‘Dudus’ Defenders Killed After Demanding Payment For Defending Him

  
Gunmen from Grants Pen, who went into Tivoli Gardens to defend Christopher ‘Dudus’ Coke in May 2010, had their lives snuffed out by the very man they went to defend after demanding part payment for their service, the Tivoli Enquiry heard yesterday.

Superintendent Everton Tabannah said the information was given to him by a woman inside Tivoli Gardens after members of the security forces took over the area in May 2010.

The police had said that 300 gunmen were in Tivoli Gardens in May 2010 to defend Coke, and that the former strongman was paying up to $100,000 each to his hired guns drawn from across the island.

Tabannah testified that the woman told him she was glad that the security forces were there, because “their presence” had put an end to the “stupidness” that was going on the community.

According to Tabannah, she reported that the men from Grants Pen were promised a payment of $50,000 each to defend Coke and that the men were killed after demanding part-payment.

However, when Tabannah started to give evidence of this, commission Chairman Sir David Simmons interrupted and pointed out to Jamaica Constabulary Force (JCF) lawyer Deborah Martin that this was not in the senior cop’s statement.

“I’m suspicious of this evidence. I’m suspicious,” Simmons said at one point, and added later that the evidence doesn’t sit well with him.

During Tabannah’s relaying of his conversation with the woman, Simmons asked him to give her name and address, but he said he didn’t take her name and doesn’t know her address.

He, however, noted that he had told now Assistant Commissioner of Police Winchroy Budhoo and other senior officers about what the lady had said.

Later in his evidence, Tabannah said the woman had asked him not to make known her name.

On another note, Tabannah testified during questioning from William Panton, one of the lawyers for the Office of the Public Defender, that the shooting which took place in Tivoli Gardens on day one of the operation, on May 24, 2010, was “judgement”.

He said he and his men were “hoping and praying” that the Jamaica Defence Force commander in charge of the company tasked with taking Sector 1 of the community from gunmen didn’t call upon them that night.

“What we heard happening over there, it must be judgement. I’ve never experience judgement, but what he heard going on over there must be judgement,” he said in relation to the heavy gunfire taking place in Tivoli Gardens.

He also denied a suggestion from Panton that he left important information out of his statement to cover the illegal actions of his men during the operation.

“Nonsense, Sir,” Tabannah, snapped. “Nothing like that.”

Tabannah said it must have been an oversight why he didn’t include the information in his statement.

The senior cop had earlier testified before the enquiry that he never received any report that his men had murdered any civilian in Tivoli Gardens.

He said the only time his men fired their guns was at the train line along Industrial Terrace when they came under fire from gunmen in Rasta City.

He testified that his men didn’t even return fire when they were pinned down for two hours on May 24, 2010 on McKenzie Drive.

He told Linton Gordon, a lawyer for the JDF, that his men had no clear view of the community combatants so they could not return fire.

Tabannah testified earlier that his men came under heavy gunfire and couldn’t enter Tivoli Gardens despite the soldiers saying it was safe to get in.

He said they tried to go in minutes after 5:00 pm but had to pull back to the Tivoli Gardens High School after being pinned down by gunmen for a little over two hours.

He said shots were being fired all night until the early morning of May 25, the day he and his men were able to enter Sector 1.

Meanwhile, Sergeant of Police Steve Waugh testified, on May 25, that a removed of bodies were removed that could be those of men who had been shooting at the police.

Waugh testified that the bodies were found behind sandbags and barricades, and close by them.

He said he couldn’t recall how many bodies were picked up from these areas.

The sergeant said he picked up 12 bodies that day, some of which were in a state of decomposition. He said no bodies were taken from houses or yards in the community.

Source | Jamaica Observer

Puerto Rican Gangster Plays Dominoes At His Own Wake

  
Via Bossip– Jomar Aguayo Collazo was murdered on October 11, just a couple of days after his 23rd birthday. 

The man’s mother knew of his love of playing dominoes and wanted her baby to have one last hurrah before he ascended to heaven to slam six’s on the big table in the sky. 
  

Furthermore, the building where Jomar’s body was displayed was the exact same bar where he was murdered.

  

‘Momma Collazo’ also gave her son a condom, but I’m assuming he’ll have little use for it up in gangster’s paradise… –on second thought, maybe he will.  

*Insert blank stare & cricket chirps*

Source | Bossip 

Diary Of Dudus Coke Gang Leader Read In Court: “This Is A Wasted Life”

  
The Tivoli Commission of Enquiry yesterday heard compelling testimony of how a notorious gangster who, amid his confessed acts of criminality, appeared remorseful about his criminal lifestyle and who was missing the affection of his family.

The testimony by Superintendent Beau Rigabie was based on the contents of a diary he said was penned by slain Stone Crusher gang leader ‘Doggie’ – given name Cedric Murray – who was killed in a shoot-out with the police in Clarendon on August 12, 2010.

Reverence For Coke

Several entries in the diary show the reverence Murray had for drug kingpin Christopher ‘Dudus’ Coke and the Coke clan and how he boasted about being among heavily armed thugs who waged fierce gun battles with members of the security forces during the May 2010 police-military operation in Tivoli Gardens.

In one entry dated May 24, 2010 – the day the operation was launched – Murray described how “gunshot rang out from every corner of west Kingston” and suggested that Coke and his cronies might have underestimated the firepower of the security forces.

All hell broke loose, more than we expected. I fired my AK [47 rifle] until my finger numb. I eat gun powder until my throat sore,” Rigabie said as he read one of the gangster’s boasts.

“It was a raging gun battle, a day I won’t forget and such tragedy for Jamaica. They came in and slaughter all those people to catch one man and still didn’t,” he continued.

“I escaped … one of the last from where I was … under crazy gunfire, but God, grace [and] mercy brought me out untouched and my don is free. I will always say ‘Jim Brown’ [Coke’s late father Lester Lloyd Coke] … I am loyal to the Coke family and my guns will always be ready,” Murray also wrote.

Despite this, the reputed gang leader showed his softer side in an entry he made in June 2010. Murray wrote that his heart was in pain because he was about to “lose his baby”, a reference to his female companion.

“This is just too much, she lives in constant fear. Every sound frightens her so the time has come for me to, once again, to feel the pain of being heartbroken,” he wrote.

Murray also wrote of his daughter’s fourth birthday when she reported waking up to a curfew. “I called her and she said ‘daddy soldiers’ and she was afraid. My life is filled with ups and downs,” he noted.

He also indicated that the dismantling of Coke’s west Kingston stronghold forced him “back in the streets” and that he was “very unhappy and lonely”.

Murray recounted one instance when a false alarm caused him to flee his place of hiding.

“So many of those, this is a wasted life. I don’t even have a roof over my head, I’m all over [the place]. I miss my kids,” he wrote.

Source | Jamaica Gleaner