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YES DEM HAVE LIVITY FI CHOOT

DEM PPL YAH A PLAY WID WE ENO..ALL DEM CAN SEH A DAT DEM HAVE LIVITY.. AYE SAH

PPL UNNO PICK SENSE OUTA NONSENSE…. BRUCE INA DI MEAN WHILE COME TALK TU WI DEH

KINGSTON, Jamaica, June 1 (UPI) — Jamaica’s justice minister said she considered a lot of evidence in signing a request to extradite a suspected drug kingpin to the United States.

Dorothy Lightbourne, also the country’s attorney general, said she was not acting under orders of Prime Minister Bruce Golding in signing the document against Christopher “Dudus” Coke, who has been charged by the the United with drug-trafficking and gun-running, The Gleaner reported Tuesday.
“It is not true that I acted under the direction of the prime minister,” Lightbourne said in court documents filed in response to Coke’s request that his arrest warrant be stayed.
A hearing Monday on Coke’s request was postponed until Wednesday so Coke’s attorneys could review Lightbourne’s filing.
Police and military troops last week clashed with Coke’s supporters in fighting that left 73 dead.
Coke’s charity programs have earned him strong support among Kingston’s poor.
For nine months, the Jamaican government refused to comply with the U.S. government’s extradition request, arguing that Jamaica needed more information because proffered evidence obtained through wiretaps violated the Interception of Communications Act, the newspaper said.
In his affidavit, Coke alleged Lightbourne acted under Golding’s direction when she signed the extradition papers, but the minister said the claim wasn’t true. She said she told the prime minister and Cabinet members May 17 she would sign the authority to proceed, and the prime minister announced the decision later that day, The Gleaner said

Original article click yasso

KANDI PART 2

Kandi a one a di wickedis battyman all him do a  walk n obeah people and mek vodoo dolly wid pin… it even did obeah one battyman name betti,him call himself kandi exquiste , a bare doll him walk n tie man wid an a  obeah man him did tie har ex-man n her ex frens dem take him to a next obeah man n release the tie what a stressss  …one night  him go party  n come home n the boy move himself outa him house……him full a std n GD.  Him n delano whey jus  change him name to yohji goodlife soho, when yuh go fi him yard all you see is burning dust n candles in a all different colours an all  him involved in lottery scam and fraud weh scam old people of their hard working money it use it mine man, bekaw nuff man  refuse him cause di skin  stay well  bad full a spot, skabies n kratch kratch because di std stay long ting it bruck out pan him skin.  Him  all go jail n the police them tek weh him cyar because dem seh a  organise crime so police  still have him info n everything and him a go panama todeh..Yes das di Kandi file

DEY ALL UP IN OUR SHIT…

Jamaican drug king’s father found fertile ground in Miami

The father of Christopher `Dudus’ Coke — at the center of a deadly gun battle in Kingston — found a fertile ground in Miami in the 1980s for his criminal activities.
Bullets, bodies haunt Jamaica Jamaican leader under fire over violent siege By JENNIFER LEBOVICH AND TRENTON DANIEL

[email protected]

It was 1988 and Lester Lloyd Coke’s Shower Posse — a notorious Jamaican drug gang — was deep into gun and drug running. He was wanted in a South Florida courtroom to answer to murder and drug charges, but never made it to Miami to stand trial.

Now, two decades later, another Coke is accused of running the Shower Posse.
It’s Lester’s son, Christopher “Dudus” Coke, the man wanted for extradition by the U.S. on drug and weapons charges and the object of a manhunt that has touched off a bloody battle between Jamaican authorities and his supporters in Kingston. The government announced last week that the violence had claimed 73 lives.
“All of this old stuff is coming up again,” said Len Cartor, a former Miami-Dade police sergeant who worked in the department’s warrants bureau and arrested the father, also known as Jim Brown, in the 1980s.
Though the father has been dead for 18 years, there’s still a painting of him in Tivoli Gardens, where some of the fiercest fighting between government troops and gunmen loyal to Christopher Coke took place last week. It reads: “Legend Jim Brown, don of dons.”
The violence that erupted in Jamaica has its roots in 1980s Miami, when Jamaicans and Colombians were the soldiers in the cocaine wars, say those who worked to put them behind bars.
Under Lester Coke, the Shower Posse — so-named because it rained bullets down on rival gangs — was centered in Jamaica, but its tentacles reached far into the United States
“It seemed like Miami was their secondary base of operations,” said retired Miami-Dade police Sgt. Kevin Dougherty, who tracked Coke while working with MDPD’s Warrants Bureau.
Coke was well-known to Jamaican law enforcement and was an activist in the Jamaica Labour Party long before he was indicted in 1988 along with dozens of others by a federal grand jury.“It was a whole gun-running and drug-running operation going up and down the East Coast,” said Andrew Reich, an assistant U.S. attorney who handled the case. “Coke was one of the lead players.”
Then, as now, the gangs enjoyed backing from political parties on the island.
“Tivoli Gardens residents looked to Jim Brown for leadership,” said David Rowe, who represented Vivian Blake, a Shower Posse leader indicted with Coke. “He was a well-known and notorious enforcer and that reputation followed him. He was always hounded by federal authorities when he was here. Once they became aware of the activities of the Shower Posse, Jim Brown was always under some degree of scrutiny.’
Rowe, who never met father or son, said there appears to be a difference in leadership styles between the two men.
“The father was a little more abrasive, prominent individual,” said the Jamaican-born Rowe, an adjunct law professor at the University of Miami and an extradition expert. “The son is a better educated person, and he’s quiet.”
In the summer of 1985, a U.S. Marshals’ task force was searching for dangerous fugitives in the Miami area. The Jamaican government had put out wanted flyers for Lester Coke, sought in the “mass murder” of 12 in May 1985 in Kingston. He was also sought in two other shootings.
That July 17, Doughtery got a tip that led authorities to a house in the Norland neighborhood in northern Miami-Dade County. A morning drive by the house revealed that a 5’10, 240-pound man believed to be Coke was inside.
Read more: http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/05/31/1657484/cokes-dad-once-thrived-in-miami.html#ixzz0pbm8MPTR

HAITI FREQUENT FLYER

Tellmepastor Fact:” kandi obeah working is not exquiste so go n release your exes from bondage, set them free kandi, your like a maroon from maroon town a voodoo working, only if obeah could let your std go bye bye nasty kandi exquiste doll flithy delano goodlife soho n infested macka prosperity you guys need to stop”

Tellmepastor Fact :”kandi not even your std is exquiste n a doll has no infection because it’s plastic so that name dont stick, kandi go let delano soho goodlife jump you from behind you two losers can exchange your infectious diceases n if your in the mood to spread it go see macka prosperity, you guys are a three pack of distruction with devastation”

*HOWDY MI PPL … MET HERE… *waving*UNO SEE SEH KANDI UPSETTA FOOT CYAA TOUCH DI MIGGLE A DI BOOT A WHAPPEN TO HIM INSTEP??*

AIR PIE, NUNNIN SOUP N A SHADOW

KADEEM U RUN GO TELL ONE SITE HOW U AND SIMPLEX GO LUNCH , WHICH LUNCH DAT MY GIRL? N HOW HIM DID GUGU EYED… MY GIRL MI NEVA KNOW SEH SHADOW HAVE EYE NOW A DAYS IS WHICH PART U STAY SEE MR PRICE N MI KNOW FI A FACT SEH DI MAN DID DEH A HIM YARD A CHILL OUT FI GO A HIM COURT DATE.. Y U MUS STILL A CALL DI MAN NAME N DI MAN RUN U  N DOW WAA U? IT COSTS NOTHING TO STROLL INTO BELVIEW  AND ADMIT USELF ENO …. STOP CALL UP DI MAN NAME CAUSE DI MAN DOW SEE U MAVIS 3RD COUSIN /MS NEED A WEAVE/ JECKEL N HYDE INCARNATE

COLE STOVE IRON HEAD/ RENETO DECORDOVA VALENTINO ADAMS

News
Shut up! Adams tells Seaga
BY ERICA VIRTUE Observer writer [email protected]
Monday, May 31, 2010
CONTROVERSIAL and verbose former Senior Police Superintendent Reneto Adams last week strongly recommended silence for former Prime Minister Edward Seaga, who has come out swinging against the government and military operations into Tivoli Gardens, a community that he built in the 1960s and which became the centrepiece of his and the Jamaica Labour Party’s (JLP’s) political support for more than four decades.
Adams, who crossed path with Seaga on several occasions during his 41 years as a police officer, and who had either led or was apart of security operations in the community, called Seaga a hypocrite
“For Mr Seaga to have come out and speak as strongly as he did, about the disruption and dislocation in Tivoli Gardens, I want to say that it is highly hypocritical…”, the outspoken retired crime fighter said, minutes after he concluded the keynote address at the Rotary Club of Kingston luncheon at the Jamaica Pegasus Hotel last week.
In a stinging broadside against the JLP, and Prime Minister Bruce Golding, his former protégé, Seaga again defended the residents of Tivoli Gardens and said that a massacre had taken place in the community.
He put the death toll at 125, instead of the 73 given by security officials, based on information he claimed to have received from the community. Charging, too, that bodies had been buried as part of a cover-up, based on information he received, Seaga accused Prime Minister Golding of ineptitude.
Adams in 2001 led a police and military team in the community, to ward off a planned attack on Wilton Gardens (Rema) which had suffered more than 100 casualties at the hands of Tivoli Gardens gunmen over the years, with some last week, showing the scars of what they say was Tivoli brutality.
After the four-day standoff in 2001, 27 persons were killed, including security personnel, and Adams crypitically warned then that “Jamaica would pay dearly, dearly, dearly” for the fortification of the community, which has used strong-arm tactics to maintain political support for the JLP in the Corporate Area.
The community is currently under occupation by members of the security forces led by the Jamaica Defence Force (JDF) who are in search of Christopher ‘Dudus’ Coke, who was indicted last August by the United States on drug and gun-running charges.
The 80-year-old Seaga, who relinquished the helm of the JLP in 2005 to Golding, emerged from political hibernation after retirement to academia, in a combative mood which belied his advanced years.
According to Adams, Seaga “nurtured this location, this environment and these people, to the extent that the security forces under a JLP government could not bear the onslaught anymore, that they had to put the police and the army to deal with it in a most effective and efficient way.”
“Dare I say, Seaga has only himself to blame…” said Adams.
“I would recommend that instead of criticising, he goes in and try to reorient the people, on a line of decent and civil living. That is the recommendation I would give him,” he said.
For its part the JLP has offered no official response to the former leader’s charge that the party was split down the middle. However, the party has been distributing an audio of Seaga, responding to a question about “Jim Brown” (real name, Lester Lloyd Coke) the father of Christopher Coke, and who was the leader of the criminal Shower Posse, which was inherited by his son, Dudus.
The audio received on Saturday from a JLP operative quotes Seaga saying that Jim Brown was a protector of the community.
“Look at the man in terms of how the community respect and treats him as a protector of the community,” Seaga’s voice was heard saying, to loud roars in the background.
But Jim Brown’s notoriety spread way beyond Jamaica’s shores and the Shower Posse, which he led, and to which more than 1,400 deaths in the United States has been attributed.
The elder Coke died in a mysterious fire while in custody awaiting extradition to the United States.
Not known for tact, South West St Catherine Member of Parliament Everald Warmington has recommended that Seaga go quietly, somewhere, even as he described him as “a bitter old man”.
Seaga, who is now a distinguished fellow at the University of the West Indies, has been consistent in his criticisms of Golding’s leadership capabilities, describing his departure to the NDM as not a problem.
“It is mischievous for Seaga to be saying that Bruce should have gone in there and defended the people. The prime minister of the land with all of the advisors came to the conclusion that it was necessary to go in there and get criminal gunmen. I want to say to Mr Seaga that it is unwise and unprofessional for him to be criticisng the prime minister in such a fashion,” Adams said.
He said it was uncharacteristic for governing parties to have this kind of offensive into communities that are their political strongholds, but it was apparent that their backs were now against the wall.

*Read original articleclick yasso

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