KINGSTON, Jamaica — Police Commissioner Dr Kevin Blake is calling for renewed moral clarity and collective resolve following the murder of four-year-old Shannon Gordon, who was among five people gunned down in a St Catherine community.
In his latest column in the Force Orders, Dr Blake condemned the growing tendency to blur the lines between victims and perpetrators, urging Jamaicans to resist narratives that excuse or justify violent criminality.
“Many who see murders and shooting injuries as mere numbers and percentages want us to believe that these hoodlums are to be treated as young men who the state has failed,” Blake wrote.
He argued that while poverty and hardship remain real challenges, they cannot be used to explain or excuse the deliberate taking of life.
At the same time, the commissioner reaffirmed his commitment to transparency and accountability in law enforcement, noting that any police-related loss of life must undergo “serious and independent review.”
“Let me be abundantly clear this High Command fully embraces this,” he said.
However, Dr Blake pushed back against what he described as distortions within sections of the media, where isolated cases are sometimes used to paint the Jamaica Constabulary Force (JCF) as systematically abusive or corrupt.
“Let no one mistake our silence for guilt, nor our professionalism for weakness. We will continue to face every challenge with heads held high, grounded in fact, fortified by integrity,” he asserted.
Dr Blake’s message, written in the wake of a particularly tragic series of killings, underscored the emotional toll such events take on law enforcement officers and the wider community.
“The images we carry in our minds from these scenes are not easily erased,” he said. “But they must strengthen our resolve rather than weaken our spirit.”
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He reminded the public that policing is not merely about enforcement but about safeguarding the nation’s collective conscience and future especially its children.
“Let this tragedy reignite our shared determination to secure every community and reaffirm the Jamaica Constabulary Force as the steadfast guardian of our nation’s peace and conscience,” Blake wrote.