In less than a week, officials have locked down a warrant for the person they believe shot Mark Ruffalo's brother in the head -- and the suspect is a woman.
Shaha Mishaal Adham, one of the two "persons of interest" first linked to the case, is now the prime suspect in the attempted murder investigation. Sources close to the investigation tell us Adham is related to members of Saudi Arabian royalty. Adham is already gearing up for a serious fight -- signing on boxer Manny Pacquiao's high profile attorney Keith Davidson.
Ruffalo's brother, Scott, is still clinging to life after he suspiciously was shot in the head in his Beverly Hills apartment last Monday..
Don't call it a comeback.
''Comeback'' doesn't even come close to describing what Britney Spears has done on her new album, arriving in stores Tuesday, her 27th birthday. Not only is Circus the best album of her career, but it also could return her to the kind of massive, multiplatinum sales that she hasn't seen since the turn of the century.
Circus is overflowing with smart, savvy dance pop the kind of hits that she has hinted at in the past with Toxic and I'm a Slave 4 U that creates the perfect escapist soundtrack for these downsized times. All these accomplishments are made that much more incredible considering how low she had sunk personally and professionally last year with her string of tabloid-worthy exploits and the embarra**ment of her clumsy train wreck of a performance on MTV's Video Music Awards.
Her last album, Blackout, sounded so cobbled together and half-done that many wondered if Spears would even be able to record another album, much less one as impressive as Circus. Though she worked with essentially the same producers and songwriters, the results are so different that Spears herself generally known for her choreography and packaging rather than her studio chops must be responsible for the change.
The monster hit Womanizer is only the beginning of the radio-ready barrage Spears is about to throw down. The title track, written by Dr. Luke, is another sleek dance-floor filler, as is the dizzying Mannequin. And she has the disco-influenced Lace and Leather, with its scratch guitar and Chic-inspired bass line.
Lace and Leather is another example of the biggest surprise of Circus the way that it nods to previous classics before taking the songs in a new, contemporary direction. Spears has never been one to look back in her music, but there's a bit of Tina Turner's River Deep, Mountain High on Mmm Papi, a bouncy little multi-culti trifle that telescopes several decades of sugary pop into a little more than three minutes.
Kill the Lights which chronicles her dealings with paparazzi, or maybe one particular paparazzo ex-boyfriend, as she says, ''Is that money in your pocket or are you happy to see me?'' opens with a call-and-response similar to Aretha Franklin's Respect. And on the bonus track Amnesia, one of the album's catchiest tracks, Spears comes over like a cross between the Ronettes and Fergie as she coos, ''I get amnesia when I'm sitting next to you-ooh-ooh.''
It's all part of what seems like a new direction for Spears, one that values musicianship. She tackles some ballads, both from Robbie Williams collaborator Guy Sigsworth, that accomplish their missions. Out From Under shows how her voice, which is still a bit limited, can carry a song, even with spare accompaniment, while My Baby is a bit schmaltzy, as it conveys how Spears is a loving mother now the cornerstone of her image rehab.
In many ways, Circus has Spears switching musical role models. She seems determined to be more like Gwen Stefani, a hitmaker who knows how to use her strengths and weaknesses, and less like Madonna, who thrives on shock value and controversy. Yet somehow, Spears has delivered the biggest shock of all compelling reasons to reverse her cartoonlike tabloid image and take her seriously as a singer.
Forget the release of Chinese Democracy as the year's biggest surprise. Circus is a Britney Spears album I never expected to hear one that matters.
Published: Tuesday | December 9, 2008
Bishop T.D. Jakes gestures as he responds to a question posed by Gleaner Religion Editor Mark Dawes (left). Bishop Jakes shared his perspectives on a range of issues as he vacationed at a Montego Bay resort last weekend. Jakes is the main speaker at 'The Way Forward' conference scheduled to take place tonight and tomorrow night at the National Stadium. - Claudia Gardner photo
Internationally acclaimed preacher Bishop T.D. Jakes, 51, will be the main speaker at 'The Way Forward' conference which has been organised by Pastors In Action - a group of local clergy led by well-known Pentecostal/ Charismatic Renewal leaders Pastor Merrick 'Al' Miller, Bishop Herro Blair and Bishop C. Everton Thomas.
Bishop Jakes arrived in Jamaica last week for a brief holiday before fulfilling engagements associated with the conference. Bishop Jakes will speak at public meetings to be held at the National Stadium, today and tomorrow. Both events will begin at 6 p.m. On Thursday, he will address specially invited pastors and their spouses at a meeting scheduled for the National Indoor Sports Centre.
Bishop Jakes last weekend, while vacationing in Montego Bay, shared his perspectives with The Gleaner on a number of issues. Below is part two of that interview. Part one was carried yesterday on page B6.
Dawes: How often do you find the time to do the rudimentary things that pastors do, such as visit the sick, conduct weddings, and funerals?
JAKES: It is almost impossible to do them for 30,000 people. I have 30,000 members at my church. That's why I serve more as a bishop than as a pastor. I have got 11 pastors at my church. I have 400 ministers at my church. And we do all the services that a small church does; it's just that we go about it differently. If you are a member of our church and you get sick, we have teams of ministers that come to the hospital to visit you. We have bereavement committees and so on.
We have 400 funerals in a year. It would not be possible for one person to do that. So what I used to provide as an individual service, I provide now through a system of services. I serve as the bishop and they serve as the pastor.That's how we get the job done.
But every now you get involved in the hurly burly of pastoral life, of counselling and funerals?
I generally handle cases that the pastors come back to me and say this is a severe case... Those drastic cases where someone with 32 years of experience is needed to handle -then I try I focus that experience on that level of touch.
Bishop, you know of ministries and pastors who have fallen for one reason or another. How do you protect yourself and your ministry? What accountability systems do you work with that helps to keep your character and your ministry buoyant?
There are several things I try to do. First of all, nobody is above making a mistake. The Bible says "Let him that thinketh he standeth, take heed lest he fall". So I don't think anyone is above sin. One of the things that it is very important for ministers to do is to handle their business with integrity and with professionalism.
Generally, most ministers either fall because of misappropriation of funds, or misappropriation of sexuality. That is why my first answer to you was focused around the family. To have a strong relationship with your spouse is very, very important. And to work on that relationship so that it is satisfying and fulfilling is a commitment not only of the minister but of the minister's wife. I think that I am kept through both things, not just because of my own strength but also my wife's commitment to making sure our home is secure and safe.
I think that is very, very important. And then, I have people that I can talk to, and that I can go to without the 'quick-willy help', to be able to find guidance, and prayer and encouragement. Most ministers destruct not because they are wicked. There is a difference between wickedness and weakness. It is very easy to fall prey to weakness. And when that does begin to happen, there is only a small window of time before a problem overtakes you. I think having someone to talk to is vitally important.
Do you go to seek help routinely even when you perceive nothing wrong with you?
Absolutely. I surround myself with a small group of people that I can open up to, that I can talk to. And I have been a confidante to a lot of ministers - those who haven't fallen and those who have. I think it is a mistake to throw people away because they have failed. We are the only army that shoots our wounded. I think it is a grave mistake to throw people away because we discover something about them that often we ourselves struggle with.
How should we rehabilitate people who have fallen?
Now that is a really a great question. I am disappointed that the Church as a whole does not have systems in place to accommodate fallen pastors and preachers. In the corporate world, when the CEO is in trouble, he goes to a Betty Ford Clinic, or a rehabilitation centre. Sometimes it is not only ministers who are in crisis, but their families are also in crisis.
Then it breaks you down. You can't ignore that, for if the family is facing crisis long enough, the minister ends up in crisis too. And he doesn't have any place to go because everybody in his life is drawing from him. One of the things I would like to do in the latter years of my life, I would like to be a part of a board or a team of people that provides a place for ministers to come and heal. Wouldn't it be terrible if doctors could not be treated in the same hospital they worked in? And yet we (ministers) are in a predicament where we provide a service that we cannot benefit from.
The tragedy is that the doctor is no more exempt from the flu than the person he treats. Because he knows medicine does not mean that he is not vulnerable to the same conditions. I think we need to provide a place where ministers can come and receive the same grace that we offer to our parishioners because we are made of the same material that our members are made of.
How does First Lady Serita complement your ministry?
She oversees our women's department at the church. She has served in a number of roles down through the years. She has been president of the usher board, she has been human resources director when we first started out. She continues to serve as our women's director for all of our women's affairs - nationally and internationally. But her most vital service to the church, I think, is to be my wife and to be my friend, and to be an encouragement to me.
Tell me a little bit about your children?
I have five children and they are not children anymore. They are all grown now. I have got a daughter, Sarah, for one of my for-profit companies. She works in the movie development area. Incidentally, I have a film coming out called Not Easily Broken, through a contract I have with Sony Pictures. She is my liaison between Sony Pictures and T.D. Jakes Enterprises.
My oldest son, Jamar, is the general manager at the church and he manages the staff at the church. The younger of my twins, Jermaine, works in the ministry in product development - duplicating the tapes and that sort of thing. My daughter Cora works in the children's ministry at the church. My youngest son is still in school, he is Thomas Dexter Jakes Jr. He is named after me.
Your activities in the recent past have been focused on Africa. What are you hoping to do on that continent and how successful have you been so far?
First of all, I love Africa at a very deep, personal and cultural level. There was a 2006 PBS special (African American Lives) where Henry Louis Gates Jr, did DNA testing of Oprah Winfrey, Quincy Jones and several others. I was the only one that they tested that was purely African. There is no other *lo** in me. Maybe in some ways that explains my personal infatuation with Africa. The African people are very spiritual people.
But how to use that spirituality to move themselves up, is an area where I think I can have an impact. There is a gradual transformation going on in the continent of Africa. I am encouraging people throughout the African diaspora not to become detached from our roots. I believe that Africa is to people of African descent, what Israel is to the Jews. We have to be concerned about our brothers because we are a bit like Joseph. We have been sold into slavery and raised in other parts of the world. There is something that happens when we reconnect, which is mutually and reciprocally beneficial. In some ways they are far stronger than we are, in terms of understanding who they are and whose they are.
They are strong on identity issues. I think they can bring much to the table that can fortify us as it relates to who we are as a people. The other thing that happens is that we can bring much to them in terms of technology, resources and being a voice to our government concerning the ills that they face today - HIV/AIDS, poverty, lack of clean water. Malaria is killing almost as many people as HIV/AIDS.
We have done quite a bit in terms of digging wells in the area. We have worked in Washington DC to be a voice for some of the crises going on in Darfur. We have been a voice encouraging our government to become more involved with HIV/AIDS.
We have been a voice to the Kenyans, encouraging them to seek tourism and trade and businesses. I am concerned when any people continue to grow spiritually but don't grow practically. I don't want spirituality to become some anaesthesia that black people are given to anaesthetise the fact that you are not developing as a people. I am really concerned about that, not just there, but everywhere. We are wonderful at having church. We do poorly at having life. I don't think that we should have to choose between one or the other. We can have them both.
To be continued.
SAN JOSE, Calif. - The worsening economy appears to be helping computer crooks with one of their toughest tasks: tricking people into opening their homes and bank accounts and becoming "mules" for laundering money or stolen goods.
The scams themselves aren't new. They're pitched in spam e-mails as "work-at-home" jobs that promise excellent part-time money for helping companies pay clients in other countries. The victims are asked to open new bank accounts in their names, agree to accept anonymous payments into those accounts, and forward those payments by way of money transfer, usually to locations in Eastern Europe.
The scam is classic money laundering with an Internet twist. The money is generally real, and the middle man is promised a cut. What those middle men may not know is they're trafficking in ill-gotten gains and helping criminals pay each other while disguising the source. And the mules are often the ones at the greatest risk of arrest.
Savvy computer users usually identify this as a scam. But security researchers say more people are willing to take a risk on the come-ons as unemployment rises and the volume of the mule e-mails increases.
Rajo Devi, who married 50 years ago, gave birth to a baby girl on November 28 after in vitro fertilisation, said Anurag Bishnoi, a doctor at the Hisar fertility centre in Haryana state.
Rajo Devi and (her husband) Bala Ram approached the centre for treatment and the embryo transfer was done on April 19, he told the Hindustan Times. Both the mother and child are in good health.
Mr Bishnoi claimed Mrs Devi was the worlds oldest mother.
Another 70-year-old Indian was reported to have given birth to twins via IVF in July this year, while a 66-year-old Spanish woman had twins in 2006.
Mrs Devis husband, aged 72, had also wed his wifes sister after 10 years of his first marriage, which did not result in children. His second wife also failed to become pregnant.
It was not clear whose egg and sperm were used in the successful treatment.
IVF has revolutionised the way we look at infertility, said Mr Bishnoi. Infertility is no longer a social taboo or a divine curse. It can be treated scientifically.
NEW DELHI
AFP
Dancehall deejay Leonard Bartley more popularly known as 'Merciless' has thrown down the gauntlet to leader of the Alliance Bounty Killer for an all out war at this year's staging of Sting 2008 . Merciless said he has issued a challenge to Bounty Killer for a lyrical showdown and would be very disappointed if his offer was not accepted. According to the Warhead, 'Mi cyaah mash up and cyaah dead' nor has he lost his touch and how better to prove his lyrical prowess and battle wits than to clash one of the most feared and most respected artiste in the business. When asked about a possible showdown with Cobra and Ninja Man he quickly dismissed any hope of that occurring, stating that the 'Bus Operator' and 'Junkie' are not in his league. Merciless continued "Bounty change him career an tun backup singa fi Mavado, but mi still wah war him". Effort by our team to reach Bounty, Ninjaman and Cobra for a comment proved futile but in a previous interview with 876radio.com the 'Helta Skelta' deejay said he refuses to waste anytime on Merciless, who he alleges was a cab driver while overseas and his experience as a cabbie would best serve him in 'Jump Starting' his career again. |
UNDERCOVER LESBIAN CLUB IN PORTMORE
Local women seeking to establish relationships with other women are no longer waiting to meet them by chance. They have taken to recruiting them by forming clubs and advertising for membership.
For the last few weeks, one such club has been advertising in a Sunday publication for women between 18 and 30 years old to join the club, named Circle Square, which THE STAR has learnt is based in Portmore, St Catherine.
The advertisement reads, "Circle Square all-female club invites adventurous, fun-loving, open-minded ladies 18-30 to join our exclusive social club. Come and explore very private membership free."
When THE STAR contacted the club via a telephone number posted in the advertisement, a male answered. The news team, pretending to be interested in joining the club, called on several occasions and were told by the man that the club is for women who are interested in women.
Bring females together
The man, who gave his name as Tony and said he was the recruiter and first asked callers if they were interested in women. Callers were also asked if they had ever slept with a woman. After he was sure that the callers were really interested, he then explained the club's intentions.
"The concept behind the club is to bring females together who have a common interest. It's not dating thing or anything like that, we just have individuals who want to come together and have fun," he said.
Tony said all future members had to be screened by him before they are allowed to meet the other women. "We don't want the sketel-like behaviour," he said.
When asked why there was an age limit, he said it was set by the club members. Although he would not say how many women are in the club, he said the membership was a 'good amount'.
THE STAR's callers were also asked about their addresses and were told that this information was required because the club does not bring together women from the same community as it has caused problems in the past. He said people have pretended in the past to be interested and when they joined and saw those in the club, it caused problems. "I do not want anyone to scrutinise you," he said.
Based on information discussed on the telephone, THE STAR learnt that screening is done in other locations away from the club and if persons pass the interview, then they are taken to meet the other women.Months after introducing a new mechanism to clamp down on electricity theft, crafty householders have still managed to tap into power sources, the Jamaica Public Service Company (JPS) has reported.
The electricity provider had started to install concentric neutral cables in some areas to reduce the number of illegal throw-ups. These cables make electricity theft more difficult because a metal casing covers the wires that actually transmit the electrical power.
Melting metal casings
However, head of the Department of Engineering and Technology at JPS, Steve Dixon, said thieves have been melting the metal casings to access the electrical conductors.
The vice-president for customer operations, Sangeet Dutta, said the situation has been exacerbated because thieves often run joined wires for more than 200 yards from power transformer bushings to their homes, which further increases the risk of electrical shocks. "This is highly dangerous," he warned.
Dutta told The Gleaner/Power 106 News that the JPS has been working with the police to curb electricity theft. However, he said there were weaknesses in the law, which provide an incentive for electricity theft.
According to Dutta, at present, the JPS can only recover charges for electricity stolen over a two-year period at the rate it had cost the company to produce it. He believes the law should be changed to allow for penalty charges to be applicable to persons who steal electricity. This is one of the proposals the JPS will be making when its tariff comes up for review at the Office of Utilities Regulation next year.
Losing
Noting that the JPS is was losing 12.7 per cent of the electricity it produces due to theft, Dutta said the problem tends to be acute in countries like Jamaica, where the poor socio-economic conditions exist.
However, he said the company was considering several measures to curtail the practice. These include the relocation of electrical meters from houses to utility poles and the installation of electricity monitors on houses instead.
Dutta said this would make it more difficult for people to interfere with the electrical supply to their homes. The company is also examining a system that would allow it to disconnect delinquent customers from a remote location. The JPS vice-president said if the company gets clearance from the Bureau of Standards Jamaica and the government electrical inspectorate, it would start a pilot programme in loss-prone areas.
Already, the JPS has installed 2,000 special meters called advanced metering information systems to monitor, from a central location, the electricity consumption of large customers. It's also considering installing similar meters for residential customers.
"With this system, once there is a change in consumption pattern, we get a red flag at our offices," Dutta said, adding that a team was then immediately despatched to the location. He said the system has already helped to detect commercial customers who are stealing electricity.
FURTHER shake-ups are in the wings for operations at the Customs Depart-ment come next year, Commissioner of Customs Danville Walker has said.
According to Walker, as of January 1, Customs will no longer see 'personal effects' as an adequate description of cargo and where commercial goods are found being listed as 'personal effects', pockets will smart.
"Wherever we find it the officers have been instructed to list and tally in detail every item and apply the duties," he said. "Where we find commercial goods being listed as personal effects come January 1, we are also going to apply a breach. That game is going to come to an end," Walker told the Observer recently.
"We have situations where people list commercial items as personal effects; that is a big scam in this country, they say it's personal effects and when you open it for example it's car parts or other commercial goods," Walker said, noting that persons used this route to get exemption from fees and getting a Tax Compliance Certificate.
"I would have loved to start this immediately; it took everything out of me to say January 1," he added.
In the meantime, Walker said the department was also not going to be tolerant of persons trying to beat the system by saying they had 'forgotten the invoice' when containers are found with undeclared goods in them. He has already met with one shipping line on the matter.
"We understand the story that someone may pack goods and no invoice comes and it's the same story that you are going to get from the person who made a genuine mistake or from the person who is deliberately trying to evade custom duties and we can't tell the difference so we are going to treat everything the same," he told the Observer.
"Whenever we find excess goods and no invoice declared, we are going to file a breach and there will be no mitigation of that breach. In such cases the cost is three times the duty of the item at a minimum. And every time we catch you, you are going to pay," he said in warning to persons who have been able to evade the system at times.
"What we want is compliance, if you want, you can go back to your shipper and say you made the mistake reimburse me," he noted.
He said while the revenue lost from the unfair practice was not much compared to the duties collected regularly "it was still millions of dollars".
"We are taking a harder line and search-ing more. We basically say to customs officers, if you don't find anything then what is the point in you being there because we know things are there to be found so you need to find them," he added.
And much is being done to reduce the time to clear goods which has been a sticking point in the department's lifetime.
Walker said this will be done through assistance being received currently from a consultant and project team from the World Customs Organisation in Brussels.
"They are reviewing all of our processes and all of our procedures starting from when the ship pulls up alongside the dock to when the cargo goes through the front door.
"When we get that analysis done we will know the exact timeline it takes to get cargo off the Port of Jamaica and we will also have recommendations for improvements in our business practices," he said.
"What our work is going to be over the next 18 months is that it is not just about doing things a little better or automating a few steps, we have to look at changing the way some of the processes work so that it takes less paper and less steps," he added.
The minister said that the offshore toll-free telephone line - 1-800-CORRUPT or 1-800-267-7878 - is a "secure, anonymous line which will not be accessed by local police officers".
MacMillan made the announcement during an address to the nation last evening. The national security minister has also repeated the announcement of a 211 hotline for children in danger.
The proposal alludes to low public confidence in the Jamaica Constabulary Force, a notion which several opinion polls have corroborated. More than 50 policemen have been arrested on corruption charges this year.
Unnecessary, confusing
Peter Bunting, the opposition spokesman on national security, said yesterday the slew of toll-free emergency lines was mind-boggling.
"The Opposition is concerned that this proliferation of hotline numbers - already we have 311 for Crime Stop, 811 for Kingfish and 119 for the police emergencies - is unnecessary and may be confusing for the public," Bunting said in a release yesterday.
He added: "It would seem more efficient and desirable to develop one emergency number with properly trained, professional call-centre operators who would route the calls to the appropriate unit for response based on the subject matter of the call."
Community action
MacMillan said yesterday that the upsurge in criminal violence, in particular attacks against women and children, has left most Jamaicans fearful. He has appealed to citizens to play their part in securing their communities.
More than 1,400 persons have been murdered since January. At least five persons were murdered on the weekend.
MacMillan has linked 80 per cent of the killings to an estimated 200 gangs which, he said, are "directly connected to a global criminal network which not only controls the trade in illicit drugs but the growing trade in human trafficking as well".
Meanwhile, Bunting has chided MacMillan for not addressing the drugs-for-guns trade between Jamaica and Haiti.
"This trade in ganja for guns between Jamaica and Haiti (and now extended to Honduras) has led to a major increase in the availability of illegal firearms in many communities," Bunting said.Thieves broke into the Waterford High School between Wednesday night and Thursday morning, stealing more than $100,000 worth of equipment and cash.
The Waterford police told THE PORTMORE STAR that the culprits gained access to the school's administrative block, the bursary and principal's office. They reportedly stole a laptop, cameras and an undetermined sum of money from the principal's office, the police say.
According to investigators, entry was gained to the bursary and other offices after the thieves cut through a metal grille. An investigation has been launched but a suspect has not yet been identified, the police say.
affected subjects
When THE PORTMORE STAR visited the institution on Thursday, senior teacher Astley Watson said the theft of the items, especially the computer, had affected some of the subjects that were to be taught that day. He said the computer was used by the teachers to help prepare lessons.
"It is a very worrying situation," Watson said. "Previous attempts were made.
Thieves got into the school. it was the first they got into the administrative block. This is worrying indeed."
He added that the surrounding community has always been protective of the school and residents have expressed concerns about the break-in.
The thieves are coming. Hide the baby cereal.
If you live in Portmore, St Catherine, then you need to take careful measures to lock away your baby cereal. There is a gang of housebreakers, who have been cleaning out people's homes, only pausing to mix their favourite drink, baby cereal.
Police in the area are warning residents to be on the lookout for the gang which consists of about five or six members, who have been watching houses until occupants leave, then force their way inside.
Detective Constable Lloyd Knight, told THE STAR that the thieves have become so slick at their 'trade' that only a little evidence is left for the police.
"After they break into the houses, they mix baby feed and have even snacks to eat before leaving with items," he said.
The police say that so far close to 50 houses have been broken into and in at least 10 of the cases, baby cereals were stolen or drank at the scene of the crime.
According to the police one of alleged members, Alton Maxwell, appeared before the Spanish Town Resident Magistrate's Court on Tuesday, after he was held in a house, which he had broken into in Portmore Pines.
mixed baby cereal
Maxwell, 19, is reported to have mixed a bottle of baby cereal and was enjoying it when he was held. He was remanded until January.
Another of the alleged gang members, Tyrone 'Muggley' Gayle, is serving time after being sentenced to two years imprisonment at hard labour for breaking into the Braeton Primary and Junior High School. These arrests have, however, done nothing to deter the other members of the gang.
Constable Knight told THE STAR that persons in the Seven East, Six West and other areas of Greater Portmore, have suffered immensely with several cases of break-ins in these areas over a very short time. This has forced the police to step up their operations in these areas.
Detective Knight implored residents to be more vigilant in their communities and secure their houses and keys to prevent becoming victims.MINNEAPOLIS A Minnesota man has pleaded guilty to answering an online advertisement for baby-sitting work and then using the client's child to make a pornographic video.
In a plea deal with federal prosecutors, Aaron Jay Lemon admitted Wednesday to producing the video. The 23-year-old from Little Canada also admitted to coercing a minor to engage in sexually explicit conduct.
The plea agreement says Lemon filmed the child in St. Paul after seeking the baby-sitting job through Craigslist. St. Paul police say the victim was a 2-year-old girl.
The U.S. attorney's office says the case was part of a project that encourages agencies to investigate the sexual exploitation of children over the Internet.
The office says Lemon faces a maximum of 30 years in prison.
A total 961 files relating to police shootings and extrajudicial killings are now being investigated by the Bureau of Special Investigations (BSI).
The Police (Civilian Oversight) Authority (PCOA) - established to monitor performance of all police islandwide - last week made the report that 621 cases of fatal shootings and 361 other shooting incidents were now being investigated by the BSI.
The cases were gathered for the periods 2007 to present. The police said last year that there were 635 cases under investigation.
"The alarming number of cases under investigation is a cause for concern," Bishop Charles Dufour, chairman of the PCOA said.
"In July alone there were 33 reported shooting incidents from which allegations of police misconduct have arisen."
He said that such statistics from the Jamaica Constabulary Force (JCF) did not speak well for the force.
"The several incidents and the outrage expressed by citizens have provided the material foundation for vast sections of the population to mistrust the police and for others to have serious doubt about their treatment of some citizens," Dufour said.
He said the confidence of the public in the JCF would continue to fall until there was strict adherence by all policemen and women to abide by the rule of law.
"In our environment, one of systematic violence, poor legitimate economic opportunities, corruption and an alarmingly high rate of extrajudicial killings, an active civilian over body is essential to hold the police accountable to standards of policing within the democratic society framework of our constitution," said Dufour.
Hundreds of residents in Tredegar Park, a community on the outskirts of Spanish Town, St Catherine, yesterday fled their homes after receiving an ultimatum from gunmen to leave.
From as early as 11 a.m., residents from an enclave called Gravel Heights loaded furniture and other possessions on to trucks, ironically under the watchful eyes of police personnel who stood guard.
"We build our houses to live here after getting the land to buy from Operation PRIDE. Some pay off, others still owe. However, we did not expect gunmen to give us ultimatum to leave our investment," remarked Michael Glades, a resident.
Though tension has reigned in the area for months, the situation escalated after a police-military operation on Saturday night. Persons being sought by the police have allegedly accused residents of being informants.
The news of an unusual alien-like baby born in China has received an intensive coverage in the media recently. Ms. Li Hui-Ying, a village from Chinas Jiangxi Province, gave birth to a boy with frogs eyes. The baby also had big bumps on his head and even a small tail on his bottom. The boy does not have any eating, drinking or sleeping disorders, but his parents still try to bring him to treat in the hospital. However, all the hospitals that the parents have been to so far refuse to accept the weird patient claiming that they have never had such an unusual incident in their experience.
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But Alforque had arrived in Oregon on a visa from the Philippines just three days before the fateful trip to the coast.
Napper said the tide had receded around Proposal Rock on Saturday when the couple began to walk to it. He planned to propose and give her the ring he carried in his pocket.
About 10 feet from the rock, a wave about 3 feet high suddenly came toward them.
"I turned into it to keep from getting pulled under it," Napper said.
By the time he turned to find Alforque, only 4-foot-11 and 93 pounds, she had been caught by the receding waters.
"She was about 30 feet away, getting swept away," Napper said.
The 45-year-old Silverton man tore off his jacket to get rid of any extra weight, and when he looked up again she was gone.
"That's the last I saw of her," he said in an interview Wednesday, breaking into tears.
The annual Gifts for Guns program ended Sunday in Compton, a working class city south of Los Angeles that has long struggled with gun and gang violence. In a program similar to ones in New York and San Francisco, the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department allows residents to anonymously relinquish firearms in return for $100 gift cards for Ralphs supermarkets, Target department stores or Best Buy electronics stores.
FURTHER shake-ups are in the wings for operations at the Customs Depart-ment come next year, Commissioner of Customs Danville Walker has said.
According to Walker, as of January 1, Customs will no longer see 'personal effects' as an adequate description of cargo and where commercial goods are found being listed as 'personal effects', pockets will smart.
"Wherever we find it the officers have been instructed to list and tally in detail every item and apply the duties," he said. "Where we find commercial goods being listed as personal effects come January 1, we are also going to apply a breach. That game is going to come to an end," Walker told the Observer recently.
"We have situations where people list commercial items as personal effects; that is a big scam in this country, they say it's personal effects and when you open it for example it's car parts or other commercial goods," Walker said, noting that persons used this route to get exemption from fees and getting a Tax Compliance Certificate.
"I would have loved to start this immediately; it took everything out of me to say January 1," he added.
In the meantime, Walker said the department was also not going to be tolerant of persons trying to beat the system by saying they had 'forgotten the invoice' when containers are found with undeclared goods in them. He has already met with one shipping line on the matter.
"We understand the story that someone may pack goods and no invoice comes and it's the same story that you are going to get from the person who made a genuine mistake or from the person who is deliberately trying to evade custom duties and we can't tell the difference so we are going to treat everything the same," he told the Observer.
"Whenever we find excess goods and no invoice declared, we are going to file a breach and there will be no mitigation of that breach. In such cases the cost is three times the duty of the item at a minimum. And every time we catch you, you are going to pay," he said in warning to persons who have been able to evade the system at times.
"What we want is compliance, if you want, you can go back to your shipper and say you made the mistake reimburse me," he noted.
He said while the revenue lost from the unfair practice was not much compared to the duties collected regularly "it was still millions of dollars".
"We are taking a harder line and search-ing more. We basically say to customs officers, if you don't find anything then what is the point in you being there because we know things are there to be found so you need to find them," he added.
And much is being done to reduce the time to clear goods which has been a sticking point in the department's lifetime.
Walker said this will be done through assistance being received currently from a consultant and project team from the World Customs Organisation in Brussels.
"They are reviewing all of our processes and all of our procedures starting from when the ship pulls up alongside the dock to when the cargo goes through the front door.
"When we get that analysis done we will know the exact timeline it takes to get cargo off the Port of Jamaica and we will also have recommendations for improvements in our business practices," he said.
"What our work is going to be over the next 18 months is that it is not just about doing things a little better or automating a few steps, we have to look at changing the way some of the processes work so that it takes less paper and less steps," he added.
Kanye West usually brags about himself, but recently he pronounced his extreme admiration for fellow star, Beyoncé. "Nobody really wants to recognize that Beyoncé is a f---ing living legend, he said. Later Kanye went so far as to claim Beyoncé is just as great, if not greater, than artists we had in the past. Shes probably greater than Tina Turner."
Things are not going well for poor Plaxico Burress. First he shoots himself in the leg with a gun he wasnt licensed to carry in NY.
Then his teammate Pierce turns on him and offers to spill his guts to the grand jury.
The doctor who treated his gunshot wound at NY/Cornell hospital was suspended for not reporting the injury as required by law.
And now the NY Giants have suspended Plax with no pay.
Anyway, reports just posted this pic of Plaxicos New Jersey crib which will probably go on the market next week since Plax can no longer rely on his $35 million dollar contract to pay the bills.
Plax has a wife and a kid to support, but he wasnt thinking of them when he broke the law.
I did it because Im a student and Im always broke, said Aylesworth, who spent several delicate minutes in a small room at the Seattle Sperm Bank last month.
Apparently, hes not alone. Seeking quick cash in a tanking financial market, would-be sellers of a variety of body products sperm, eggs, *lo** plasma, even human hair are filling waiting rooms and swamping agencies with inquiries.
Jamaica's Reggae Boyz football team fitness coach, Junior McBean was sentenced in the Corporate Area Resident Magistrate's Court when he pleaded guilty to identity theft on Thursday.
McBean was ordered to serve 480 hours of community service after pleading guilty to identity theft.
McBean was charged with identity theft and forgery after he submitted forged documents in the name of Junior Samuels to the Immigration Department in order to obtain a new passport.
Reports are that McBean submitted his passport and other documents bearing the name "Junior Samuels."
It was further reported that checks by the the Immigration Department found that the birth certificate he submitted was also forged.
The document was reportedly in the name "Shaun Anthony Samuels".
He was preparing to travel with the football team to Cayman and was arrested when he went to collect his passport.
His attorney, K Churchill Neita had explained to the court that more than 20 years ago, a football coach gave him the fake birth certificate in order to get him onto a football team for which he was too old to play.
McBean has travelled around the world with the Reggae Boyz under that name. NOVEMBER 21--A 12-year-old Florida student was arrested earlier this month after he "deliberately passed gas to disrupt the class," according to police. The child, who was also accused of shutting off the computers of classmates at Stuart's Spectrum Jr./Sr. High School, was busted November 4 for disruption of a school function. A Martin County Sheriff's Office report, a copy of which you'll find below, notes that the 4' 11" offender admitted that he "continually disrupted his classroom environment by breaking wind and shutting off several computers." The boy, whose name was redacted from the police report released today, was turned over to his mother following the arrest. The young perp turned 13 on November 15.
But that's what just happened to 46-year-old Leeroy Le Gallais, who was jailed for three years yesterday after admitting molesting the horse in a stable in Guernsey.
Le Gallais was already on probation after being convicted of performing sex acts with the horse, named Calico, last year. On that occasion, he had been caught after he left his underwear in the stable.
This time round, Le Gallais told the court: 'I had a few beers, I went to the stable and interfered with the horse.'
His crime was found out after Calico's owner noticed that a blanket and a mounting stool in the stable had been moved, and the horse was showing signs of stress. Police suspected Le Gallais, who confessed.
You think Magic faked AIDS for sympathy? Chris Baker asked co-host Langdon Perry on their conservative radio talk show that airs from Twin Cities, Minnesotas KTLK 100.3 FM. Perry answered, Im convinced that Magic faked AIDS; and he later referred to basketball giant, Magic Johnson as the only cured AIDS guy ever.
According to the Star Tribune the conversation received extensive exposure after being posted by Media Matters for America, but this did not faze the duo who dismissed the controversy around their remarks, refusing to comment and saying only that the whole thing was, not news...but simply a three second comment from a four hour show.
Magic Johnson released a statement in which he expressed his displeasure at the way his HIV status and the epidemic in general was being trivialized.
He told the Star Tribune, Millions are dying from HIV/AIDS, and the fact that they would make jokes about my status is unbelievable, said Johnson, 49, who came out as HIV positive in 1991. Chris, Langdon and KTLK should use their power in a more positive light by encouraging people to get tested for this disease instead of making up such ridiculous lies.
Audio | Xvid | 48000Hz | stereo 64Kbps | Video 9 | 720x480 | 30.00fps 800Kbps | 1.49 GB
Radio personality, Nikki Z, yesterday returned to the Corporate Area Resident Magistrate's Court to answer to the charge of possession of ganja.
Nikki Z, whose real name is Nicole Duhaney, is to return to court next year.
When the matter was mentioned, the court heard that the forensic report was still outstanding.
However, her attorney said he was told that the certificate had been destroyed. Senior Resident Magistrate Glen Brown set another mention date for February 6. Her bail was also extended.
The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) is warning Jamaicans not to expect a reduction in murders because of the recent decision by members of the House of Representatives to retain the death penalty.
Officials of the IACHR met with media heads at The Gleaner's North Street, central Kingston, offices yesterday and emerged with the clear warning that it will take more than the return of the death penalty to reduce violent crimes in Jamaica.
"Our experience with the death penalty shows two things - and this is not an assessment on Jamaica - but all of the studies that we are aware of and that we have taken into account show that the death penalty does not, in fact, have any measurable deterrent effect on serious crime," Paola Carozza, chairman of the IACHR told The Gleaner.
"The thing that does have a measurable deterrent effect is effectiveness in investigation and prosecution of crime," Carozza added.
Lack of accountability
He is urging the political directorate to ensure that investigation, prosecution and a speedy judicial process are in place to put the handcuffs on crime.
"It is impunity and the lack of accountability that contribute to serious crime, not the nature of the punishment," the IACHR chairman said.
The IACHR has long made it clear that it is opposed to the capital punishment, but Carozza yesterday accepted that there was nothing in the law to prevent Jamaica from carrying out the death penalty.
Last week, local parliamentarians voted 34 to 15 to retain the death penalty as the ultimate punishment for some crimes in Jamaica. They also voted 36 to 15 against abolishing the death penalty.
Officials of the IACHR are in the island for talks with members of the political directorate and civil society.
The island's libel laws and the death penalty are expected to top the agenda when the IACHR representatives meet with government officials.