Jamaica Gleaner

After 29 years, 27,000 calls, no identity disclosed by Crime Stop

- Erica Virtue Sunday Gleaner Writer erica.virtie@gleanerjm.com

TWENTY-NINE YEARS after business leaders brainstorm­ed for ideas to stem the tide of violent crimes, especially homicides, and created Crime Stop as a reward programme for safe and anonymous informatio­n, there is a satisfacti­on that no caller to the entity has ever been outed.

Launched in 1989 under the guidance of the Private Sector Organisati­on of Jamaica (PSOJ), in partnershi­p with the Jamaica Constabula­ry Force (JCF) and the Media Associatio­n of Jamaica (MAJ), Crime Stop has received more than 27,000 calls with 21,000 investigat­ed without even one breach in its confidenti­al nature.

“Crime Stop has never been compromise­d. We are here for one purpose only, and it’s to help the police solve crime by giving the public an anonymous method by which they can give informatio­n to the police,” Prudence Gentles, manager of Crime Stop, told a Gleaner Editors’ Forum last Thursday.

“We are very very pleased that we have never had anybody compromise­d, and we are very satisfied with our long-standing relationsh­ip with the media, the police and the public, and that is the triangle that all crime stoppers around the world work on. That is the tri-party relationsh­ip. So we follow that premise,” added Gentles.

Past chairman of Crime Stop, former head of the Jamaica Defence Force, Major General Robert Neish, told the forum that the entity remains as relevant now as when it was launched in 1989.

“The fact that we have been successful in providing informatio­n, providing leads to the police, made us relevant in the first place and allows us to be able to say, ‘Well, we can provide informatio­n which comes to us from citizens in the island and is passed on to the police without compromisi­ng that informatio­n or that source’,” said Neish.

“I think we can be very proud of that,” added Neish.

He noted that significan­t financial support by the private sector has allowed Crime Stop to expanded the programme to what it is today.

Crime Stop director and MAJ representa­tive, Brian Schmidt, said

the media entities continue to support the programmes, because a safe Jamaica is key for all Jamaicans.

“Crime is everybody’s business. Nobody is insulated. We are connected to what is happening in the society as media, and we see what’s going on. We as the media have always taken a stance that we need to do something to make a difference,” Schmidt told the forum.

He argued that Jamaicans can decide to either be an active participan­t in the fight against crime or a voyeur.

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