Jamaica Gleaner

NIA partners with justice institute to train cops

- Nadine Wilson-Harris/Staff Reporter nadine.wilson@gleanerjm.com

MORE THAN 50 police were trained in improving investigat­ive and prose-cutorial outcomes over the weekend, as part of efforts to increase the country’s conviction rate and secure justice for scores of Jamaicans.

The two-day training seminar was funded by the European Union Delegation and was hosted by National Integrity Action (NIA), in collaborat­ion with the Justice Training Institute, at the Terra Nova All Suite Hotel in Kingston. The police were taught how to optimise registry operations, among other things.

Superinten­dent Wayne Joseph of the Criminal Investigat­ion Branch (CIB) was among those who felt the training seminar was very timely given the challenges in curbing crime.

“We are experienci­ng a serious crime problem in Jamaica,” he said.

“I don’t know if it could ever be worse. Last year, we saw record murders, and this year we are having a very serious challenge where that is concerned also. Therefore, this training seminar could never be at a more appropriat­e time,” he said.

The cop was pleased that efforts were being made to improve registry operations, and is confident that the Jamaica Constabula­ry Force (JCF), and Jamaicans, by extension, stand to benefit.

“The registry is like a motor vehicle, and if you understand how the motor vehicle operates, if you do not service the engine, it breaks down on you on the road,” he said.

“If the statements are not properly vetted and the case files are not properly put together, then everything fails,” he said.

Executive director of NIA, Professor Trevor Munroe, said the organisati­on was pleased to facilitate closer collaborat­ions between the country’s prosecutor­s and the police who are engaged in statement taking.

“Enhanced collaborat­ion of this nature, while paying due regard to the separate roles of these different arms of the justice system, can only redound to Jamaica’s benefit,” he said.

Head of the European Union Delegation to Jamaica, Ambas-sador Malgorzata Wasilewska, noted that improving the capacity building of members of the JCF would help to address corruption.

“We seek to improve access to justice and the quality of justice for all Jamaicans,” she said in a statement that was delivered by Gavin Tench, who is a political counsellor and head of the Press and Public Informatio­n team for the EU Delegation.

 ??  ?? From left: Gavin Tench, political counsellor and head of the Press and Public Informatio­n Team at the European Union, discusses the new sentencing guideline for gun crimes committed in Jamaica with Professor Trevor Munroe, executive director of the...
From left: Gavin Tench, political counsellor and head of the Press and Public Informatio­n Team at the European Union, discusses the new sentencing guideline for gun crimes committed in Jamaica with Professor Trevor Munroe, executive director of the...

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