Attorney awaits IPROB findings after alleged assault at May Pen police records office
A practising attorney who handles matters in the parish, Supreme, and appeal courts says she was physically assaulted by a plain-clothes man at the police records office in May Pen, Clarendon, on 12 March 2026, and is now awaiting findings from the Inspectorate of Professional Standards Oversight Bureau (IPROB).
The woman, who asked not to be named, told reporters she had gone to the office on business and declined when a man asked for her telephone number. She said he later questioned her application paperwork, pushed her against a wall, struck her head, placed her hands behind her back, crushed a receipt, threw her belongings outside, tore off her wig, and beat her after she refused to leave. She said the incident was witnessed by others, including a client, and captured on closed-circuit television. She reported the matter to IPROB and said she missed two days of work, continues medical treatment including wearing a brace for lower-back pain, and may pursue court action depending on the watchdog's outcome. She alleged the officer later complained to the General Legal Council that she had attacked him first.
In other news, the People's National Party is mourning former St. James West Central Member of Parliament Author Nelson, who died at 91. The party described the trained engineer as a humble public servant who won consecutive elections in 1993 and 1997, sometimes travelled to Parliament by bus, and returned to the constituency during the 2020 general election campaign to support PNP candidates. Condolences were extended to his wife Barbara and children Sha, Mark, and Andrea.
The Few Children Foundation has raised concern over reports that some students at Ascot Primary School in Portmore, St. Catherine, were allegedly treated differently at graduation based on Primary Exit Profile results, including claims that lower-scoring pupils were denied caps and gowns and seated at the back. The group said such conduct, if proven, could raise constitutional questions and urged families to report the matter to education and child-protection authorities, preserve evidence, and seek legal advice. Youth Policy Committee Chair Sabrina Barnes said, "Every child deserves to be treated with dignity, respect, and equal worth."
The Jamaica Constabulary Force says officers have seized hundreds of Ecstasy and MDMA tablets since the start of 2026 as synthetic drug use grows. Deputy Superintendent Courtney Wilson of the Firearms and Narcotics Investigation Division for the Western Region said seizures formed part of operations against transnational organised crime, while Jamaica Customs Agency data cited in the briefing showed increased MDMA detections over the review period.
Syndicated from Realnews Yt · originally published .
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