Jamaica Gleaner

JDF WARNING INDECOM search warrant too risky, solicitor general tells court

- Livern Barrett Senior Gleaner Writer

THE NATION’S solicitor general, Nicole Foster-Pusey, is warning that granting the Independen­t Commission of Investigat­ions (INDECOM) a warrant to search the army’s Up Park Camp headquarte­rs could shake internatio­nal confidence in Jamaica.

The warning came yesterday as the Judicial Review Court began hearing an applicatio­n by the head of the Jamaican military, Major General Antony Anderson, and the Defence Board to quash a warrant obtained by INDECOM to conduct a search of the Jamaica Defence Force (JDF) headquarte­rs.

As part of its investigat­ions into the use of mortars during the May 2010 policemili­tary operation in the west Kingston community of Tivoli Gardens, INDECOM surprised JDF officials with a search warrant last December.

The warrant was accompanie­d by seven notices that required JDF personnel to give evidence under oath about the use of mortars.

The warrant, which was scheduled to be executed on January 12 this year, gave INDECOM investigat­ors the authority to enter Up Park Camp and gain access, make enquiries and inspect documents, records, informatio­n and property

related to the procuremen­t and use of the explosives during the operation.

While acknowledg­ing that the intended purpose of the warrant was to access and inspect documents related to actions of members of the security forces in a specific operation, Foster Pusey warned of the dangers this presented.

“The warrant is so wide in its scope that there are no restrictio­ns on how the retrieval of the informatio­n and documents will be conducted, and it is likely that sensitive informatio­n and confidenti­al internatio­nal agreements will be obtained or accessed,” she indicated in her submission­s to the court.

“That is not the only possible consequenc­e of the proposed act. There is substantia­l risk that if the warrant is executed ... certain confidenti­al documents and informatio­n will be disclosed or accessed,” she warned.

Added Foster-Pusey: “There will also be a negative impact on the confidence reposed in the Jamaica Defence Force, and, by

extension, Jamaica due to this access.”

The solicitor general also raised concerns that there appeared to be no protocol in place to prevent disclosure of records and informatio­n that INDECOM would not be authorised to view.

She suggested that the court could consider and form a view on whether there is the need for a protocol to be put in place “in respect of informatio­n which may be outside of the realm of the Official Secrets Act”.

Seventy-four civilians and one member of the JDF were killed in the operations, which were aimed at capturing then fugitive Christophe­r ‘Dudus’ Coke.

After initially denying that mortars were used in the operations, retired army chief Major General Stewart Saunders admitted, during testimony before the west Kingston commission of enquiry, that 37 mortars were fired into three open spaces in Tivoli Gardens during the operations.

Foster-Pusey is scheduled to continue her submission­s today.

 ?? FILE ?? The entrance to the Jamaica Defence Force headquarte­rs at Up Park Camp in St Andrew.
FILE The entrance to the Jamaica Defence Force headquarte­rs at Up Park Camp in St Andrew.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica