a stop to this. Dem can't just sit in dem house and live inna fear. If you don't stop the head, more of the little ones will come up.

    "It come een like dem unstoppable. Is three top man inna it. Dem have the money an' a dem a do the thing," he said.

    The man admitted to being associated with the gang at one stage, although he said that he was usually on the periphery and had never got involved in the irregular projects.

    "I was with them, but I wasn't a part of dem. If me was a part of dem me couldn't leave the gang. Dem kill somebody close to me ... and a nuff people pickney dem kill and go bury roun' a di river bed ... a nuff bone roun' deh, with some old rotten clothes, because a nuff time me roun' deh a mine sand and nuff clothes come up," the ex-gangster said.

    "When dem a kill the people, dem tek off dem clothes and either burn it or throw soil and sand over it. They always bury the victims naked ... me no know why.

    "Is the same gang members in the community a break into people's house, rape the people dem daughters, set up robberies and other things. If someone else commit a robbery, bruk a house or go with a underage girl, dem bruk him up or kill him, because is dem alone must do it. Anybody else do it violate the rules... a so dem a run the place. Dem shoot up anybody who lick out pon dem," he added.

    "Nuff a dem in the community don't have a skill. Apart from committing crime, the most that the youth dem inna the area can do is build a spliff," he said.

    Although the young man said he had vital information that could assist the police in solving some of the murders committed, he is not seeking protection, as he said he had no confidence in the police.

    "I don't want to go into the Witness Protection Programme; no, I will protect myself. If the Government could supply me with some money to do my trade, I would be better off," he said.

    "I don't trust the Witness Protection Programme, because the police will send man come kill me same way. I don't trust the police. I rather trust some of the youth dem around me," he said.
    THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

    "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


    "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

  • #2
    A young man's dream shattered by Harbour View gang
    More than 4 years after ‘Jimmy’ Francis was stabbed 15 times, no one arrested for his murder

    BY HG HELPS Editor-at-Large helpsh@jamaicaobserver.com

    Sunday, January 26, 2014 4 Comments

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    The spot where Francis was stabbed to death in Harbour View well over four years ago. (PHOTO: MICHAEL GORDON)

    JHORDAYNE 'Jimmy' Francis had shown a lot of promise as a youngster attending Kingston College.

    But the teen's dream of becoming a maritime engineer was shattered when he was stabbed 15 times as he strolled along a road that he normally traversed in the well-populated East Rural St Andrew settlement of Harbour View.

    That fateful evening of October 17, 2009 brought out a cruel side of Harbour View, as after the 19-year-old was stabbed by whom eyewitnesses said were three young men acting on the instructions of an area 'Don', he was left on the ground for several hours to die, without any attempt to get him medical attention.

    One man who said he is well aware of what happened that night and who continues to be peeved by it all, knew and understood Jimmy thoroughly, and admired the way that he conducted himself ... not being one to promote violence, hatred and crime, but one

    who had a calm demeanour, and almost permanently wore an infectious smile.

    The young man told the Jamaica Observer that a certain gang in the area, called the Mad Ants Crew, was responsible for the brutal act, one of many it committed over a period of more than 15 years.

    Jimmy, who shared many a smile on any given day with even those who disliked him, was said to have become involved with a young woman whom the area Don also had an interest in.

    An order for him to be executed was given and the act was carried out with haste.

    "The Don organised and had a deep hand in that killing," said the young man, who opted to tell his story to the Sunday Observer with the understanding that his identity is not revealed.

    He said that he was disgusted by what had been happening in the general area over the years and believes that the police were not carrying out their mandate of protecting, serving and reassuring those who needed it most.

    "The Don came on the scene just as the youth get stab up. When I got on the scene, Jimmy's body still hot. It was on the ground for over one-and-a-half hour. I was in the area when I hear a man say them just kill a youth roun' so.

    "I did think it was my friend, because me have a friend who give pure trouble. I called a woman to find out if it was him and she say nobody nuh see him, so mi run go roun' the road and when mi go mi see the youth body on the ground, mi couldn't believe it was Jimmy.

    "Two a the youth them who stab him up was still out there a run the people from off the road and them tell the girl who run the bar to lock it up and she just move fast and shut the door," he said.

    What our informant said next almost shook him off an emotional ladder.

    "Me see one youth wipe off him knife, tek off him shirt and wash it off. The next youth walk away without shirt and all that time, over one-and-a-half hour after them stab him up, Jimmy still pon the ground a kick, because a three of them stab him up.

    "Some foam was still a come out of him mouth, but nobody could help him, because if yu try to help him them would kill yu. Everybody 'fraid and nobody no waan talk," our source said.

    The police are yet to charge anyone in relation to Francis' death, four-and-a-half years after it occurred.

    The informant said that a well-known man with strong political connections, and two others who both operate questionable business ventures were the leading individuals in the slaughter of Francis.

    "A them a the people who run Harbour View. Everything that go on, them know bout it. Anybody who do anything that them don't know about, them get rid of them," he said.

    "Jimmy was such a nice youth ... I never hear him and a next man in a argument. Him just laugh when you talk. Him did dey with one of them girl, the girl love him and them kill him because of that.

    "It was something organised. He died just like that. I called Crime Stop and tell them that I know who killed him and Crime Stop tell me to go (police) station and give report. It come in like everything corrupt. After them kill him, them see the youth them who do it, and them just walk up and down every day," he added.

    A check with a senior investigator who said that he was familiar with the case, revealed that the police were trying to find an eyewitness who was there when Francis died, to give them a statement, in return for them providing him with full protection.

    "We are still pursuing the matter, but we need people to come forward with vital information. We have not been getting the co-operation that we would like," the investigator said.

    In the meantime, the informant said that the fight for turf continues, with no clear sign of better things to come.

    "The three youth them get a big money to kill Jimmy. Them kill him and it just go so," he said. "Out here in Bay Shore (Harbour View) is a dog nyam dog system. Is not a easy thing going on out here. It is all a fight for donship."
    THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

    "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


    "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

    Comment


    • #3
      Shooting victim’s sister still loves the police
      BY KARYL WALKER Editor - Crime/Court Desk walkerk@jamaicaobserver.com

      Sunday, January 26, 2014 1 comment

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      JACKSON-THOMAS... it was like a Nobel Peace Prize moment. (OBSERVER FILE PHOTO)

      DESPITE the deep emotional scars that have been inflicted on her psyche since the death of her brother at the hands of the police on Monday, Shackelia Jackson-Thomas still holds love in her heart for members of the constabulary.

      Nakiea Jackson, 27, was killed under controversial circumstances, and irate residents of the Orange Villa community in downtown Kingston mounted two fiery protests on Monday and Tuesday to voice their disgust at what they describe as a cold-blooded and senseless act.

      But Jackson-Thomas said that she realised that she still holds the image of the force in high esteem when a cop visited her on Friday and broke down crying on her shoulder in grief at Jackson's killing.

      "When he drove up, he gave me an embrace and I returned the embrace. He started sobbing. Although I have been so strong I felt the tears running down my cheek. I said to him he has to be strong because we need people like him to remain in the force because they do face a fight. It was like a Nobel Peace Prize moment," Jackson-Thomas told the Jamaica Observer.

      So moved by the cop's reaction to her brother's death, Jackson-Thomas has taken a philosophical outlook that she said will guide her going forward and help her to heal from this tragedy, which has shaken up her relatives and by extension the entire community of Orange Villa.

      "This is what my brother really is. That he could evoke that kind of emotion and sentiment, it must be that he was their ally and not someone they should be afraid of. I know now that this is a relationship we have to continue. This one person (the cop who killed her brother) is not a reflection of the force," she said.

      Residents of Orange Villa said that Jackson was walking past some cops who had come into the community when they inquired if he was the operator of a cook shop, as he held an empty rubbish bin. He answered in the affirmative and went into the shop where he continued looking after the food that he sold on a daily basis.

      A cop went inside the cook shop, residents said, and moments after, two loud explosions were heard.

      To their shock and horror, Jackson was shot twice and was dragged by his feet and left on a pavement.

      However, police reported that a robbery was committed in the area and a man wearing dreadlocks was being chased. The police said that they attempted to accost the man when he pointed a gun at them. The police said that they took evasive action, opened fire, and Jackson was hit.

      The cops said that a 9mm pistol was recovered.

      But despite being deeply hurt by her brother's demise, Jackson-Thomas has still found space in her heart for forgiveness.

      "I have to forgive. It's not about tainting the law. They are still human. I understand. Let's sit and talk. Let's find a more effective way of working things out," she said.

      Jackson's death has been a blow to some students of the nearby Kingston High School whom he used to sell lunches to for a measly $100.

      Two days after his death, National Security Minister Peter Bunting, Commissioner of Police Owen Ellington, and Member of Parliament for West Kingston Desmond McKenzie visited the area to assure the residents that the matter is being probed and justice will be served.

      On Thursday, Jackson-Thomas and her relatives met with a police delegation, including staff from the Chaplaincy Unit.

      But despite her ability to forgive, Jackson-Thomas is still steadfast that her brother does not go down as another statistic, she insists that justice must be served. She has acquired the services of an attorney-at-law to represent the interests of her brother's loved ones and to eventually clear his name.
      THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

      "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


      "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

      Comment


      • #4
        Yep,I do not know of the mass burial...but it is a fact that area is infamous for collusion between police and criminals.We are not talking low ranking officers either,you will be surprised...
        Drug dealings,extortions etc.
        Even the cases of returning residents from abroad....
        The born again youth is easily identifiable,Chen Chen result is likely...

        Comment


        • #5
          The newspaper is a fought & dem should hire a company fi do some excavation to verify the claims of the thug. If a body is found, then they should notify the authorities and publish the article.
          Winning means you're willing to go longer, work harder, and give more than anyone else - Vince Lombardi

          Comment


          • #6
            As far as law enforcement is concerned,if you know of a burial site then you are the one that buried the corpse.
            And of course,it is not wise of the newspaper to put civilians' lives in danger((which they fid by reporting specifics(necessary markers) that can identify the whistle blower.
            When police hear that you have a gun they simply visit your house...despite there are constitutional issues..,they have to act on the info..too,especially seeing the lack if constitutional...

            Comment


            • #7
              Hortical them things cost money. The media in Jamaica does not have a 60 minutes or 20/20 budget. If the story sounds feasible then the authorities should be pressured to go do the digging,
              "‎It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men" - Frederick Douglass

              Comment


              • #8
                Its not as expensive as you think to hire a company with a backhoe, and this is done everyday at construction sites, and then bring a forensic pathologist on board. We're not talking about CBS news type budget here at all. To publish something without verification is sloppy by the newspaper.
                Winning means you're willing to go longer, work harder, and give more than anyone else - Vince Lombardi

                Comment


                • #9
                  why doesn't he just go to INDECOM

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    If it is worth to print the story why not follow through? They are probably scar

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

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      what is new in Jamaica? Things are sensationalized without not even a second source and then people run with it, especially if they don't like you.
                      • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Journalism 101, you don't run with a story unless it can be verified.
                        Surprised everyone believes the report at face value.
                        Winning means you're willing to go longer, work harder, and give more than anyone else - Vince Lombardi

                        Comment

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