This Video of Officer Darren Wilson Standing Over Michael Brown’s Body Could Offer Important Evidence to the Case

DID BOYCOTTING OF BLACK FRIDAY WORK? SURPRISE! SHOPPING SLIDES as a RESPONSE TO FERGUSON...Black Friday Weekend Slows Down As Allure Fades....down 5.2 percent from last year, according to a survey of 4,631 people

AP | By ANNE D'INNOCENZIO Posted: 12/01/2014 12:10 am EST 
NEW YORK (AP) — Black Friday fatigue is setting in. Early discounting, more online shopping and a mixed economy meant fewer people shopped over Thanksgiving weekend, the National Retail Federation said Sunday.
Overall, 133.7 million people shopped in stores and online over the four-day weekend, down 5.2 percent from last year, according to a survey of 4,631 people conducted by Prosper Insights & Analytics for the trade group. Total spending for the weekend is expected to fall 11 percent to $50.9 billion from an estimated $57.4 billion last year, the trade group estimated.
Shopping No More....Did Ferguson cause impact?
Part of the reason is that Target, J.C. Penney, Macy's, Wal-Mart and other major retailers pushed fat discounts as early as Halloween. Some opened stores even earlier on Thanksgiving. All that stole some thunder from Black Friday and the rest of the weekend.
Still, the preliminary data makes retailers worried that shoppers remain frugal despite improving employment and falling gas prices.
Matt Shay, the trade group's CEO, said he thinks people benefiting from the recovery may not feel the need to fight crowds to get the deepest discount on a TV or toaster. And those who feel like the recession never ended may not have the money and will stretch out what they spend through Christmas. more

St. JAMES, JAMAICA: Norwood tragedy - 5-y-o boy, Jonathan Ward dies in mysterious car fire...The boy's death was particularly painful for his grandmother, Linnette Perry, as she was attending her brother's funeral at the time of the tragedy.

BY HORACE HINES Observer staff reporter hinesh@jamaicaobserver.com  Monday, December 01, 2014    
NORWOOD, St James — A St James family is now in mourning after a five-year-old boy died in a fire that engulfed a parked motor car in his yard Saturday afternoon.
The fire, which claimed the life of Jonathan Ward, also called Rushie, has left family members puzzled.
01
5-y-o boy, Jonathan Ward and sad grieving grandmother
According to them, shortly after midday Jonathan and one of his cousins were in the house at Nelly Lane in Norwood playing video games before they went outdoors.
Uchema Hemmings, a young family member, said she was inside the house when the car burst into flames. She said that efforts to rescue the boy from the blazing motor vehicle proved futile as the heat was unbearable.
Family and community members eventually managed to smash one of the windows after they brought the blaze under control using buckets of water and sand.
Yesterday, when the Jamaica Observer visited the scene, family members theorised that the boy locked himself inside the vehicle before it was gutted by the fire.
The boy's death was particularly painful for his grandmother, Linnette Perry, as she was attending her brother's funeral at the time of the tragedy.
"The death has left the family stranded. Is a little boy who give a lot of trouble, but otherwise he is helpful. He is missed by family and missed by strangers because is a loving little boy," Perry moaned. "Mi caan believe. Mi caan eat, mi caan drink, mi caan sleep. It is sad."
Her granddaughter, Uchema, was equally distraught. more

St. Mary, Jamaica: Mom, ANNMARIE Karram makes desperate plea after women snatch infant from her arms, ‘Bring back my baby’

BY PAUL HENRY Crime/Court Desk co-ordinator henryp@jamaicaobserver.com  Monday, December 01, 2014   
 ANNMARIE Karram would cradle her newborn baby, Akeem, tenderly stroke his plump face, and speak to him in a loving, soft tone as she promises to keep him safe.
Annmarie Karram is disconsolate as she reflects on how
 her baby, Akeem (right) was stolen from her arms.
 (PHOTOS: PAUL HENRY)
“You are the youngest baby I have and I don’t want anything to happen to you,” the 36-year-old mother of five children would tell her son.
“Just like how the others survive, you will survive too.” Often, she would rock Akeem to sleep, cradling him in her bosom long after he had closed his eyes, and stare at his face, a picture of tranquility.
At times her mother would make a fuss, telling her not to allow the baby to sleep in her arms because “it will spoil him”. But it was her baby to hold and to keep safe.
However, just seven weeks after his birth, on October 8 at home in Content/Retreat, St Mary, Akeem would be snatched from the loving arms of his mother on Monday, November 24, by two women in the neighbouring parish of St Ann.
The incident has devastated Karram, who now feels that she has failed in her duty to protect her newborn from the savagery of the world, and left the extended family and police puzzled.
“Anywhere you have him, I want you to carry him back,” Karram pleaded to her baby’s abductors during an interview with the Jamaica Observer on the weekend. more

Christopher ‘Dudus’ Coke, Tivoli Gardens enquiry opens today: THE commission of enquiry into the 2010 Tivoli Gardens operation, which left scores of civilians and two members of the security forces dead, is set to begin today.

Monday, December 01, 2014 BY PAUL HENRY Crime/Court Desk co-ordinator     
THE commission of enquiry into the 2010 Tivoli Gardens operation, which left scores of civilians and two members of the security forces dead, is set to begin today.
The hearing is to take place at the Jamaica Conference Centre in downtown Kingston.
The commission is expected to conduct hearings in the first two weeks of December and then break until the New Year.
01
Jamaica Defence Force soldiers attend to a colleague
 who was shot by gunmen who sought to resist the security
 forces’ attempt to arrest former Tivoli Gardens strongman
Christopher ‘Dudus’ Coke during the Tivoli Gardens operation
 in May 2010. (PHOTO: JAMAICA OBSERVER)
The commissioners are expected to compile a report and recommendations concerning the events surrounding the May 2010 West Kingston operation and submit them to the governor general within two months after concluding the enquiry.
In 2013, the Government announced that it had accepted a recommendation to establish a Commission of Enquiry into the conduct of the 2010 operation, during which more than 70 people died as the security forces tried to capture fugitive Christopher ‘Dudus’ Coke, who was wanted in the United States on drug and gun-running charges.
The operation was launched on May 24, 2010 after repeated appeals by the authorities for the dismantling of blockades mounted at the entrances to Tivoli Gardens were ignored.
But police and soldiers met resistance from gunmen loyal to Coke, resulting in the fatalities. During the fighting, Coke fled Tivoli Gardens, but was captured weeks later, on June 22, 2010, and waived his right to an extradition hearing.
On June 24, 2010, he was flown to New York and was eventually sentenced to a 23-year prison term in June 2012 after pleading guilty to racketeering.
Sticking to the sentencing guidelines under a plea bargaining arrangement reached between Coke’s defence team and prosecutors in August 2011, Judge Robert P Patterson imposed the maximum sentence, despite last-minute pleas for leniency by Coke himself and his attorney Stephen H Rosen. more

SOUTH AFRICANS: Africa Umoja Dancing at Hosea Feed The Hunger in Atlanta, GA on Thanksgiving Day for the Homeless, recorded for RulaBrownNetwork

Mr Vegas elated with Beyonce's remix "Standing in the Sun", will be featured on her upcoming album Platinum Edition...."This can only be a good look for reggae music. I am on the album of the most powerful woman in music"

Sunday, November 30, 2014
DANCEHALL artiste Mr Vegas said he is overjoyed that the remix with Beyonce, Standing in the Sun, will be featured on her upcoming album Platinum Edition.
Mr Vegas and Beyoncé
According to Mr Vegas, this could be considered as one of his most major musical achievement since the launch of his career more than a decade ago.
"This can only be a good look for reggae music. I am on the album of the most powerful woman in music. Her fans will now know Mr Vegas and will start checking out my music," said Vegas.
Last year, Mr Vegas -- whose given name is Clifford Smith -- received word that the American pop star wanted to have him on her remix. After receiving her vocals, he teamed up with producers Danny and Cleveland 'Clevie' Browne.
Mr Vegas is no stranger to international collabs. He has worked with the likes of Wyclef Jean and DMX. He was also featured on Snoop Dogg's 2013 Reincarnated album.
Earlier this year, he also collaborated with Jason Derulo on the dancehall remix Talk Dirty. more

IN JAMAICA (CONGRATULATIONS): CSEC top three, SLEEPLESS nights, extra work and a zeal to make their parents proud was the formula Fitzroy Wickham, Anicia McFarlane and Jhanel Garwood used that earned them top scores overall in the 2014 CSEC

 By KIMBERLEY HIBBERT Career & Education reporter hibbertk@jamaicaobsrever.com  Sunday, November 30, 2014    
SLEEPLESS nights, extra work and a zeal to make their parents proud was the formula Fitzroy Wickham, Anicia McFarlane and Jhanel Garwood used that earned them top scores overall in the 2014 Caribbean Secondary Education Certificate (CSEC) examinations.
The three took the time to share with Career & Education details of their journey.
Fitzroy Wickham, first place
Wickham, 16, who was raised in Orange Hill, St Ann, said from a tender age his mother instilled in him the value of education, and it is a lesson that he intends to take with him throughout life.
Anicia McFarlane (left), Fitzroy Wickham and Jhanel
Garwood smile proudly with their awards received at the
 Jamaica Association of Principals of Secondary Schools
 national CXC awards ceremony last week.
 (PHOTO: Lionel Rookwood)
"My mother encouraged us to read at a very young age and the Bible was one of the first books I read. From there on she allowed us to join the public library and reading became second nature for my sibling and I," Wickham said.
The younger of two children, Wickham said he grew up in a single-parent home as his father died when he was two years old. His mother, a teacher, would be the driving force in his life from there on.
The young man, who is also head boy of York Castle High, said studying for him involves putting in hard work right before an examination.
"When I'm under pressure I find that I work better. The strategy that works best is what I employ," he said. Wickham has hopes of one day becoming a neurosurgeon and explained that the different wonders of the brain fascinate him.
"I read books by Dr Ben Carson and in other medical books I've read, the complexity of the brain, how the organs work, and their various capabilities are beyond human imagination. If we could just tap into all its resources, we would do wonders," he said. more

IN JAMAICA (FRIGHTENING & SAD STORY): Mom says police aware suspect using her murdered son, 18 y-o Rashidi Samuda's phone — even replacing victim's WhatsApp photo with his...."I went to KPH right away, and when I asked the nurse what happen, she said 'don't ask me any question',"

 Sunday, November 30, 2014 
IT'S been five months since Maureen Brown's 18-year-old son Rashidi Samuda was brutally slaughtered by a bunch of thugs in Jones Town.
The criminals, he told her before he died, said they wanted his cellphone.
01
Mom's sadness
But, as if the savagery of their actions was not painful enough, Brown — who said she is still receiving counselling — has been trying to control the anger she is feeling from knowing that the police have a photo of a suspect in her son's murder, but have done nothing to apprehend him.
According to the distraught mother, the suspect is still using her son's phone, and doesn't seem to be fearful about doing so, as he has replaced Rashidi's WhatsApp profile photo with his.
Even worse is Brown's complaint that a female detective sergeant at the Half-Way-Tree Police Station admitted to her sister that she knows the suspect because she had arrested him before for stealing.
The Jamaica Observer tried repeatedly to get in touch with the detective sergeant, but phones at the police station were either busy or rang unanswered.
At first glance, Brown's face seems expressionless. But on closer examination one can see that she is hurting. It's not difficult to understand why after one hears her heart-rending story.
Her quiet life was disrupted on the night of May 18 when, on returning home from watching a play at Little Theatre, Brown noticed that her son was not in the house.
That was approximately 9:00 pm.
18-year-old son Rashidi Samuda
"I asked his nephew for him and he said he (Rashidi) went to buy ice cream," Brown told the Sunday Observer. "Shortly after, when I turned the phone on, I received another call; it was from my son who said, 'Maureen, dem stab me up'," she related.
The young man told her he was at the Kingston Public Hospital (KPH) and she left home immediately to get there.
"I went to KPH right away, and when I asked the nurse what happen, she said 'don't ask me any question'," Brown alleged.
 more

ST. JAMES, JAMAICA: 36 y-o MoBay businessman, Antonio McKoy helping to improve lives at Barnett Lane...."The needs in the community are great," McKoy has embarked on a mission to educate residents, starting with the children.

BY MARK CUMMINGS Editor-at-Large Western Bureau cummingsm@jamaicaobserver.com  Sunday, November 30, 2014  
MONTEGO BAY, St James — For many years businessman Antonio McKoy had been hearing about the plight of residents living in several inner-city communities in St James.
Nola Williams, a director at Le-Antonio’s Homework and
Development Centre, helps a student from the Barnett
 Lane community with his homework earlier this year.
But he only became aware of the extent of the slew of social and economic ills that beset some of these communities after he relocated the offices of his construction company -- Le-Antonio's Roofing and Construction Ltd -- a few years ago, from the upscale Ironshore area to Barnett Lane, one of several inner-city communities in Montego Bay.
"The needs in the community are great," McKoy told the Jamaica Observer.
"The residents don't have a lot; there are a lot of idle hands, there are a vast number of uneducated persons and there are a lot of kids roaming the streets and not getting the help they need at home."
The savvy 36-year-old businessman has since started to play his part in improving the social and economic conditions of residents in Barnett Lane, as well as the surrounding communities.
MCKOY… the needs in the community
 are great
Cognisant that literacy is an essential skill in today's world, McKoy has embarked on a mission to educate residents, starting with the children.
Earlier this year, the businessman, through his Le-Antonio Foundation, which was established last year, opened a homework centre in a section of his business establishment, which now accommodates 75 registered children between the ages of six and 16 from Barnett Lane and its environs. more

Two die in crash on Old Hope Road : UWI medical student, 19-year-old Danielle Hanson, of Mandeville, Manchester and 19-year-old Mikhail Campbell of Patrick Gardens, Kingston 20

Saturday, November 29, 2014 | 10:03 AM 
KINGSTON, Jamaica – A medical student, 19-year-old Danielle Hanson, of Mandeville, Manchester and 19-year-old Mikhail Campbell of Patrick Gardens, Kingston 20, died as a result of injuries sustained in a motor vehicle collision along Old Hope Road, St Andrew early Saturday, November 29.
19-year-old Danielle Hanson
The Matilda’s Corner Police report that about 1:00 am, Hanson was driving a BMW motorcar in which Campbell was a passenger heading in the direction of Papine.
Upon reaching a section of the roadway Hanson reportedly hit the curb and lost control of the vehicle, colliding with Toyota Prado motor vehicle traveling in the opposite direction.
Hanson and Campbell were taken to hospital where they were pronounced dead. The driver of the Toyota Prado was treated and released. more

IN JAMAICA: Grief in Roehampton, Two crushed Grief in Roehampton by truck in St James community....The two have been identified as 68-year-old bar operator Sadie Kerr, also called 'Neva', and Junior Lawrence.

BY HORACE HINES Observer staff reporter hinesh@jamaicaobserver.com  Saturday, November 29, 2014
ROEHAMPTON, St James — Up to late yesterday evening, residents of this normally quiet farming community were still grappling with the death of two community members who were crushed by a truck that slammed into a bar where they were Thursday night.
01
The wreckage
The two have been identified as 68-year-old bar operator Sadie Kerr, also called 'Neva', and Junior Lawrence.
Four other people — the truck driver and his two sons and another patron at the bar -- were seriously injured and taken to hospital.
Reports are that about 7:00 pm Thursday, the driver who had just used the truck to deliver water to residents in the community, was descending a hill when he lost control of the vehicle. The vehicle slammed into the concrete building which housed the bar before overturning.
The impact of the collision caused the building to collapse. Kerr and Lawrence were pinned under the ruins of the flattened structure. A wrecker was used to remove the bodies from under the ruins.
The Jamaica Observer was told that the patron who was injured suffered two fractured legs after he jumped from the building in an attempt to save his life.
Yesterday, distraught residents directed their anger at the National Water Commission, arguing that the incident was as a result of the water company's failure to provide the company with water.
"We need water. He (truck driver) was taking water in the community. It is because of the water problem why this happen. It is a disgrace, because of water. We need water. We are decent citizens living here, we need water," the residents cried. more

Pregnant Ferguson Woman, Dornella Conners Loses Eye After Cops Shoot Car With Bean Bag

 The Huffington Post | By Simon McCormack Email Posted: 11/28/2014 4:15
A Ferguson woman lost her left eye when police officers in Ferguson shot a bean bag round at the car she was in. Dornella Conners is now blind in one eye and can barely see with the other, she told KMOV.
Ferguson
Dornella Conners
She said she and her boyfriend pulled into a Ferguson gas station on Tuesday morning, hours after the decision not to indict officer Darren Wilson in the killing of Michael Brown was announced. As she and her boyfriend were driving away from the station, Conners said St. Louis County police surrounded their car.
Conners said her boyfriend was trying to avoid interfering with the police while trying to drive away from the gas station. But police said the car was heading right for them. That's when police shot a bean bag round at the car, shattering the passenger window and injuring Conners."I’m very upset, very disappointed with tactics that they used trying to get control of situation,” Donnell Conners, Dornella’s father told the station.
The story comes as #BlackoutBlackFriday protests spread across Ferguson and the nation in an effort to call attention to what supporters say was an unjust outcome in Wilson's case and to bring an end to the consumption-based day after Thanksgiving.
"In the wake of #Ferguson, it's become painfully clear that people of color, and Black people in particular, are still unjustly targeted by law enforcement and the criminal justice system," reads a statement on BlackoutBlackFriday.org. more
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BLACK FRIDAY FRENZY : Ferguson Protests Move To Stores... Chaos In Britain... Walmart Wo rkers Plan Strikes... TOYS R US MADNESS... Crowd Control... One Of The Biggest Days Of The Year For Gun Sales... More Stores Open On Thanksgiving... Does Little To Boost Sales... Growing Backlash... Best Deals Aren't Actually On Black Friday...

Shoppers head into Target just after thei doors opened at midnight on Black Friday, Nov. 28, 2014, in South Portland, Maine. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)
Shoppers head into Target just after thei doors opened at midnight on Black Friday, Nov. 28, 2014, in South Portland, Maine. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)
NEW YORK (AP) — Black Friday was already well underway before many awoke this morning.
The traditional kickoff to the holiday shopping season has become a two-day affair, with more stores opening before people put down their turkey legs on Thanksgiving. There's good reason for the creep; businesses know shoppers will only spend so much, and they want the first crack at those holiday budgets.
Still, millions of Americans are expected to head out in search of steep discounts today. The National Retail Federation forecasts holiday sales will grow 4.1 percent to $616.9 billion — the biggest jump since 2011.
It's a make-or-break time for many retailers, which on average get 20 percent of their annual sales during the holiday shopping season. Already, retailers have resorted to steep discounting to lure shoppers.Here's a look at what's happening this Black Friday.
Ferguson Protests Hit Stores
Dozens of protesters interrupted holiday shopping to speak out about a grand jury's decision not to indict the white officer who fatally shot Michael Brown, a black teenager.  more

IN JAMAICA: Court orders THE Urban Development Corporation (UDC) public access to Winnifred Beach in Portland ending a five-year legal battle between the residents and the entity.

Friday, November 28, 2014    
THE Urban Development Corporation (UDC) has been ordered by the court to grant public access to Winnifred Beach in Portland, ending a five-year legal battle between the residents and the entity.
People crowd the Winnifred Beach in Portland in this file photo.
The ruling, which was handed down in the Port Antonio Resident Magistrate's Court in the parish last month by Resident Magistrate Marjorie Moyston, said UDC has 90 days to create on a new title an easement for the right of the public to access the beach for bathing and recreation purposes.
Four members of the Free Winnifred Beach Benevolent Society took the matter to court five years ago, seeking a declaration of the public's absolute and indefeasible right to access the beach.
This, after news broke that the UDC intended to develop the lands on which the beach is located, under Fairy Hill Phase 2. The features of Fairy Hill Phase 2, according to the 2006 environmental impact assessment (EIA) report on the proposed development, included not only the construction of beach cottages and residential lots, but also a Fairy Hill Beach Park.
"The beach park would feature, at minimum, the following amenities: a ticket office, guard post, business offices and family-oriented recreational facilities, as well as sanitary conveniences," noted the EIA report done by consultants Technological and Environmental Management Network.
"The main feature of this development will be the 29 residential lots ranging in size from 821 to 1,505 metres-square. Beach cottages will also be constructed to provide temporary dwelling opportunities for beach patrons and other visitors to Portland who are desirous of extending their length of stay," the EIA report added. more

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THE Jamaica Observer last Wednesday lauded teachers from the eastern side of the island for their contribution to the country's education system

Andrea Givans (second right), Teacher of the Year for sales
of the Jamaica Observer’s Learning Corner/Jr Study Centre,
 collects her award from Seprod Promotions and Marketing
Co-ordinator Orville Warren (second left). Sharing the
 moment are Omar Spence of Scotiabank and Nicole
 Campbell from cable company Flow.
(PHOTOS: JOSEPH WELLINGTON)
BY DONISHA WILLIAMS Observer writer donishaw@jamaicaobserver.com  Thursday, November 27, 2014 
THE Jamaica Observer last Wednesday lauded teachers from the eastern side of the island for their contribution to the country's education system at a special luncheon at the newspaper's headquarters in Kingston.
Danville Walker, managing director of the Observer, congratulated the awardees and thanked the teachers for supporting the newspaper's TeenAge, Study Centre, Learning Corner and Junior Learning Corner publications.
"...You, the teachers, are the key to these initiatives and we applaud your efforts. Our programmes -- Show Us Your School, Meet the School and TeenAge Expression Tours -- have been very successful since their inception. The students have enjoyed them and we have also enjoyed putting them on," Walker said.
(From left) The Jamaica Observer’s
Danville Walker and Circulation
 Manager Valerie Smith with
Oberlin High’s Audrey Francis
 and Ivy Green. The school was
 recognised for selling the
most copies of the TeenAge
 Observer in the island.
Nicole Campbell, public relations executive at Flow, took the opportunity to report on the company's activities which involve the nation's schools. Among those highlighted was the 'Building Leaders Through Technology' programme, which provides primary and secondary schools with free Internet to enhance the learning environment. She also said Flow was able, for the first time, to stream the TeenAge Expression Tour live for the benefit of teachers and students who could not attend.
Guest speaker Howard Campbell, lecturer and CEO of Howard Campbell and Associates, commended the teachers for their daily contribution to student achievement and success. more

25 y-o Phil Hughes, Australian Cricketer Dies After Strike to Head with a ball and never regained consciousness...Hughes made 26 test and 25 one-day international appearances for Australia

25 y-o Phil Hughes
(Reuters) - Phil Hughes, who died on Thursday aged 25, will forever be remembered as one of Australian cricket's free spirits.
A pugnacious left-hander brimming with self-confidence, his life was tragically cut short when he was hit on the head by a ball and never regained consciousness.
The violent manner of his death has shaken the cricket community, and the world of sport, to its core.
Hughes had been in an out of the Australian national team for the past five years but had been pushing for re-selection. As a batsman he had his flaws, but those imperfections seemed to make him even more popular.
When he was struck down on Tuesday, batting for South Australia against New South Wales, he was 63 not out and seemingly on track for a place in the national team to play India next week.
LOVEABLE CHARACTER
The Australian public loved his fighting spirit and boisterous nature, a kid from the bush who made it to the top but never changed as a person.
Hughes made 26 test and 25 one-day international appearances for Australia, but at just 25 there seemed plenty of time to make more as he battled to overcome his weaknesses.
His ability to score runs has never been questioned but his unorthodox batting technique, especially against short-pitched bowling, was an issue. more

MONTEGO BAY, JAMAICA: 28 y-o man, Terrence Barnett sentenced to life for murder and rape of sales rep, Toneva Forbes.... Gets forgiveness from victim’s devastated mother

BY HORACE HINES Observer West reporter  Thursday, November 27, 2014   
MONTEGO BAY, St James — FIFTY-EIGHT-YEAR-OLD Dahlia Forbes has been a nervous wreck ever since her daughter Toneva Forbes, a sales representative of Cambridge in St James, was brutally raped and murdered in a secluded section of Hague Settlement in Trelawny, two years ago.
But the distraught mother, who worships at the Lapland Seventh-day Adventist Church in St James, has unreservedly forgiven the perpetrator of the heinous crime.
01
58 y-o Dahlia Forbes/ 28-year-old Terrence 'Dinna' Barnett
"I forgive him because if I don't forgive him what sense does it make that I pray? God is not going to hear my prayer if I don't forgive. I would be saying my prayers in vain if I have iniquity in my heart," the distressed mother, who is also of a Cambridge, St James address, said.
Last week, 28-year-old Terrence 'Dinna' Barnett of Hague Settlement, in Trelawny was sentenced to life imprisonment in the Trelawny Circuit Court after being convicted for murdering Toneva.
Barnett will have to serve 30 years before he becomes eligible for parole.
The convict, who was reportedly also on a rape charge at the time he raped and murdered Toneva two years ago, cried openly after the verdict was read.
In the meantime, the distraught mother reacted with indifference to the conviction, citing that it will neither resurrect her daughter, nor will it assist in the maintenance of the two children she left behind.
"The judgement that them give him don't really help me because right now me have the two children to deal with. So how dem a go get support? Their mother gone, one of them don't have no father, so what a go happen to them? That is my problem," Forbes said.
The sales representative, who was affectionately called Samantha, died leaving, Oneva, now six, and Rickeem, who turned four a few months ago. Toneva was the fourth of six children for Forbes.
On Monday October 1, 2012, Toneva and a male colleague -- both employed at a Montego Bay business establishment -- entered the Hague Settlement community together, but went in different directions to conduct their sales. They were scheduled to meet later in the afternoon but when she didn't turn up and failed to answer her cellphone, the police was notified. more

Could Jamaica be the next stop for Woodstock Festival?

KINGSTON, Jamaica, Wednesday November 26, 2014, CMC Jamaica says it is moving to host the Woodstock festival, one of the world’s biggest music festivals.
Junior Tourism and Entertainment Minister, Damion Crawford, says he has already held discussions with promoters of the Festival, and if things go according to plan, the event could be staged in Jamaica soon.
Woodstock-Site-740
“I called the (representatives) at Woodstock and ask them to consider having a reggae Woodstock in Jamaica. A member is coming down shortly to have a meeting,” he said. Crawford said if the discussions are positive, he will be pushing to get private sector support, instead of having the government being engaged in the planning, promotion and staging of the festival.
“Government is not a promoter and entertainment needs people who are willing to take the risk,” he said. The Woodstock Festival or simply Woodstock is a music festival, billed as ‘An Aquarian Exposition: 3 Days of Peace & Music’. It is held at Max Yasgur’s dairy farm in the Catskills, New York, from August 15 to 18 annually.
The Festival is widely regarded as a pivotal moment in popular music history with groups such as The Rolling Stone among those to have performed at the event.


 

Darren Wilson: There's 'No Way' Michael Brown Put His Hands Up (VIDEO INTERVIEW w/ WILSON)

Ferguson Police Officer Darren Wilson opened up for the first time in an interview with ABC's George Stephanopoulos, part of which aired Tuesday evening, less than 24 hours after it was announced a grand jury would not indict him for the death of Michael Brown.
Wilson said there was "no way" Brown put his hands up before Wilson fired his weapon, as some witnesses have described. Wilson said he thought, "he will kill me if he gets to me" when he saw Brown come toward him. more

MEDICAL workers at the Kingston Public Hospital (KPH) yesterday staged a protest after a mentally ill patient attacked a nurse at the downtown Kingston institution.

BY KIMMO MATTHEWS Observer staff reporter matthewsk@jamaicaobserver.com  Wednesday, November 26, 2014    
MEDICAL workers at the Kingston Public Hospital (KPH) yesterday staged a protest after a mentally ill patient attacked a nurse at the downtown Kingston institution.
Protest at KPH following attack on nurse
According to the angry protesters, the nurse was doing checks on Ward 2A when she was chased by a man, who was a psychiatric patient.
Jennifer McLeod, who claimed she witnessed the attack, said the nurse was also hit by the man.
"If it weren't for me and another man the nurse could have been killed by the man this morning," she alleged.
"When I see what was happening I could not believe. The man ran down the nurse, held her by the neck and struck her to the side of her head," the woman told the Observer as she stood close to where angry protesters had gathered.
The nurses said yesterday's incident was the latest in a series of attacks on medical professionals as they carry out their duties at KPH, the island's largest hospital.
"This is what we have to face on a daily basis from patients right across the board and we are tired of what is happening and want the matter to be addressed," said one protester.
"When it is not attacks, we are faced with threats, if someone should carry out some checks we nurses and other medical staff get more than 100 threats per month and we are concerned for our safety," said another nurse. more

Outameni Protest: Opposition walks out of House after PM refuses to answer questions

BY BALFORD HENRY Senior staff reporter balfordh@jamaicaobserver.com  Wednesday, November 26, 2014   
OPPOSITION parliamentarians walked out of the House of Representatives yesterday in protest against the Government's handling of the controversial Outameni property purchase and the refusal of the prime minister to answer questions tabled on the issue.
Leader of the Jamaica Labour Party, Andrew Holness
The walk-out brought an early end to the meeting of the legislature, setting back some issues including the closing of the debate on reparations.
The Government sought to recover the agenda by going ahead with the opening of the debate on three bills seeking to replace the Judicial Committee of the United Kingdom Privy Council with the regional Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ). But after a large group of students who were visiting to watch the proceedings left the gallery with their teachers, the writing was on the wall.
Leader of the House Phillip Paulwell called it quits after Prime Minister Portia Simpson Miller opened the debate on three bills, and House Speaker Michael Peart adjourned the sitting.
In the meantime, the Opposition invited the press to a briefing in its conference room at Gordon House, at which its leader, Andrew Holness, warned that the protest would not end there. He said that he would widen it to add areas of collaboration between Government and Opposition, including the Partnership for Jamaica, launched in July 2013.
The partnership is a programme designed to ensure the country's stabilisation, growth with equity and sustainable development initially over the period 2013-2016. It gives special focus to fiscal consolidation, rule of law, ease of doing business, employment creation, and energy diversification and conservation. more

Twenty-five Mico College students get $3m in scholarships

Mico College students get $3m in scholarships
Tuesday, November 25, 2014    
The St Andrew-based Mico University College last Tuesday held its annual Presentation of Scholarship Awards Ceremony, which saw 25 students receiving bursaries with an overall value of $3 million. Here scholarship recipients are joined by Mico staff and individuals and representatives of entities that sponsored the awards.

Justifying Homicide: Why Darren Wilson was never going to be indicted for killing Michael Brown....By Jamelle Bouie

The first Ferguson protests had two slogans: “Hands up, don’t shoot”—referring to Michael Brown’s final actions before he was killed—and “Justice for Michael Brown.” And when you asked protesters what they meant by “justice,” they replied with a plea for accountability. In their minds, justice could only come with an indictment of Darren Wilson, the police officer who shot him. No, he probaby wouldn’t go to prison. But if nothing else, an indictment would show that Brown’s life mattered. That the lives of people like Brown matter. And that their communities deserve answers and explanations for police violence. 
USA-MISSOURI/SHOOTING
An elderly protester
On Monday night, St. Louis County prosecutor Bob McCullough told Ferguson that after three months of deliberation, the 12 members of the grand jury had its decision: Darren Wilson would not be indicted. In his statement announcing the decision, McCullough explained that the grand jury considered five separate charges—ranging from manslaughter to first-degree murder—and that the jury was convinced by the available evidence that Wilson had reasonable grounds for shooting Brown, and wasn’t liable for a crime. more

Second chances for youths in JAMAICA: JCDC and NYS offer events management programme

Tuesday, November 25, 2014  
WHEN the Jamaica Cultural Development Commission (JCDC) and the National Youth Service (NYS) initiated the Events Management Training and Employment Programme, the objectives included creating viable employment and development opportunities for young people in arts development and events management. However, the programme has exceeded expectations creating second chances for youths who were sitting at home idly.
With a ratio of 28 males to 22 females, the programme created on the job training and exposure in areas of events planning, events budget preparation and monitoring, customer relations, elements of production, basic décor, set design and construction, first aid and fire safety and basic protocol for youths who recently completed six months employment with the JCDC.
"The programme was another opportunity, a second chance for these youths to gain on the job training, improve on weaknesses and to network and create greater chances for employment. Eighty per cent of the youngsters had never worked before or had a structured work experience and the growth that they experienced is commendable," explains Elizabeth Smith, one of the programme co-ordinators from the JCDC.
Smith expresses that close to the end of the programme which ran from April to October 2014, the Events Production Assistants (EPA) ages 17 to 24 years had concerns of what would be their next step, but the support has not ended with their employment tenure. more