Attorneys representing the Jamaica Defence Force (JDF) are to make submissions today as the West Kingston Commission of Enquiry resumes.
However, the hearing will not be open to the public.
The lawyers for the JDF are seeking to prevent the disclosure of sensitive information.
They say revealing the information may be harmful and against public interest and public safety.
Following the submissions, the Commissioners will rule if the information is to be revealed.
Meanwhile, the public will be invited to take part in the enquiry on Monday.
At that time, former Prime Minister Bruce Golding and former Commissioner of Police Owen Ellingston are to go back on the witness stand where they will be cross-examined by attorney-at-law Jacqueline Samuels-Brown, who is representing Reverend Al Miller.
Miller was arrested and charged after he was found in the company of then fugitive Christopher ‘Dudus’ Coke.
The enquiry is looking at the police-military operation in West Kingston in May 2010 which left more than 70 people dead.
Below is another article originally ran by the Huffington Post that exposes more of the disgusting and hate-filled commentary shared among officers and other public officials within our grand ole’ justice system.
The ramped media coverage of police officers shooting to kill unarmed black men in various cities across America are extreme examples of police brutality taking place within the criminal judicial system.
I am certainly not saying police have an easy job.
Quite frankly I couldn’t do their job, however law enforcement officers are supposed to be sworn to protect the public from the “bad guys”.
With exposure of this kind of conduct by ‘our police’ I am not so sure who the real bad guys are anymore.The jury is still out on that one!
The release of racist and offensive emails by city officials in Ferguson, Missouri, touched off a firestorm of criticism across the country this week, with swift moral outrage and demands for immediate change.
It is the type of progressive change that was missing this time last year, when it was revealed that a similar series of emails were allegedly sent and received by white detectives at a Louisiana sheriff’s office.
Similarly to Ferguson, the racially charged emails depicted black men as animals, likened President Barrack Obama to a monkey and referred to African Americans as the “entitlement crowd.”
There was also an offensive joke referencing the rape of white women by black men.
“Two black guys are at a bar talking. One says to the other, ‘You ever notice after you have sex with a white woman that your eyes burn, your nose burns and you get all teary-eyed?’ The second black guy says, ‘Yeah all the time.’ The other says, ‘Why is that?’ The second guy says, ‘I think it’s the pepper spray.'”
Unlike Ferguson, there was no national outrage.
The Louisiana emails were exposed in May 2014 by Belinda Parker-Brown, president and CEO of Louisiana United International, a Slidell-based civil rights organization. According to Brown, the 13 email messages she obtained — nearly twice as many as those uncovered in Ferguson — were received and forwarded by two high-ranking St. Tammany Parish Sheriff’s Office employees.
Last Thursday, city officials in Ferguson released to The Washington Post seven racist emails that included jokes about Obama, African Americans and Muslims. The release of the messages came in the wake of a Justice Department investigation into the 2014 shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown by an officer with the Ferguson Police Department.
One of the Ferguson emails even references Louisiana:
“An African-American woman in New Orleans was admitted into the hospital for a pregnancy termination. Two weeks later, she received a check for $5,000. She phoned the hospital to ask who it was from. The hospital said, ‘Crimestoppers.'”
While the Ferguson and Louisiana emails are equally shocking, Parker-Brown told The Huffington Post she is not surprised by the ones that surfaced in her own community.
The Louisiana parish where the email exchanges allegedly took place is the same parish that former Ku Klux Klansman David Duke calls home.
David Duke outside the Patriot Book Store in New Orleans in 1978. Photo: Associated Press
It is also where Sheriff Rodney “Jack” Strain once said, “If you’re gonna walk the streets of St. Tammany Parish with dreadlocks and chee wee hairstyles, then you can expect to be getting a visit from a sheriff’s deputy.”
Throughout his whole time in the bing, he has used his get out of jail card in order to take various trips to the hospital for medical care.
This week he “rolled” into court in a wheelchair for an alleged robbery case in which he supposedly committed with comedian Katt Williams back in 2014.
The wheelchair may have actually helped his case as he was given more time to find new legal counsel.
Stay tuned to The Pen Hustle for a new update every time Marion blesses the court.
He is due back in front of a judge on Monday for the hit and run case.
And the Suge Knight Saga continues….
Via Fox News:
A judge on Wednesday gave former rap music mogul Marion “Suge” Knight time to hire a new attorney in a robbery case filed after a celebrity photographer accused him and comedian Katt Williams of taking her camera last year.
In a separate case, Knight has been charged with murder in a deadly hit-and-run.
The Death Row Records co-founder appeared in a Los Angeles courtroom chained to a wheelchair. He complained to Judge Ronald Coen, saying he could walk. Knight fell at his previous court hearing and has been taken from courthouses four times for medical conditions since he was charged with murder in early February.
The judge promised Knight, 49, that he would not be brought into court in the wheelchair again as long as he was fit to walk.
Coen pressed Knight about whether he wanted a new attorney in the robbery case. His previous attorney, David Kenner, said in a filing he no longer wanted to represent Knight.
Knight said he wanted to fire Kenner and has until May 27 to hire a new attorney.
Knight is due back in court Monday for a preliminary hearing in a murder case filed after he allegedly struck two men with his truck outside a Compton burger stand, killing one of them.
Knight’s attorney Matt Fletcher said he expects the hearing, during which prosecutors will present some of the evidence in the case, will go forward.
Fletcher said the wheelchair used at Wednesday’s hearing seemed to be an effort to humiliate Knight, who told Coen he walked from his jail cell onto the bus and walked into the courthouse before being placed in the chair.
“As he said, it’s like ‘Silence of the Lambs,'” Fletcher said, referencing a scene in 1991 film in which Anthony Hopkins’ character is heavily restrained and strapped to a hand truck.
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