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For builders prone to long-term planning, Peter Dohanich, a 51-year-old funeral director, has posted an invitation on Craigslist offering to waive the funeral fees for anyone willing to build him a new deck at his Manhattan home.

"It may sound like a laughable barter transaction, but consider the average cost of paying for a funeral. ... Ask someone that recently had a funeral what they paid!!!" wrote Mr Dohanich in a listing posted on the online classified service Craigslist.com last week.

Mr Dohanich said he was looking for a builder or contractor to remodel a new patio but did not have the cash for the project. "Someone told me, if you're looking for services, look on barter," Mr Dohanich said.

So far, Mr Dohanich said he has received a few calls from prospective takers but has not yet filled the job.

The idea makes sense because the estimated cost of the construction work, at $6,000 to $10,000 (Ł4,300 - Ł7,200) is similar to the cost of a funeral, he said.

Read

 

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A St. James couple who allegedly attacked and wounded a woman was granted bail in the sum of $50,000 each when they appeared in the Montego Bay RM court on Tuesday, March 3.

The incident reportedly took place on February 9, 2008 about 8:15pm while the complainant was at Paradise Crescent conversing with a group of friends.

It is alleged that someone from the group made a statement regarding the couple who was passing by, which prompted them to turn back and approached the group.

Virgo then allegedly uttered threatening words to the complainant before stabbing her to her right shoulder.
The complainant reportedly picked up a stone and ran and fell in the process.

While she was on the ground, it is alleged that Virgo stabbed the woman to her left breast while Clarke, who also had a knife, proceeded to cut the woman in her face.

The matter was reported to the police and the two were arrested and charged.

Eight Westmoreland kids, aged 10 and under, were recently prevented from being involved in an orgy when they were caught by a resident.

THE WEEKEND STAR first heard rumours of the tale, but checks with the police proved it was more than just that.

Inspector Cassius Lennox of the Area One police admitted knowing of the episode. "It's not like they are criminals but they are definitely some rude kids. We wouldn't have a police report for that but it did happen," he said. "It was a group of young kids too, none passed 10 ... . Five of them were nine and the others were 10."

Reports are that the incident occurred almost two weeks ago and involved eight primary-school children (four boys and four girls), who planned a secret rendezvous to have sex.

Accosted

Their plans were, however, disrupted, thanks to a fisherman, who happened to be passing the abandoned building where they were and accosted them before alerting other residents and the police.

Police say the man who caught the kids claimed they were all in one room, were already undressed and had already began kissing and fondling each other.

The man told the police that he discovered the 'kids' party' after hearing strange sounds coming from the abandoned house. He said he decided to investigate as he knew nobody lives there.

After popping in on them, he said they immediately made a dash for their clothes.

The police said the kids were questioned and it was found that they had been planning the event for quite some time.

But that's not all, they were pretty much prepared to embark on their sexual plans as the boys all had condoms in their pockets and one of the girls was found with a pornographic magazine.

The kids are reported to have said that they were going to try the things they had seen in the magazine.

Inspector Lennox told THE WEEKEND STAR that the kids' parents were alerted and urged to seek counselling for them.

"You could tell the parents were ashamed, they even tried to scold them right there but we intervened," he said.

When contacted yesterday, clinical psychologist Dr Asquith Reid, explained that a situation such as this is a case where the kids have been exposed to sex.

"The truth is that nowadays our children are seeing these things more than before and if not educated, they will try to imitate it," Dr. Reid said.

He urged parents to feel free to educate their kids about sex as these days they are more exposed to it than in the past. "Children are adventurous, but they should be so in a guided way. If not chances are they will end up in situations like this," he added.

Judge Makes Controversial Remarks

Posted: 11:50 am EST March 5, 2009Updated: 1:45 pm EST March 5, 2009

A Volusia County judge has recused himself from a case because of controversial comments he made about African Americans, Hispanics, and Asians.

 

WFTV has learned that Judge David Walsh said minorities are often no-shows when it comes to serving on a jury. A court spokesman told Eyewitness News that it's typical for judges not to comment on pending cases even though he has stepped away from the present one.

 

The comment that Walsh said was, "I have been somewhat disheartened at the sometimes lack of certain members of certain races to serve as jurors. And I don't think it's without our attempts to try to get them here. Sometimes they just don't come. Not just African American, but others such as Asians. Hispanics, especially."

 

Judge David Walsh made the comment at the end of jury selection.

 

Antonio Herndon, who is black and on trial, objected to the fact there were no blacks on the jury and reacted immediately when he heard Walsh's comments.

 

However, Herdon's attorney told Eyewitness News that it took awhile before he understood how serious Judge Walsh's comment was.

 

"'You've never been black. Have you ever been black? You don't know what I'm going through.' Once he said that I realized, I have not. I've never walked in his shoes or a black mans shoes," said defense attorney Mike Lambert.

 

WFTV was trying to get an interview with Walsh who has not returned any calls.
In this undated photo released by the Cleveland Police Department, Davon

CLEVELAND Police say a man suspected of murdering his wife, his sister-in-law and three young children has killed himself after being confronted by police. Cleveland police Lt. Thomas Stacho says 33-year-old Davon Crawford shot himself in the head Friday afternoon while holed up in a bathroom at a house believed to be the home of a relative.

Stacho says authorities surrounded the home and forced their way through the front door.

Crawford's wife, Lechea, was among those killed in the couple's home Thursday night. The other victims killed were Lechea Crawford's 25-year-old sister Rose Stevens and Stevens' three children: 4-year-old Destiny Woods and 2-year-old twins Dion and Davion Primm.

 

OUR ponders light bill increase

March 11, 2009
Started By Garrick2 Comments
The Office of Utilities Regulation (OUR) has scheduled a series of public consultations to get the views of citizens on a proposed light bill increase.

On Monday, the Jamaica Public Service Company (JPS) submitted an application to the OUR for adjustments to its existing tariff structure.

The OUR said it will provide the public with additional information on the application as soon as the JPS waives a confidentiality clause.

The first consultation will be held in Portland at the Old Marina in Port Antonio on April 15.

The second is slated for April 21 at the Civic Centre in Sam Sharpe Square, Montego Bay, St James.

The following day, the consultation moves to the Ridgemount United Church Hall in Mandeville before the final one on April 28 at the PCJ Auditorium in Kingston.

The meetings begin at 5.15 p.m.
At least one taxi association is welcoming the Transport Authoritys decision to review the laws governing audio equipment in public passenger vehicles.

The Authority said in the interim, it has decided to use a discretionary approach in dealing with the matter.

This means that it will now allow taxi operators to play AM/FM radios without CDs and DVDs.

The law does not allow the operators of public passenger vehicles to play any audio equipment at all.

And so in the last month, the Transport Authority has been prosecuting taxi operators caught playing radios, CDs or DVDs in their cars.

The Authority has been flooded with complaints and criticisms with taxi operators saying their AM/FM radios help with their safety.

The president of the Jamaica Association of Hackney Carriages, Willard Costley, said he is happy that the Authority has decided to review the law.

Party going thieves reprimanded

March 11, 2009
Started By Garrick2 Comments

Two students from Kingston-based schools and an 18-year-old man were yesterday brought before the Corporate Area Resident Magistrate's Court to answer to attempted robbery.

Fined

Although the charge was not pursued by the complainant, the accused man, Jermaine Jarrett, was ordered to pay $10,000 or serve 10 days in jail for his actions. Both students were strongly reprimanded by Senior Resident Magistrate Glen Brown.

The students, both 15, and Jarrett are accused of robbing persons in Half-Way Tree, St Andrew.

When asked about their reasons for being in that location, they said they were party hopping.

"I was coming from a party in Half-Way Tree ... then going to a stage show in New Kingston," one of the accused said.

The mother of one of the teens, who was at court, was chastised by RM Brown, who accused her of allowing her child to attend a party after school without knowledge of its location.

"He told me that he was going to a party in Half-Way Tree," she said.

After reluctanctly releasing the boys, the RM urged the mother to search her son's bag and pockets before he leaves for school. She assured him that it will never happen again.

Accused robber denies charges

March 11, 2009
Started By Garrick1 Comments

A man who allegedly attempted to rob a woman of her handbag then stabbed at her and a policeman who attempted to intervene denied the accusations in the Corporate Area Resident Magistrate's Court yesterday.

Wayne Richards is charged with assault at common law and robbery with aggravation.

The court was told that the complainant was walking along King Street in downtown Kingston when she was approached by the accused who had a knife.

Richards reportedly tried to take her handbag, but she refused to hand it over. It is alleged that he then stabbed at her. A policeman who saw what was happening and tried to intervene was reportedly also stabbed at.

Shot by cop

The accused was reportedly only subdued when the officer pulled his firearm and shot him in the leg.

A lawyer representing Richards told the court that Richards was employed to the Jamaica Defence Force as a maintenance worker. The court was also told that this alleged offence was committed while the accused was on bail for an abduction case.

He returns to court on March 20 for the matter to be tried.
Caribbean Takeaway couple say they were kicked out for not fitting in with other shopkeepers

THE FORMER owners of a Leeds-based Caribbean restaurant claim they were evicted from their shop after complaining to their landlords about racial hara**ment.

 

Gary and Sharon James- Brown say they were constantly racially hara**ed after launching their eatery, Sharons Caribbean Takeaway,

in Leeds City Centre, in 2007. The couple say they complained to their landlords, TCS Holdings, but allege that the company did not deal with their complaint.

 

The pair were first issued a Notice of Determination in November last year, which legally gave them six months to vacate. However, when Sharon arrived at the shop on January 22 this year she found that she

could not use her key. I went to open my shop like any other normal day but realised that my key did not work, Sharon said.

 

I immediately went to see my liaison officer at TCS Holdings office and was informed that my husband and I have been evicted.

Gary told The Voice that their dispute with TCS Holdings started when they moved into the premises. The problems kicked-off

when the neighbouring sandwich shop began to inquire what food we sold and asked why we included English food to our menu when black people only ate rice and peas and fried chicken.

 

We also got numerous mystery shoppers that would sit outside and make racist remarks, especially to our white customers, asking them why they were eating ni**er food, he said.

 

When we reported these incidents to our landlord we were told to remove our table and chairs from outside to solve the problem.

The couple say they were dealt a blow when served with an eviction notice. I went to inquire about changing premises because we

were growing as a business, but was refused because my wife and I were being evicted as we did not fit in with the other shopkeepers.

 

He added: I am livid. Although I did not agree with the original Notice of Determination, I accepted it because of all the stress, but

now they have gone to far.

 

INSULT

 

To add insult to injury TCS are refusing to return our deposit of Ł750. Devastated by the eviction, Sharon said: I am completely

in shock in how TCS Holdings is treating us. We have a family to

support and a home to maintain.

 

We demand justice. Gary and Sharon have now contacted their local MP and are seeking legal action. TCS Holdings declined to comment when contacted by The Voice.

Man faces new trial

March 11, 2009
Started By Garrick0 Comments

The trial of a man charged with the murder of his former common-law wife took a dramatic turn yesterday when the director of public prosecutions (DPP) stopped the matter after the defence had closed its case.

The case was stopped after Supreme Court Judge Almarie Sinclair Haynes indicated that she was going to reconsider a no-case submission which was made last week.

Prosecutor Maxine Jackson was not called upon to respond to the submissions when they were made.

This has resulted in 36-year-old labourer Warren McFarlane of Freeman Lane, Kingston 13, having to face a new trial.

He is to return to the Home Circuit Court on March 20 when the case will be mentioned.

The Crown had closed its case a week ago. The defence closed its case yesterday and defence lawyer Donald Bryan began to address the jury.

When Bryan and prosecutor Jackson returned to court yesterday, they were called into the judge's chambers.

Following the disclosure in chambers, the DPP was consulted and when court resumed, the court was told the DPP had entered a nolle prosequi, stopping the trial.

Injustice

Bryan has described the move as an injustice to his client.

DPP Paula Llewellyn, QC, when contacted yesterday, said "it was a very unusual step that I was forced to take in the particular circumstances, but my duty to the public's interest would have had it no other way".

The prosecutor had opposed bail on the grounds that McFarlane had been on the run for the last three years.

McFarlane is charged with the murder of 19-year-old Kadian Evans.
Human rights lobby group Jamaicans for Justice (JFJ) is intensifying calls for urgent measures to clear the backlog at the Spanish Town Coroners Court.

In its quarterly e-brief on reform matters, the JFJ highlighted what it calls the dead wait in the Spanish Town Coroners Court.

The group referred to eight cases its been monitoring which have been called up numerous times, but are yet to be settled.

The JFJs executive director, Dr Carolyn Gomes, said this is bad news for witnesses and many other people involved in the matters.

The JFJ has also pointed to poor procedural practices, which are contributing to the delay in serving witnesses subpoenas to attend court.

The report says to make matters worse, there is the unavailability of jurors, inadequate staff to caseload and low priority on Corners court matters.

Last year, a Bill to amend the Coroners Act was passed to allow for the appointment of a Special Coroner to deal with cases involving killings by agents of the State.

However, that special prosecutor is yet to be appointed.
Sonia Mitchell, Gleaner Writer

 

Layout1_1_P77SUGrade5anAM.jpg
Lewis

When Janice Lewis decided to pull her children out of the formal education system, even her husband might have thought she was going bonkers.

But what started with her three biological children, aged three, five and seven, has grown to 26, catering for kindergarten to grade five-level students.

Lewis, 50, told The Gleaner her labour of love has begun to reap rich rewards.

Among her success stories is her daughter, Michaela, who aced the Grade Six Achievement Test (GSAT) with an average of 94. She's now a fourth-form student at St Andrew High School for Girls. Another feather in her cap is an unrelated male student, with an average of 91.75, who passed for Ardenne High.

"My family members and friends are very pleased with me, as they have seen the results, and even though I don't advertise the school in the media, it is known by a lot of people through word of mouth in the community," Lewis told The Gleaner.

The school, which is located in the rural St Andrew community of Coopers Hill, is registered with the Ministry of Education as Redeemed Prep and Reading Centre, she said.

Despite the success, Lewis, an ex-army officer, recalled her struggling journey when she had her 10 children - yes, 10 - under her wings.

In September 1999, she became dissatisfied with the tutelage at Covenant Christian Academy, which her three eldest children attended. Lewis was convinced she had to take things into her own hands.

"In January 2000, I took on the task of removing them from the school, and decided to home-school them myself after I suggested to them to sort themselves out," Lewis said.

Traditional schooling

Layout1_1_PYDAEGrade5anAM.jpg
Janice Lewis (second right) goes through a lesson with students at her Coopers Hill home school.

Her husband, retired Major Neil Lewis, initially resisted the sugges-tion, citing a preference for tradi-tional schooling, which facilitated greater social interaction. But Mom, who had training in food technology, dived headlong into uncharted waters.

While spending time in the United States in the 1980s, she became familiar with the A Becka early-childhood curriculum developed at Pensacola Christian College.

The A Becka curriculum is heavily used in subjects like health safety, etiquette, mathematics, science, spelling and penmanship. Lewis said she utilises some of the texts used in formal schools, and also makes use of a GSAT website.

She has also worked as vice-principal for six months at Liberty Prep in St Andrew.

Hubby converted

Today, Lewis boasts that even her hubby has become a full-fledged convert.

He believes the children are now more rested, relaxed and happy. Any deviation from discipline is quickly nipped in the bud, the teacher-mom said.

As the school population has grown larger, she has enlisted four other teachers in her pet project.

She told The Gleaner that although her biological children were not in a traditional school setting, they participated in extra-curricular activities such as piano, ballet, attending church and other family entertainment. They also go on excursions yearly.

"The home school has become such a success that (it even caters for) children who are autistic, and adults have seen the need to become involved in the home-school programme to become literate," said Lewis.

Gunman shoots 9 in south Alabama, then himself

Family members of the victims of a shooting walk away after being denied accessAP  Family members of the victims of a shooting walk away after being denied access to their home in Samson, 

SAMSON, Ala. A gunman on a terrifying rampage across two southern Alabama counties Tuesday killed at least nine people, including members of his own family and apparent strangers, and burned down his mother's home before fatally shooting himself, authorities said.

Police were investigating shootings in at least four different locations in several communities, all of which were believed to be the work of a single gunman who had not yet been identified by investigators.

The afternoon of *lo**shed began in Kinston, near the Alabama-Florida border, where the shooter burned down his mother's house, according to Coffee County Coroner Robert Preachers. Officials located the woman's body inside the house, but they had not been able to get inside the still-burning house to determine a cause of death or whether she was the 10th victim.

The gunman then headed east, into Geneva County, where he shot and killed five people four adults and a child at a home in the nearby town of Samson. Then he killed one person each in two other homes. The identities of all the victims were unknown, but Preachers said they included other members of the shooter's family.

"He started in his mother's house," Preachers said. "Then he went to Samson and he killed his granny and granddaddy and aunt and uncle. He cleaned his family out."

"We don't know what triggered it," Preachers added.

The gunman also shot at a state trooper's car, striking the vehicle seven times and wounding the trooper with broken glass.

He then killed someone at a Samson supply store, and another person at a service station.

Samson contractor Greg McCullough said he was pumping gas at the station when the gunman opened fire, killing a woman coming out of the service station and wounding McCullough in the shoulder and arm with bullet fragments that struck his truck and the pump.

"I first thought it was somebody playing," he said. He said the gunman roared into the parking lot and slammed on his brakes. Then he saw the rifle.

He said the gunman fired and the rifle appeared to jam, then he "went back to firing." Then he drove off.

McCullough, a father of two, said he tried to help the woman who was shot and yelled for someone to call an ambulance.

"I'm just in awe that something like this could take place. That someone could do such a thing. It's just shocking," McCullough told The Associated Press in a telephone interview.

Police pursued the gunman to Reliable Metal Products just north of Geneva, about a dozen miles southeast of Samson, where he fired an estimated 30 rounds from a semiautomatic weapon, the Alabama safety department said. One of the bullets hit Geneva Police Chief Frankie Lindsey, who was saved by his bullet proof vest.

The gunman then went inside the plant and shot himself, according to the safety department's statement.

Reliable Metal Products makes grills and vents for heating and AC systems, mainly for hotels. A person who answered the phone at the plant said no one could talk about the shooting.

State Rep. Warren Beck, a Republican whose district includes Geneva, said the gunman had worked at Reliable Metal.

"My secretary heard gunfire everywhere," he said. "This is one of the most tragic events ever in Geneva County."

State Sen. Harri Anne Smith, R-Sloc****, said some of those killed in Samson were sitting outside.

"He was just driving down the street shooting at people sitting on their porches," she said. "A family was just sitting on the porch and they were shot."

Smith and Beck were at the Statehouse when state troopers came to get them and took them to Geneva County. Smith said the governor's office is sending resources and state troopers are setting up a command post.

A white single-story house where the five people were killed in Samson was cordoned off by police.

Police had hung white sheets to the entranceway to shield the scene where authorities said a black hearse that pulled away late Tuesday was transporting victims' bodies.

Samson Mayor Clay King said he knew the gunman but wouldn't identify him. He declined to comment on a possible motive.

"What I'm focusing on is people here in the town, making sure they feel comfortable," said King, who added the town opened a crisis center at the First Baptist Church with counselors available.

King said he's the "most shocked person in the world" about the shooting.

"I've lived here 44 years and never, never dreamed of this happening," he said.

The towns of Geneva and Samson are near the Florida border in southeast Alabama. Geneva's population is about 4,400 and Samson, 2,000.

In the center of Samson, authorities in sheriff's cars and trucks with blue lights flashing blocked off part of East Main Street, where some of the shooting occurred.

At the hardware store, yellow tape was strung across the front of the store where at least five bullet holes punctured the glass windows to the store, with its wheelbarrows and Adirondack lawn chairs on display. An orange-and-black sign to the store reading "Closed" lay on the ground outside the store atop the glass shards.

David Bradley, 51, the owner of the hardware store, said he was inside behind the counter when the shooter opened fire outside his store. At the time, there were five customers inside, plus Bradley's 27-year-old son, Justin.

"No one was injured inside the store," David Bradley said, adding he didn't even get a glimpse at the suspect. "It happened so quick."

House idle, MPs busy

March 11, 2009
Started By Garrick2 Comments

THE COUNTRY'S legislators did not hold their weekly parliamentary sitting yesterday despite a raft of bills and private-members' motions to be debated.

At the same time the parliamentary clock is ticking fast towards March 31, the day Parliament prorogues, signalling the end of the 2008/2009 legislative year.

Acting leader of government business in the House, Andrew Gallimore told The Gleaner yesterday that when the House adjourned on March 3, no date was set for a meeting. He said while the government side was willing to meet and attend to the nation's business, there was no guarantee that opposition members would turn up based on their poor attendance last week.

"Last week, at the end of the sitting, there were only two opposition members in the House," Gallimore told The Gleaner.

He said the Government did not want to pass legislation without full participation from the opposition side. However, Gallimore conceded that the decision not to fix a date for a sitting was not made in consultation with the leader of opposition business, Derrick Kellier.

Robert Pickersgill, senior opposition MP, rubbished claims made by Gallimore as to why the House did not meet.

"I was going to pass through Parliament, but then I hear that it is not sitting," Pickersgill said yesterday.

He made it clear that the leader of government business could not speak on behalf of the Opposition as it relates to parliamentary attendance.

Campaign trail

Parliamentarians on both sides of the political divide have been on the campaign trail in West Portland as they seek to woo voters in the run-up to the March 23 by-election.

The People's National Party's Kenneth Rowe is seeking to increase the seat count in Parliament for the Opposition, while the ousted member of parliament, Daryl Vaz, is fighting to return to Gordon House.

At present, there are nine pieces of legislation and 22 private-members' motions on the Order Paper for debate in Parliament.

The acting leader of government business was unable to give a date for the next sitting of the House. He said a decision would be made after consultation with both government members and the leader of opposition business.

THE Greater Portmore police say they have been trying to locate the relatives of Sydney Barnes, 72, a farmer of Grange Lane in St Catherine.

Barnes and a 48-year-old woman were murdered in Grange Lane on February 15 by two gunmen, who police suspect were looking for another man. Their bullet-riddled bodies were found shortly after in nearby bushes.

Yesterday, Deputy Superintendent Carlos Bell said the police were following strong leads in connection with the murders, but wanted help to find the old man's relatives.

Jeremiah Reid's mother regularly reminded him as a child that he was named after one of the iconic prophets of the Bible and that he should build on that legacy.

He didn't let his mom down, steering clear of the gang activities which were then a way of life in the impoverished Railway Lane area of Montego Bay - then considered a city slum - where he grew up in the late 1940s and 1950s.

"My mother grew me up in the church," said a reflective Reid. "I had the fear of God in me from early in life, so instead of getting into gangs, I channelled all my energy into sports."

Inspiration

Reid said he drew inspiration from the success of fellow Railway Lane resident Professor Rex Nettleford, who was then making his mark in academia; Marcus Garvey, whose works he read with great interest; and his involvement with the Montego Bay Boys Club (MBBC), an institution renowned for promoting discipline and sports.

At MBBC, Reid developed into an exceptional sportsman, excelling in swimming, football, cricket, table tennis and volleyball. By his late teens, he was repre-senting St James in football and cricket and attracting national attention. In 1963, he had the distinction of representing Jamaica in cricket against a touring English team.

Reid also made an indelible mark in the parish of Manchester, where he attended both the Chestervale and Cobbla Youth Camps. In addition to representing Manchester in cricket and football, he also got into administration, serving both the parish's cricket and football boards as vice-president.

When he returned to St James, the versatile Reid, who had then acquired coaching credentials in football, cricket, tennis and track and field, took up where he had left off. He became captain of both the parish football and cricket team and, over time, became a vice-president of the parish's football and cricket boards.

Reid, a recipient of the coveted Sam Sharpe Award for his contribution to sports, has done more than enough to earn the respect of his peers. Among his cherished accomplishments were being named the top track and field coach in Jamaica in 1974 and coaching the Jamaica Under-19 cricket team to its first outright win in the West Indies Under-19 competition in 1990.

Not slowing down

Despite being in his 60s, the evergreen Reid, a deacon, is not slowing down. He still represents St James in the All-Island Masters Cricket Competition and is a member of Jamaica's senior track and field team, which participated in the annual Caribbean Championships. As an Institute of Sports officer, he continues to coach cricket, football and tennis lads.

Affectionately called 'Mass Jerry', Reid will be remembered as one who rose from the slum of Railway Lane to become one of Montego Bay's most revered sons.

FOR years, Marjory Trottman harboured the dream of helping at-risk youths in her Braeton Phase 3, St Catherine community. But hampered by the lack of resources meant her desire would remain a distant hope until two weeks ago
when several organisations stepped into the picture.

With the help of the Optimist Club of Braeton and the Social Development Commission (SDC) and support from the Portmore-based National Centre for Youth Development,
HEART Trust and the Ministry of Labour and Social Security, Trottman two Mondays ago hosted a Youth Development Forum at the Braeton New Testament Church which had the participation of more than 30 unemployed youths from her community.

20090310T230000-0500_147379_OBS_BRAETON_WOMAN_LEADS_CHARGE_TO_HELP_COMMUNITY_S_AT_RISK_YOUTHS_1.jpg
TROTTMAN... my aim is to see all the youths in my community gainfully employed. (Photo: Garfield Robinson)

The main objective of the forum was to get the youths to focus on their future and with the necessary guidance, set reasonable goals for themselves.

After all, Trottman's long-term aim is to see all the youths gainfully employed or at least have a skill that can translate into work some time in the future.

She said having lived most of her life in Braeton she was, on many occasions, called on to assist individuals. Lately, however, she felt the urge to reach more people than just those in her immediate sphere.

"From time to time a young person will come and ask me to assist them to get a job and so I thought it would be best to have something like this for everybody," she told the Observer, adding that she had assisted many youths to enrol in skills training programmes such as HEART.

According to her, the forum was just the first step of a mission to assist the youths in determining where they wanted to take their lives. The forum allowed them to assess themselves, set goals and discuss strategies for achieving the goals. In addition, they were briefed on the various programmes offered by HEART, the application process as well as the importance of getting National Insurance Scheme and Tax Registration numbers.

20090310T230000-0500_147379_OBS_BRAETON_WOMAN_LEADS_CHARGE_TO_HELP_COMMUNITY_S_AT_RISK_YOUTHS_2.jpg
Optimist Club of Braeton member Elaine Rose (left) counsels two teenagers who participated in the Youth Development Forum held recently at the Braeton New Testament Church in Portmore, St Catherine. (Photo: Joseph Wellington)

It was clear from the get-go that a number of the youths required guidance as they lamented that they were already given negative labels by the society. The youths said they were oftentimes referred to as "worthless", told they "can't come to nothing good" and accused of being the "generation of vipers" that the Bible speaks of.

But many of the youths said contrary to the negative perceptions, they dreamed of becoming entrepreneurs, chefs, mechanics, musicians, with one even saying his ambition is to be a video game designer. None
of the youths, however, had actually made even a first step towards realising their dreams.

They said the absence of an income prevented them from getting a skill and in some cases, further their education. Others lamented that they were parents and could not juggle child-rearing, work and school.

Also, one youth said they also did not get enough encouragement from adults around them.

"Nuff a dem big people condemn we because of our parents... because dem say we parents a cruff," said one very vocal female.

It was the same female who said despite going to HEART to get certified in construction work, she is yet to get certification after the classes stalled mid-way in 2006.

But Miguel Wallace, one of their peers who went to HEART and then to the National Youth Service, advised that despite the challenges it was doable. "To become successful you have to have a vision. When I went to HEART, I wasn't very equipped, but then I went on to youth service and I am doing it," he said.

Lloyd Erskine, development area co-ordinator for the SDC, said they have recognised that there is a series of issues as it related to youths who are unattached (not working or attending school).

Following the session, the youths were asked to complete a registration form indicating their interests and level of schooling so it could be determined what assistance they needed.

Erskine said the group's progress will be monitored as the intention was not only to have dialogue, but to provide tangible support for the unattached youths.

Trottman, in the meanwhile, said she is already looking toward getting sponsors to host similar forums in the future.


Teen gunman dead after killing 15 at German school


German Special Police Forces leave the Albertville school  in Winnenden nearAP  German Special Police Forces leave the Albertville school in Winnenden near Stuttgart, Germany, Wednesday, 

WINNENDEN, Germany A 17-year-old gunman dressed in black opened fire at his former high school in southwestern Germany on Wednesday then fled in a hijacked a car, killing at least 15 people before police shot him to death, state officials said.

The teenager killed nine students, three teachers, and a passer-by outside Albertville high school in Winnenden, authorities said.

Triggering a land and air manhunt, he hijacked a car, let the passengers go and drove about 25 miles (40 kilometers) before police found him. When confronted, he killed two bystanders in a shootout with police before he was slain, Baden Wuerttemburg governor Guenther Oettinger said. Two officers were seriously injured, but there was no immediate information on other casualties.

Police have not yet identified the gunman.

It was the nation's worst shooting since another teenage gunman killed 16 people and himself in another high school in 2002.

"He went into the school with a weapon and carried out a *lo**bath," said regional police chief Erwin Hetger. "I've never seen anything like this in my life."

The gunman entered the school in the town 12 miles (20 kilometers) northeast of Stuttgart and opened fire, shooting at random, police said.

Witnesses said students jumped from the windows of the school building. Concerned parents quickly swarmed around the school, which was evacuated.

It was about four hours later that authorities said the gunman had been killed, but it was not immediately clear at what time police shot him.

The teenager graduated last year from the school, which has 1,000 students.

The German government was "deeply shocked and incensed about the appalling killing spree," Ulrich Wilhelm, a spokesman for Chancellor Angela Merkel, said in Berlin.

In 2002, 19-year-old Robert Steinhaeuser shot and killed 12 teachers, a secretary, two students and a police officer before turning his gun on himself in the Gutenberg high school in Erfurt, in eastern Germany.

Steinhaeuser, who had been expelled for forging a doctor's note, was a gun club member licensed to own weapons. The attack led Germany to raise the age for owning recreational firearms from 18 to 21.

fdsfc

A policeman assigned to the Ferry Police Station in St Catherine apparently slept too sound Monday night.

He said when he woke up at approximately 6:00 yesterday morning at his home in Gore Tuca, Portmore, St Catherine the padlock on his gate was cut off and his brown 2002 Toyota Corolla motor car was missing.

The policeman, who requested anonymity, said the vehicle, registered 4824 EM, may have been stolen between the hours of 11:00 pm and 4:00 am. The theft, he said, was reported to Greater Portmore Police Station.

"Up to now I have the padlock on my desk at the station here; you can see that they use a steel cutter to cut it," the policeman told the Observer.

The cop, who spent much of yesterday making queries about the missing vehicle, was confident that he was making some progress in locating it. He said that he has already started probing some leads into the theft.

"I just a take it easy; from morning I have been making some phone calls in Portmore. The car was among two other cars parked in the yard; to how it park, and to how it would have to be reversed out the yard, is must someone who know how it is normally parked there move it," said the officer.

 

Baby born in drain

March 8, 2007
Started By STAINLESS13 Comments
After delivering her baby in a culvert by the side of the road and having the umbilical cord cut by a stranger, Tanya Burrell proceeded to leave the child on the grounds of a church, just a few feet away from an ant's nest.

Burrell, a 26-year-old un-employed resident of Old Stony Hill Road, St. Andrew, appeared in the Corporate Area Resident Magistrate's Court yesterday to answer to a child abandonment charge.

The facts are that on January 21, Burrell left the baby, wrapped in a brown jacket, on the premises of a Methodist church in the community. The newborn was found by members of the church who turned up for Sunday service. The baby, still covered in blood and amniotic fluid, was found in the grass.

The child was taken to the Stony Hill Police Station and then subsequently to the Bustamante Children's Hospital.

Burrell was taken into custody a few days later, after the police received information from residents of the area. She was admitted to the Kingston Public Hospital for treatment, as she had not been to a doctor after delivering the child. When admitted, she reportedly confessed to police officers that she had abandoned the child.

Burrell had reportedly given birth to the child in a culvert on January 20. While on her way home from work, she started feeling labour pains and delivered the child by the side of the road. A male passer-by helped her cut the umbilical cord and reportedly gave her the jacket the child was wrapped in.

When she appeared before RM Judith Pusey, Burrell pleaded guilty to abandoning the child. She is to return to court on Monday, when she will be sentenced.
People stand outside of First Baptist Church in Maryville, Ill. Sunday March 8,AP  People stand outside of First Baptist Church in Maryville, Ill. Sunday March 8, 2009 after a man killed 

MARYVILLE, Ill. A pastor shot and killed during his Sunday sermon deflected the first of the gunman's four rounds with a Bible, sending a confetti-like spray of paper into the air in a horrifying scene that congregants initially thought was a skit, police said.

The gunman strode down the aisle of the sprawling First Baptist Church shortly after 8 a.m. and briefly spoke with The Rev. Fred Winters, then pulled out a .45-caliber semiautomatic pistol and began firing until it jammed, Illinois State Police Director Larry Trent said. Churchgoers wrestled the gunman to the ground as he waved a knife, slashing himself and two other people, Trent said.

None of the about 150 congregants seemed to recognize the gunman and investigators do not know details of Winters' conversation with him, but they planned to review an audio recording of the service, Trent said. The service was not videotaped.

"We thought it was part of a drama skit ... when he shot, what you saw was confetti," said congregant Linda Cunningham, whose husband is a minister of adult education at the church. "We just sat there waiting for what comes next, not realizing that he had wounded the pastor."

Winters had stood on an elevated platform to deliver his sermon about finding happiness in the workplace and managed to run halfway down the sanctuary's side aisle before collapsing, Cunningham said.

Two congregants tackled the gunman as he pulled the 4-inch knife, and all three were stabbed, police said. The gunman suffered "a pretty serious wound to the neck" while one congregant had lower back wounds, Trent said.

Congregants knocked the gunman between sets of pews, then held him down until police arrived, said church member Don Bohley, who was just outside the sanctuary when the shooting began.

"People came running out and told us to call 911," said Bohley, 72.

Authorities didn't know whether Winters, a married father of two who had led the church for nearly 22 years, knew the gunman. Police described the gunman as a 27-year-old from nearby Troy but would not release his name pending possible charges.

"We don't know the relationship (between the gunman and pastor), why he's here or what the circumstances came about that caused him in the first place to be here," said Illinois State Police Master Trooper Ralph Timmins.

Trent said investigators found no immediate evidence of a criminal background for the suspect. He said police were investigating whether a red Jeep parked outside the church belonged to the man.

The Jeep was registered to the address of a 27-year-old man in an upscale neighborhood in Troy. No one answered the door at the residence Sunday. A woman from a neighboring home cried while hugging other neighbors in the cul-de-sac, but all declined comment.

The Rev. Mark Jones, another pastor at First Baptist, said he briefly saw the gunman but not the shooting, though he heard a sound like miniature firecrackers.

"We have no idea what this guy's motives were," Jones said outside the church.

He later urged a Sunday evening prayer service attended by hundreds at nearby Metro Community Church in Edwardsville to find resilience and spirituality after "this attack from the forces of hell."

The standing-room-only crowd cried, cradled Bibles and stretched their hands skyward as they packed into the church, many watching the service on large television monitors in overflow areas.

"We need to reassure our hearts and reinforce our minds that Pastor Fred is in that place that we call heaven," Jones said. "Church, evil does exist. Today, we saw the visible results of evil and its influence."

The gunman and 39-year-old congregant Terry Bullard underwent surgery at St. Louis University Hospital and were in serious condition Sunday evening, spokeswoman Laura Keller said. The other victim, Keith Melton, was treated and released from Gateway Regional Medical Center.

"I would call it heroic," Trent said. "While many understandably were stuck to their seats, they took to action."

First Baptist had an average attendance of 32 people when Winters became senior pastor in 1987; it now has about 1,200 members, according to the church's Web site. Winters also was former president of the Illinois Baptist State Association and an adjunct professor for Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, according to the site.

The red brick church sits along a busy two-lane highway on the east side of Maryville, a fast-growing village of more than 7,000 about 20 miles northeast of St. Louis. A farm sits directly across from the church, but subdivisions of newer homes can be seen from every side.

"Things like this just don't happen in Maryville," Mayor Larry Gulledge said. "We've lost one the pillars of our community, one of our leaders."

Sharla Dryden, 62, pulled into the church parking lot for a 9:30 a.m. service Sunday to see "just a lot of chaos, lot of police, fire, and people just devastated."

"I would have been devastated if anyone had been shot, but to hear it was the pastor was terrible," Dryden said. "You just never expect this to happen at a church."

At Winters' two-story brick home in Edwardsville, several friends gathered to pay their respects but declined comment. Family members also declined comment.

A statement on First Baptist's Web site asked for prayers for Winters' family, the congregants who tackled the gunman, the gunman and his family, and church members.

Last month, a man shot and killed himself in front of a cross inside televangelist Robert H. Schuller's Crystal Cathedral in Garden Grove, Calif. In November, a gunman killed his estranged wife in a New Jersey church vestibule as Sunday services let out.

In July, two people were killed and six wounded in a shooting rampage at the Tennessee Valley Unitarian Universalist Church in Knoxville, Tenn. An out-of-work truck driver who police say targeted the church for its liberal leanings pleaded guilty to the shootings and was sentenced to life in prison without parole.

WINNENDEN, Germany (CNN) -- A gunman dressed in military gear killed 15 people Wednesday in a shooting spree in Germany before he was shot dead by police, police spokeswoman Renate Roesch told CNN.

Police launched a manhunt for the 17-year-old gunman who was said to be heavily armed.

Police launched a manhunt for the 17-year-old gunman who was said to be heavily armed.

The gunman, 17, began his rampage at a school where he used to be a student in Winnenden, a small town near Stuttgart.

"The suspect broke into the school. He went into the classroom and shot wildly around himself and left the building and fled on foot," Hans Ulrich Stuiber, another police spokesman, said.

Three teachers and nine students were killed at the Albertville-Realschule Winnenden, Roesch said. The shooting, which began around 9:30 a.m., lasted about two minutes, police said.

On his way out of the school, the gunman killed a person who was working in a hospital nearby, then hijacked a car, taking an occupant hostage.

He drove to the nearby town of Wendlingen, kicking the hostage out of the vehicle on the way, said Leo Parzinger of the Wendlingen police.

He then killed two more people before being killed himself in a shootout with police, authorities said.

At least seven people were injured in the shootings -- five people in Winnenden and two police officers in Wendlingen -- Roesch added. She was unable to say how serious the injuries were.

The families of the dead have been informed and are receiving counseling, she said.

She declined to name the gunman.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel is planning to make a statement about the incident later in the day, her office said.

Demon, preacher clash on bus?

February 22, 2007
Started By STAINLESS11 Comments
What should have been a regular JUTC bus ride from Spanish Town, St. Catherine, to Cross Roads, St. Andrew, ended up quite differently on Thursday after several passengers attempted to exorcise a demon from a youngster.

What started out at the terminus in Spanish Town as the usual occurrence of someone preaching on a bus, quickly changed on the journey to either a dramatic unsuccessful exorcism or a bizarre clash of preachers.

The incident was sparked by a student, who was preaching, boarding ten minutes into the ride and apparently spreading a different message from a preacher who had been on the bus from Spanish Town.

The first preacher had been speaking about the salvation of the Lord, with some of the passengers listening attentively and shouting 'Amen' and 'Praise the Lord', but then the student, fully-clad in uniform, boarded the bus and began preaching about the laws of God and how they should be kept.

Suddenly the mood inside the bus changed and both young men began shouting at the top of their voices. It became clear that a competition was in the air. But things took another turn as the first preacher, now joined by another, started accusing the young student of being possessed with a demon.

He was grabbed at the top of the head while one of the preachers shouted, "I bind you in the name of Jesus, release him ... The Blood of Jesus is against you."

By this time, the preacher, his friend and about a quarter of the passengers began speaking in tongues.

The student, with eyes wide open in amazement at the treatment he was getting, responsed calmly. "You know not of what you speak."

The incident was like a scene from The Exorcism of Emily Rose. One person grabbed him by the shoulders and began shaking while others rebuked 'the devil from the pit of hell' to come out of him. But the only response they got was the student slowly turning his head and telling his accusers repeatedly, "You know not of what you speak."

After a while, the preacher became worn out and sat down to take a breather. But soon he was up again conducting the exorcism.

It was obvious that not all the passengers were in agreement with what was taking place. At the end of the ride several persons expressed their disgust. "This a damm foolishness. Mi a Christian, but fi dem come pon mi bus an' a gwaan like jackass, mi shame 'cause dem almost a cause war," the driver said.

The ride ended with much debate as other persons said they felt the evangelists did not believe enough and so did not have the power to cast out the demons, while others wondered whether there had been any demons at all.

Efforts to contact a representative of the Jamaica Urban Transit Company to see if there were any reports of the incidents were unsuccessful.

PASADENA, Calif. An asteroid about the size of one that blasted Siberia a century ago just buzzed by Earth.

NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory reported that the asteroid zoomed past Monday morning.

The asteroid named 2009 DD45 was about 48,800 miles from Earth. That is just twice the height of some telecommunications satellites and about a fifth of the distance to the Moon.

The space ball measured between 69 feet and 154 feet in diameter. The Planetary Society said that made it the same size as an asteroid that exploded over Siberia in 1908 and leveled more than 800 square miles of forest.

Most people probably didn't notice the cosmic close call. The asteroid was only spotted two days ago and at its closest point passed over the Pacific Ocean near Tahiti.

 

Read

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March 10, 2009
Started By Mellow_Vybz2 Comments

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how deep is a woman Vagina ? a.k.a Pu$$y


There's no one answer to that. Just like males have different penis sizes, women have different lengths in the vaginal canal. It usually depends on how tall or short the woman is, her body chemistry, etc. It is usually deep enough to accomodate the length of a full-grown male penis, on average 4.5-5 inches. Some are more 'shallow', some are deeper. It will always vary from person to person but it usually deep enough to accept the length of an average sized penis before entering the cervix


Dr David Mconachy states:

The ladies vagina depth can vary dramatically, however the average depth is around 6inches however the largest recorded depth of a vagina was recorded in London, 1916 and the depth recorded was 17.5inches. This is very deep.
Hope this helps, Dr D Mconachy, gynecologist, UK


It depends on the woman, but the average is 5 to 9 inches deep when aroused. Some women are deeper than this, some not.

The woman's vagina can be averaged 5-7 inches long when aroused. Of course there are women with very long canals and some with very short ones. But the above numbers is the average.

Vaginas vary greatly in depth, as, of course, does every part of the body.

The most relevant question is whether it's going to be deep enough for a particular guy's penis to go in and be used enthusiastically without hitting the cervix and thus causing great pain and possible bleeding.

In general terms, assuming that neither partner's genitals differ too widely from the norm, they're like to fit together quite well if the woman is just a couple of inches shorter in height than the man.

You don't often see it nowadays (gets operated on long before that stage) but you used to see total prolapses of the uterus, where it pushed right down and turned the vagina entirely outside in (procidentia) -- certainly showed what that particular vagina had been like as far as depth was concerned. A large proportion of our great great grandmothers spent the last decades of their lives with a protuberance bearing a totally-remarkable resemblance to their husband's penis

MAN CRAPS PANTS, FLEES COURT

March 10, 2009
Started By Garrick7 Comments
STARCover_1_PT7BYToiletMM.jpg

A man had to run from the Corporate Area Resident Magistrate's Court yesterday after he defecated on himself upon hearing his name being called.

The man had to run home for a change of clothing after his intestines went haywire before he could even answer to the offence with which he had been charged.

Weak-bowel

A warrant initially issued for his arrest was subsequently stayed for today after the attorney for the 'weak-bowel' fellow related the interesting circumstances to the court, under which his client had soiled his pants and had to make a hasty retreat.

The lawyer, in making the application before Senior Resident Magistrate Glen Brown, explained that his client was in court but had suffered "intense bowel actions" upon hearing his name being called by the court officer for his appearance. As a result of that spontaneous and forceful bowel movement, the man had to seek a change of clothes.

Chuckles

The revelation sent light chuckles through the courtroom before the previously issued warrant for the accused man was postponed.

The accused was scheduled to appear in court yesterday after being charged with assault occasioning grievous bodily harm following a December 27, 2008, incident in Greenwich Town, St Andrew.

Arrested and charged

Allegations are that on the date in question, the accused and two other men attacked the complainant, causing him to suffer a broken rib, dislocated shoulder and other bruises. The accused was subsequently arrested and charged with the offence. Yesterday would have been his first appearance in court in relation to the matter.

The accused is set to return to the Corporate Area Resident Magistrate's Court today.

KipRich vibes in Lucea

Fabian O'Hara, Star Writer

 

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Dancehall artiste Kiprich wows the audience.

After the four-hour journey from Kingston to Lucea, Hanover, the STAR of the month (February) arrived at Club 300.

Outside the club, patrons lined up, anxiously waiting to get inside to get a glimpse of KipRich.

Inside, KipRich played pool and engaged some of the natives in some rib-tickling conversations, much to their delight.

 

Face-off

After the games, it was party time, and there was a face-off between the 'Linkz', with British Linkz from Lucea and Dutty Linkz from Kingston, packing the dance floor.

Laden had patrons believing that it was their Time to Shine, as the song had to be 'pulled up' as the forwards kept coming.

Patrons soaked up the vibes as much as they consumed Magnum and other liquors, building up a momentum for the live performances.

A few of the local acts took the stage, but it was Frada and Accent Dougal, who got the tough crowd to let out a few 'blanks of approval'.

 

People were ungrateful

It was more difficult for Ritchie Ras, as a few words into his song, the boos rang out. He, however got a handful of forwards later on, but said that the people were ungrateful.

Telah, a former Magnum Kings and Queens contestant, turned the place inside out when she declared that she loved the 'Stompin Shop' as she was not into the whole 'Rompin' thing. The forwards came fast and were long lasting as she delivered songs from her catalogue.

Upon hearing that 'Kippo' was about to grace the stage, Club 300 went loco. He interacted with the crowd well as he delivered some of his more popular songs.

Kerry Buruy, one of the patrons present, said that the night was good but should have gone on longer.

"It was really good, just that it seemed really short, looking forward to the next visit she told THE STAR.

STARRIGHT_1_P2BP7partyHAM.jpg
Girls from Kingston, Lucea and Green Island in Hanover could not resist attending at the Caution - The 'Nuh Behaviour' Military takeover show at Club 300 in Lucea last Friday. Magnum Tonic Wine, Blue Promotions and The Star were part sponsors.

STARRIGHT_1_PD22OpartyKAM.jpg
Bess FM's DJ Naz (second left) and Sherica Graham, of Lucea, Hanover, pose with One Third's (from left) Miguel, Andre and Al.

STARRIGHT_1_PYO2ApartyIAM.jpg
The 'Dutty Link' dance crew were all in their element at the Caution - The 'Nuh Behaviour' Military takeover show at Club 300 in Lucea last Friday. - Noel Thompson photos

STARRIGHT_1_PZBNFpartyDAM.jpg
Well-known dancer from Lucea, Hanover, 'Cassandra', shows off her dancing talent.

 

OctoMom Scores a House!!!

March 10, 2009
Started By Garrick1 Comments
OctoMom don't need no publicist, because she's about to get a new home.

click to view!

We've learned her dad is the purchaser of the 2,583 square-foot house for Octo. It's located in La Habra, near where OctoGrandma lives now. It has four bedrooms and three bathrooms, a large master bedroom with a walk-in closet and a large backyard. It's listed for $564,900. The buyer paid near asking price.

It's listed by Mike Patel of Prudential Realty in Anaheim Hills in the O.C. We're told the deal was just inked and it will close on Friday. Sources also say the "substantial down payment" came from money that OctoMom has been scoring over the last few weeks. As one source put it, "the money has been coming from all over the place -- $15,000 here, $25,000 there." We're told the seller is financing the deal.

We're told Octo will either move in over the weekend or early next week

Pants-below-waist ban?

March 10, 2009
Started By Garrick5 Comments
It seems local security officials have not given much thought to adopting the approach taken by the Grenadian government to ban young men from wearing pants below their waists.

Earlier this year, the Royal Grenada Police Force outlawed such dressing and launched a campaign targeting youngsters who show their underwear by wearing pants below their waistline. The move was introduced by the Grenadian commissioner of police, who was sworn in last July. Some states in the United States have also instituted a similar law.

A story posted on the website www.kaieteurnews.com on January 9, quotes the commissioner as saying the rule is to remind people that they should observe a proper dress code when in public. The story also makes reference to an incident where a group of tourists were sent back to their cruise ship because of the way they were dressed.

When THE STAR spoke with Minister of National Security, Colonel Trevor MacMillan, however, he seemed rather unimpressed and disinterested in Grenada's move. He said it was a waste of time and he would not comment on the matter.

Other groups, however, like the Values and Attitudes Committee, believe such a move would reap great benefits. Lifestyle consultant and former convenor of the committee, Dr Heather Little-White, told THE STAR, "Definitely, this should be banned. It is a form of indecent exposure." She said the Values and Attitudes had proposed a national dress code as exists in Bermuda.

She continued, "Men should wear shirts and merino-type tops should not be for the public. Even from a public-health perspective, it creates a risk, especially in public places."

Dr Little-White, said banning saggy pants would " bring back some law and order and with other measures would encourage decent public behaviour".

The trend of wearing jeans below the natural waistline was made popular by the hip- hop culture, which, through cable and other media, filtered into Caribbean societies.

Efforts to get a comment from the commissioner of police were not successful.

Smith sings different buggery tune

March 10, 2009
Started By Garrick2 Comments

Layout1_1_PJGK5ErnieSmiAM.jpg
Smith

MEMBER OF Parliament Ernie Smith might just have become the butt of a new round of jokes. Despite his impassioned plea in February for tougher penalties for buggery convicts, the South West St Ann representative, who is also an attorney-at-law, was in court last week strongly defending a man charged with - you guessed it - buggery.

So strident was Smith in defence of his client in the St Ann Circuit Court that although pleading guilty to the charge, the accused was able to walk away with just a suspended sentence.

Professionalism

Smith later defended his action, saying he was upholding the tenets of his profession.

"I am a professional person; anyone who confides in me and believes in me that I will properly represent them in any case, provided I take the case, I give that person my 100 per cent expertise," Smith explained.

Lenford Adams, 23, of Alexandria, St Ann, was brought before Justice Leighton Pusey on a charge of buggery on February 23.

Allegations presented by Assistant Director of Public Prosecutions Natalie Brooks are that on August 19, 2007, the accused entered the room of his female cousin and began fondling her, and buggered her afterwards.

Adams pleaded guilty but sentencing was put off until March 6.

No deviant behaviour

When the case was heard last Friday, Smith pleaded with the judge not to send Adams to prison, arguing that his client had never before run afoul of the law.

Based on the probation report, Smith said, his client had never displayed any deviant behaviour and co-existed well with others in his community.

Smith's stout-hearted defence was in stark contrast to his lambasting of gays and buggery - the main sexual expression among homosexual males - in a presentation to Parliament last month.

But in court Friday, Smith changed his tune on buggery.

"My view on a particular behaviour in the Jamaican society has nothing to do with my professionalism. It has nothing to do with the quality of representation that I give every person who retains me to defend them," Smith said.

THE Jamaica Constabulary Force (JCF) yesterday downplayed reports that Police Commissioner Hardley Lewin could soon be announcing the reshuffling of several senior officers.

20090309T220000-0500_147324_OBS_POLICE_CHIEF_SAID_PLANNING_RESHUFFLE_OF_SENIOR_OFFICERS_1.jpg
LEWIN. scheduled to meet with senior officers today

"At this point in time I can say nothing about those reports and until they are official I cannot comment," Karl Angell, the constabulary's director of communications, told the Observer yesterday.

However, a senior officer said several were informed of the planned reshuffle. The senior officer was, however, unable to say when the changes would come in effect.

Other police sources said the police commissioner was scheduled to meet today with several officers, but it was
not clear if a reshuffle of top officers would be on the agenda.

Gov't doesn't own Fern Gully

March 10, 2009
Started By Garrick3 Comments

The Jamaican Government does not own Fern Gully, the world-renowned natural rainforest in St Ann that provides a three-mile section of the main corridor linking the capital city Kingston with the North Coast.

Tourism Minister Edmund Bartlett made the startling disclosure in an interview with the Observer, in which he said that a proposal to develop Fern Gully into a major tourist attraction had been shelved, at least for now, until the Government could determine who were the actual owners of the lands.

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Fern Gully currently houses several craft shops and is a favourite stop for tourists. (Observer file photo)

Bartlett's planners were forced to put the development plans on hold, following recent information that some of the lands were privately owned by persons other than those initially thought to be the owners. The minister said he was unsure of just how many persons actually had an interest in Fern Gully.

"...We are going to use best efforts to make sure the land is available," he said, explaining that Government's plans had been halted while it determined who owned the lands and exactly how the properties would be acquired. "We are checking around to find who are the owners," he said.

The disclosure brought at least temporary reprieve to environmentalists who bitterly oppose any development, saying it would only further degrade the natural beauty of the area, and that inappropriate beautification efforts had already been allowed to take place - to Fern Gully's detriment.

Fern Gully, nestling between the community of Colegate and tourist resort Ocho Rios, is a highly regarded natural rainforest, noted for its cool temperatures and winding curves. It currently houses several craft shops and is a favourite stop for tourists.

Bartlett, while not wanting to be specific about what type of development was planned for the area, told the newspaper that it would also involve the development of an ecological attraction.

He admitted that the design work for the proposed development had not yet been done as it was first necessary to sort out the ownership issues for the land.

He said the lands in question extended well beyond the winding roadway in Fern Gully and involve several parcels.

As to whether the known owners had any intentions to develop the lands themselves, Bartlett said none of the interests had demonstrated any commercial activity for the area.

He said that a group of private entrepreneurs had been looking at developing the area and had brought forth a plan but this was no longer being pursued.

But finding the owners might not be the only obstacle, as the Northern Jamaica Conservation Association (NJCA), a non-governmental organisation based in Runaway Bay, has expressed concerns that they were never consulted about any planned development for the area.

Executive director of the NJCA, Wendy Lee, told the Observer that her association first heard about the proposed development shortly after Bartlett took office in 2007.

However, despite writing to the Tourism Product Development Company for clarification, they were yet to receive a response.

"Leave Fern Gully alone. It is a natural area," Lee insisted. "Jamaica is the attraction with its people and natural scenery. There is no need to develop it and put lights there at nights."

She said the idea of development for an area of natural beauty was the last thing that should be done. What needed to be done instead, she suggested, was re-routing of motor and human traffic from the area.

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Member of Parliament for West Portland Daryl Vaz shows his new passport and visa to the media at the Jamaica Labour Party's Belmont Road, New Kingston, headquarters on Monday. Rudolph Brown/Chief Photographer

ARMED WITH a copy of his birth certificate, two Jamaican passports and a letter of declaration, Daryl Vaz yesterday called for an end to arguments about whether he is qualified to sit in the House of Representatives.

Vaz, who was ousted from the West Portland seat by the courts because he had dual citizenship at the time of the 2007 general election has been nominated by the Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) to contest the March 23 by-election in the constituency.

But he could face a fresh legal battle to prove that he is now qualified to sit in the House.

Abe Dabdoub, whose challenge led to the disqualification of Vaz, has indicated that he will be returning to the courts for a determination of the status of the JLP candidate.

No confirmation

Up to late yesterday, there was no confirmation from the Supreme Court that Dabdoub had made good on his declaration, but an obviously peeved Vaz called for an end to the squabble.

"I see it as a distraction and an irresponsible accusation by lawyers who should know better," Vaz told journalists at a media briefing.

"Upon presentation of these (documents) to the media, I hope you will not come back again asking the same questions. I want to say, as it relates to my status and my qualification to represent the people of Jamaica, the argument done," Vaz added.

He outlined the sequence of events, which he said, started immediately after the chief justice ruled that he was not qualified to sit in the House and ended when he received the certificate of loss of nationality from the United States.

"That is the final document and certificate to indicate that the process is complete and you have renounced your citizenship. As a result of that, I then applied for and thankfully, was given a visitor's visa to allow me to enter the United States of America," Vaz claimed.

He stated that he would not have had to apply for a US visa if he was a green-card holder.

Vaz was supported by other JLP officials who argued that while their candidate has met the legal and moral standards, questions must be asked of the People's National Party (PNP), which has nominated a candidate who has dual citizenship.

Holds a Canadian passport

The PNP's candidate for the West Portland seat, Kenneth Rowe, has admitted that he holds a Canadian passport and the JLP argued that while constitutionally he is allowed to sit in the House, the PNP has a moral dilemma.

"It is incumbent on lawmakers to not just govern by technicalities, but also to lead and govern with high morals.

"Because Mr Dabdoub, having gone to court and fought the issue of dual citizenship ... and then the very same party nominates an individual with dual citizenship, then there is a big moral gap they have to close," JLP executive Dr Ronald Robinson argued.

The justice system came under sharp criticism last Friday when Supreme Court judge Lennox Campbell discovered that two men had been languishing in custody for the last four years without a date being set for their trial.

The men, Joel Brown and Lance Mathias, were arrested and charged in August 2004 after they were accused of committing two murders the previous month.

Prosecutor Kathy Pyke said one of the problems faced was unpreparedness on the part of the defence.

"The court has a responsibility to see to it that the cases are tried expeditiously," the judge remarked. "Four years is terrible; I can't think of any other word."

He also referred to the United Kingdom Privy Council's ruling in the Pratt and Morgan case, which resulted in many death-penalty convictions being commuted to life sentences.

The judge advised Pyke to speak to the lawyers involved so that a trial date could be set when the men return to the Home Circuit Court on March 11. "This case has dragged on for too long," the judge said.

The judge also criticised the practice of a large number of cases being set for mention week after week, without trial dates being fixed. He said the cases were only cl**ttering the court list.

Late start

Lawyers and police officers who turned up at the Home Circuit Court Friday had to wait more than two hours before a judge was available to preside over the cases set for mention. The judge who was scheduled to preside was ill.

When the court resumed at 12:30 p.m., prosecutor Dahlia Findlay apologised for the late start, saying it was unavoidable.

In response, Justice Campbell said, "Something should have been put in place to stop something like this from happening. This is not unavoidable."

Parliament going nowhere fast

March 10, 2009
Started By Garrick2 Comments
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PNP leader Portia Simpson Miller and Dr Peter Phillips were among the notable absentees from Parliament last Tuesday. - File photos

THE PEOPLE'S National Party (PNP) owes Jamaicans an apology. Their almost well-choreographed act of abandoning the people's Parliament without justifiable explanation is a shameful act.

Last Tuesday, several members of the Opposition People's National Party stayed away from the sitting of the House of Representatives.

There was no Portia Simpson Miller, the opposition leader and president of the PNP; no Peter Bunting, the party's general secretary; nor his deputy Luther Buchanan.

Robert Pickersgill, the party's chairman, was also missing from the House and so, too, were Dr Donald Rhodd, chairman of the PNP's Region Two, where the party is fighting to win a seat by way of a by-election, as well as senior party man Dr Peter Phillips.

Absence

So pronounced was the PNP's dismal attendance that government MPs joked that they would move a censure motion against Roger Clarke, one of two Opposition MPs who were in the House (the other was Derrick Kellier, the opposition House leader), when he clashed with Dr Christopher Tufton over the controversial importation of fertiliser which contained elements of human excreta.

Dr Omar Davies, Fitz Jackson, Lisa Hanna, Ronald Thwaites, Dr Wykeham McNeill, Anthony Hylton, Maxine Henry-Wilson, Sharon Hay-Webster, Dr Morais Guy, Michael Peart and Dean Peart merely passed though the House.

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Prime Minister Bruce Golding's ambitious parliamentary agenda has been more rhetoric than reality.

Checks with Parliament records indicate that only West Hanover MP Ian Hayles and East Central St Catherine MP Natalie Neita Headley, who is overseas on parliamentary business, advised the clerk of the House of their absence. Everyone else, including a few government MPs, merely ignored their legislative duties for the day.

One wonders if the high stakes in the West Portland by-election motivated the absences or short stints the PNP had in the House.

Or perhaps it could be a well-planned protest against the governing Jamaica Labour Party's (JLP) legislative agenda, that appears to be lacking in substance and direction.

Robust debates

The PNP could argue effectively that they missed nothing and that their constituents did not suffer from their absence from Parliament. Aside from the Sexual Offences Bill, debate on which was concluded last Tuesday, and the grandstanding which the fertiliser issue provided, nothing else took place in the House.

It has been a practice of the Government to pack the parliamentary sittings with questions and answers to questions.

While not discounting the importance of answering questions, especially in clarifying government projects and policies, the nation is cheated when our Parliament consistently avoids robust debates by ignoring motions that are on the Order Paper.

These are extraordinary times and one would hope that the parliamentary agenda could be set in such a way that members are made to dig deep, similar to the way a batting team would go about saving a Test match in the last hour of play.

Instead of skipping Parliament or barely going through the motions during sittings, we expect that Government and Opposition alike would stop talking about consensus and demonstrate that they fully understand what it means.

For all the talk of consensus, second reading has not yet taken place on anti-crime bills. The last time we heard, the PNP and JLP were meeting on them to iron out a few things, possibly make a few compromises, before taking it to the House. Well, the parliamentary year is almost over and the bills are seemingly languishing in File 13.

While Parliamentarians continue to waste time, for which they are being paid with taxpayers' money, the Order Paper is overflowing with motions, many of them critical to national development. These motions are in danger of not being debated anytime soon, as the parliamentary year speeds to an end.

And while our leaders procrastinate, turbulent world economic conditions continue to rip away the pockets of the haves and the have-nots.

The government must prepare the people for the shocks of the coming national budget and do it early. It has no control over the global economic crisis which will impact heavily on the budget - neither did the PNP Opposition when it formed the government - but government has a responsibility to do everything possible to cushion the intensity of the impact.

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Ken Chaplin

The government was rather late in explaining fully to the country the effect that the global economic meltdown will have on Jamaica. Finance Minister Audley Shaw, apparently not wanting to create panic, seemed to have underestimated the full impact the crisis will have on Jamaica. It was left to Prime Minister Bruce Golding to tell the full story in a brilliant dissertation at a function in Montego Bay, a speech that should have been made in Parliament and broadcast islandwide. Now it is the responsibility of the government's communication apparatus, especially the Jamaica Information Service, to disseminate the information in the speech throughout Jamaica so people will understand the full impact of the crisis in Jamaica.

It was disingenuous of the Opposition spokesman on finance, Dr Omar Davies, to suggest that the speech was political. Rather it was profound and it captured, in simple language, the crisis and how the country will have to tackle it.

Ian Boyne, director of production at the Jamaica Information Service, did a masterful analysis of the speech in his column in the Sunday Gleaner recently in which he supported Golding's points. Indeed, when the PNP was in power and the JLP in Opposition, some of Boyne's comments were regarded as anti-JLP. I do not recall him stating in his column that he was director of production at the main mouthpiece of the government. But all the knocks that Boyne gets were expected because as a top public servant he should not be writing on political matters. Notwithstanding all I have said, people find his column informative and interesting, and he ought to continue to do now what he has done in the past.
Placing the world economic crisis in perspective, Golding said that 25 banks collapsed in the USA last year and a further 14 so far this year. Similar bank failures have occurred in Europe and Asia, the other two dominant regions in the global financial market. The International Monetary Fund declared last month that bank losses worldwide would exceed US$2.2 trillion. It is not just the failed banks that have suffered. Stocks and assets held by financial institutions across the world have lost more than US$30 trillion in market value in a matter of a few months.

Savers and investors will have to absorb a substantial portion of the losses. The banking system will have to be rebuilt and new domestic and global regulatory systems put in place. Only then will confidence be restored and people start saving, investing, borrowing and spending again. Only then will the demand for goods and services start growing again, factories start reopening, employers start rehiring and recovering again. It is in this context that Golding said that Jamaica's fate must be considered. "Part of our own reality is that even before the onset of the crisis the Jamaican economy was not in good shape. We have lived for almost a generation with prolonged periods of low growth, huge debts, large fiscal deficits, high unemployment and weak export performance," the prime minister said.

No shoes, no money, but ...

March 10, 2009
Started By Garrick6 Comments
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Robert Coates- GHETTO GEMS

western bureau:

Life's hard-fought journey to success, for 33-year-old Robert Coates, was built on gritty determination and humble beginnings, during a time when having no shoes to go to school was not an excuse for not having ambition.

The second child of eight, Coates said his parents had insurmountable financial challenges.

"I remembered at about age 11, while I attended Farm All-Age (now Farm Primary and Junior High), I began selling bag juice on Fridays to make extra money to go to school during the week, so I would have to miss school on Fridays," Coates told THE STAR.

While his father worked as a gardener and his mother, as a domestic worker, the c****ined household income was not sufficient to meet all the needs of the children. Coates remembers having to go to school barefoot at times, because there was just not enough money to buy shoes.

Despite these obstacles during his youth, he said the adversity strengthened the family bonds.

Coates credits those circumstances for propelling him to complete his examinations at the grade nine level and earn a place at Cornwall College. But disappointment came when his parents were not able to afford tuition costs.

Back to school

Determined to shape his destiny, Coates began working in the hospitality industry at age 17. It was then that he was able to save enough money to go back to school to obtain his CXCs and other certification for the hospitality sector. He recently completed his studies in travel organisation at Colbourne College.

Entrepreneur

Although he expresses a deep love for the hospitality industry, Coates prides himself on being an entrepreneur who played an integral role in establishing businesses such as a hardware store in Rose Heights (where he still lives), a restaurant and a shoe and clothing store.

Nowadays, Coates is busy with pastoral duties at Visionaries Apostolic Church and his full-time job as a guest-services coordinator at Tryall Golf and Country Club.

Being a husband and father of two, with one more on the way, also keeps him on his feet.

He implores persons in inner-city communities not to allow their circumstances to paralyse their futures.

"It is possible to elevate yourself from your circumstances and come out on top. I have never done anything illegal in life to achieve what I have achieved, so persons don't have to live by the gun or knife; they can change for the better," he insisted.

Coates further pointed that his parents' Christian background was also an important driving force.

(This is a repeat of an article previously carried in The Gleaner's Ghetto Gem series.)

Senior Puisne Judge Marva McIntosh began her summation to the jury yesterday at the trial of 25-year-old Sheldon Pusey, who is charged with the murder of 64-year-old Ambassador Peter King.

Pusey has been on trial in the Home Circuit Court since January 19 for King's murder.

The Crown is alleging that Pusey fatally chopped and stabbed King at his house at 11A Waterloo Road, St Andrew, between March 19 and 20, 2006.

Pusey said in his defence that he went to King about a job. He said King was forcing him to be intimate with him and he stabbed him. The judge, in her summation, told the 12-member jury not to have any sympathy for King or Pusey.

Sole judges

She told the jurors that they were the sole judges of the fact and they had to examine the evidence presented by the prosecution and arrive at a verdict.

The judge will continue her summation when the trial resumes today.

OCHO RIOS, St Ann - Commissioner of Customs Danville Walker says failures within the public sector are due mainly to the incompetence of some managers and is calling on his colleagues to hold themselves accountable for their own actions.

Addressing members of the St Ann Chamber of Commerce in Ocho Rios on Thursday, Walker said the country can no longer afford a public sector that is under-performing. He said the failure of some public sector managers and supervisors has resulted in the Government losing millions of dollars.

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Commissioner of Customs Danville Walker (right) in discussion with St Ann Chamber of Commerce President Horace Wildes and branch manager at the Capital and Credit Merchant Bank in Ocho Rios, Karlene Mullings. (Photo: Alesia Edwards)

"If those who are paid as managers in the public sector are not managing and delivering, mechanisms must be put in place to remove them. This country can no longer afford a non-performing public sector, we just cannot afford it," Walker told the business leaders.

Walker said if the public sector is to grow and perform at a satisfactory level, all persons in authority must be held accountable for the entity he or she leads. He was speaking against the background of new measures implemented at the Customs Department to prevent under-invoicing.

The customs boss said the days of supervisors turning a blind eye to fraud was near an end as he will be holding managers and supervisors accountable for some of what is happening within their respective departments.

"We have sought to tighten that up, where all the goods must be declared, and we expect to see duty paid or we are coming after those companies," Walker warned, adding that the department will continue vigorous checks on all importation to ensure that all the necessary duties are paid.

He also reiterated his intention to go public with breaches and embarra** the offenders.

Thursday, he also disclosed that scanners will be installed at the island's airports by next month to help detect undeclared items. The scanners, he said, are intended to reduce the number of manual searches.

The customs commissioner also disclosed that the department is also looking at reintroducing the K-Nine division.

Massacre

March 10, 2009
Started By Garrick2 Comments

Montego Bay, St James - The fun and merrymaking inside Nicole Stone's bar at Bongo Lennie Corner in Hendon, St James early Sunday morning was in sharp contrast to the pall of gloom which hung over the entertainment spot, the scene of another dark massacre, just hours later.

A large pool of *lo** was on the bar floor, providing horrifying evidence of the early morning gun attack that left four men dead, three others injured and the St James murder total at 37 since the start of the year.

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A lone man contemplates the scene outside Nicole Stone's bar where four men were killed and three others injured in Hendon yesterday morning. (Photo: Alan Lewin)

The brutal attack was reported about 1:25 am when two masked gunmen opened fire at a bar full of partygoers celebrating its opening, killing four of them. Police gave their names as: Peter Williams, a 34-year-old former telemarketer also called 'Funo' of Hendon; Adrian 'Condom' Winter, 20, a labourer of Lime Tree also in Hendon; Oniel 'Moses' Black, 30, a sound system selector of Coke Drive, Glendevon and a 23-year-old man identified only as "Kevon".

Three other men ages 18, 22 and 66 were also shot and injured as the guns blazed furiously inside the bar. Patrons said the thugs burst into the room suddenly and started spraying bullets for no obvious reasons.

Near to despair themselves, the St James police urged calm, fearing that reprisals could unleash another round of killings in Glendevon, a volatile enclave near the northcoast resort city of Montego Bay.

The St James divisional commander, Superintendent Maurice Robinson released his personal cellphone number - 322-2803 - hoping that persons with information about the tragic incident would call him.

However, up to Observer press time, Robinson said, police had not yet established a motive for the killing. "We have no leads, no motive, nothing concrete as yet," he said.

Yesterday's massacre in Glendevon was the second such shooting at a party in a week in the parish. Two Saturdays ago, three revellers were shot dead at Perry Street in the western city, triggering screams for revenge from some Glendevon residents.

"Di war caan done," declared a visibly devastated man yesterday, claiming that the gunmen had killed his cousin.

"Dem can't come round yah come just shoot up man suh and get away with it," said another angry resident who was among a group of curious onlookers outside the ill-fated bar.

Bar owner Nicole Stone could not be consoled. Her uncle, Williams, was among the dead.

"Dem kill mi uncle and him nuh do nothing," cried Stone, pointing to a large pool of *lo** inside her bar. Stone said she had hid behind the corner as the two masked gunmen sprayed bullets wildly inside the bar.

Other eyewitnesses said the masked men pointed out persons individually as they went on the shooting spree and Stone said three of the four men killed were shot inside her business place while the fourth died outside.

She noted that while she was aware of only two gunmen inside the bar, other eyewitnesses said that armed men also kept watch outside, while their cronies went on their rampage inside. Residents theorise that the thugs struck when they knew the hardcore men in the area were sleeping.

Winter's father Roy, pained by his death, said his son might have been alive today if he had not turned away from his Christian upbringing. "If him did still a go church him would a know say it wrong fi go dem place deh and him would still be alive," he moaned.

Black, who is originally from St Elizabeth was remembered as a jovial, fun loving and helpful individual. He leaves a son behind.

Men held with fake licence charged

March 10, 2009
Started By Garrick6 Comments

Two men held by the police in St Mary possessing the same fake New York State driver's licence, were slapped with forgery charges and brought before the Corporate Area Resident Magistrate's Court yesterday.

The police yesterday told the court that they went to St Mary to apprehend one of the men, Jason Kameka, in whom they initially had interest. They said Kameka was responsible for the fraudulent conversion of some $2.4 million, which he deposited in the complainant's account via fraudulent cheques, before withdrawing the money.

American driver's licence

The police say that the other man, Timothy Burton, was in Kameka's company when he was accosted.

Following a search of the men, it was discovered that they had the same American driver's licence (New York state), bearing the name Jason Mitchell.

Burton was subsequently charged with possessing a forged driver's licence while Kameka is facing the same charge, along with those of uttering forge documents, obtaining money by false pretence and causing money to be paid out. Both will return to court on March 11.

Teen killed in hit-and-run

March 10, 2009
Started By Garrick8 Comments

A 16-year-old student was killed and three of his schoolmates injured when they were hit by a car on the Oracabessa main road in St Mary last Thursday.

Dead is Shavez Williams of Content Gardens, Ocho Rios, while two 16-year-olds were injured. The other student is 14.

According to police reports, about 8 p.m., the four students were walking along the Oracabessa main road in the parish when they were hit by a red Toyota Rav4. The driver reportedly fled the scene.

The teens were rushed to hospital by residents where Williams was pronounced dead and the others admitted in serious condition.

A man who is accused of robbery was given a nine-month sentence yesterday in the Corporate Area Resident Magistrate's Court.

The accused man, Ricardo Edmondson, was charged with larceny from the person after being accused of forcing his hand into the pocket of the complainant, robbing him of $600.

When Senior Resident Magistrate Glen Brown asked the accused his reason for committing the act, he merely said, "I was hungry."

Allegations are that the complainant was walking along Waterloo Road, St Andrew, when he was approached by Edmondson for money.

After the robbery, the accused man was seen by the complainant at Devon House. Security guards were alerted and Edmondson was held and the police called.

Edmondson was taken into custody and following investigations, was arrested and charged.
The St Andrew South police seized three illegal firearms during an operation on Thursday night.

According to the police, an operation was carried out shortly after 9 p.m. at several premises on Headley Avenue. The guns, along with a quantity of ammunition, were found.

Home-made guns

A search of one of the houses yielded an AK-47 rifle with a magazine containing 29 cartridges, two home-made guns and three 12 -gauge cartridges.

No one was arrested in connection with the seizure.

Man murdered

March 10, 2009
Started By Garrick2 Comments

A St Elizabeth man was shot dead in the Kingston 10 area yesterday.

Dead is Robert Lloyd Farquharson, 39, of Thornton District, Siloah, in St Elizabeth.

Reports are that about 11:40 a.m., residents along the Loxley Hemmingway Avenue saw a silver-coloured car drive into the community. Three men, including Farquharson, were believed to be aboard.

The men reportedly alighted from the car and one opened fire, hitting Farquharson, who died on the spot. The other men drove off.

The Half-Way Tree police are investigating.
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