Jamaica Gleaner

‘They killed my boy!’

- Corey Robinson Staff Reporter corey.robinson@gleanerjm.com

THERE WAS no Independen­ce Day frolic on Maiden Street in Franklin Town yesterday as residents mourned the death of Nicholas Thomas, the 20-yearold killed in Wednesday’s controvers­ial shooting on East Queen Street in downtown Kingston.

Unlike at nearby corners in the neighbourh­ood, festival songs were replaced with tears and sighs along the road where Thomas once shared a tenement yard with his mother and several other siblings.

“I lost a son – my boy. Him is just 20 years old, and we don’t even get to spend any time with him. Him don’t live any life yet and him gone,” mourned Thomas’ mother, Sandra Brooks, as she and others condemned her son’s death inside the old tenement dwelling.

“He was so helpful. He was so joyful. He was so beloved by everyone. And everyone in the community is mourning for him,” cried Brooks. “Right now, I don’t see anything to bury my son; not even a dollar. I have four children to go back to high school September and he was the one helping them. So I don’t see anything.”

DPP TO DECIDE

Official police reports are that Thomas, whom relatives said worked in a wholesale establishm­ent downtown, and a 23-yearold female student of G.C. Foster College were shot by an off-duty female corporal of the Jamaica Defence Force (JDF), when two armed men robbed her of a chain in the vicinity of Mark Lane. The incident occurred about 4 p.m., the cops say.

Police reported that during the robbery, the JDF corporal pulled her service pistol and opened fire hitting Thomas and a woman in the face. The two robbers managed to escape and are being sought by investigat­ors, said Superinten­dent Michael Scott, head of the Kingston Central Police Division, yesterday.

“We are still searching for the other guys. We are working on some leads, but we are still asking members of the public to help us by providing informatio­n,” stressed Scott, who described the injured woman’s condition as “still serious but improving”.

Scott explained that the JDF corporal had not been detained, and that the matter was being treated as a case of self defence. “We are collecting all the evidence that we can get, and then after that we will put it into a file and submit it to the Director of Public Prosecutio­ns for her to make a decision,” he said.

It was not clear yesterday whether the Independen­t Commission of Investigat­ions had launched a probe into the incident, but the JDF is reportedly assisting the police with their investigat­ions.

While the sleuths probe the circumstan­ces leading to Thomas’ death, however, 16-year-old Juantawny Thomas, spent his birthday without his older brother yesterday. Normally, they would go to the beach to celebrate, but yesterday Juantawny spent his special day crying speechless­ly.

Thomas’ friend Kalifah Campbell was less reserved, despite confessing to an often stormy relationsh­ip with Thomas during his life. In her despair, she demanded that he somehow be brought back from the dead.

“We want him back. We want him. Them kill Nicholas just so for nothing! We want him!” she screamed.

 ?? PHOTO BY COREY ROBINSON ?? Sandra Brooks, mother of Nicholas Thomas (centre), sits with some of her children and friends at their home in Franklin Town, Kingston, yesterday.
PHOTO BY COREY ROBINSON Sandra Brooks, mother of Nicholas Thomas (centre), sits with some of her children and friends at their home in Franklin Town, Kingston, yesterday.

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