Jamaica Gleaner

Too little, too late

Slow reporting hindering success in finding missing persons

- David Salmon/Gleaner Writer

SLOW REPORTING and lack of awareness on the part of communitie­s have been cited as major factors negatively impacting the search for missing children across the island.

That is the assessment by Novelette Grant, retired deputy commission­er of police.

Even though the missing person policy was revamped in 2005 to allow for immediate reporting, Grant revealed that, up to when she retired in 2018, some persons still believed that they should wait 24 hours before reporting the matter to the police.

“There is still some degree of confusion out there … . And you keep seeing that coming up and coming up, so it tells you that we may not be as successful in getting people to understand what it is that people should do when somebody goes missing,” Grant said in an interview with The Gleaner.

This is another challenge for the Jamaica Constabula­ry Force (JCF), as Grant described the difficulty in locating abducted individual­s, especially children, as their captors usually strike in less-frequented areas.

COMMUNITY RESPONSE

The recent abductions of 13-year-old Winshae Barrett and nine-year-old Phylisa Prussia, both of Bath, St Thomas, have underscore­d the importance of swift and overwhelmi­ng community response in search efforts. Both girls were found and hospitalis­ed.

The abductions sparked an intensive hunt for the suspect, Davian Bryan, as an army of volunteers combed bushes in rugged terrain to locate them.

Bryan is still at large.

Grant stressed the need for the community to be involved by volunteeri­ng to search for missing persons or to be spatially aware about their environmen­t. This includes paying attention to overgrown lots, derelict buildings, unlit areas, as well as being aware of children when they go to school or are on errands.

However, more important, she believes that community-based organisati­ons should work in tandem with the police to promote preventati­ve education. This includes raising awareness of the vulnerabil­ity of children, especially boys, who go missing.

According to Grant, between January 2013 and September 2017, some 9,138 children ages 11-17 were reported missing, 1,974 males and 7,164 females. Of this number, 8,590 persons returned home, including 1,897 males and 6,693 females.

“What was distressin­g looking at it over the period, 370 of those children who went missing were murdered, with 302 being males and 68 being females, even though 1,974 males went missing. So the bulk of the violent outcomes were in the male group,” she said.

The three most cited reasons for going missing were peer pressure, sexual activity, and conflict of parents and guardians.

The retired deputy commission­er added that the JCF analysed informatio­n between January 2015 to mid-February 2017 and found that 206 persons were abducted in 2015; 157 in 2016; and 20 in the first six weeks of 2017. During the period, 21 victims were below the age of 18 - 17 girls and four boys.

In cases where perpetrato­rs deliberate­ly targeted people, the victims were usually known to the predator, the retired senior cop said.

“Opportunis­tic targets” usually end up being victims of multiple offences, including rape, robbery, wounding, and, in some cases, murder, she said.

Senior Superinten­dent of Police Stephanie Lindsay, head of the police informatio­n arm, did not provide requested data in time for publicatio­n.

Grant shared that the Bath searches were particular­ly instructiv­e as they showed the importance of sharing informatio­n via social media in coalescing community action and national support. Nearly 500 people, involving the police, army, child welfare personnel, and other civilians, were enlisted in the searches.

Children’s Advocate Diahann Gordon Harrison echoed Grant’s assessment about the value of high publicity and the amassing of participan­ts.

“The situation in St Thomas is the exception because of how public the situation has been dealt with and, of course, we understand why because we had almost the entire community, in fact, and its environs, concerned about these poor little girls,” Gordon Harrison said.

 ?? KENYON HEMANS/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Residents from Bath, Spring Bank, and other communitie­s of St Thomas join forces with the police to search for a teenage girl and her suspected abductor Davian Bryan last week.
KENYON HEMANS/PHOTOGRAPH­ER Residents from Bath, Spring Bank, and other communitie­s of St Thomas join forces with the police to search for a teenage girl and her suspected abductor Davian Bryan last week.

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