
Justice Minister Delroy Chuck says Jamaican law permits police to apply force considered reasonable, including lethal force in some situations. He made the remarks as pressure grows for officers to wear body cameras, following public concern over an increase in fatal police shootings.
The most recent case drawing countrywide attention is the death of Lotoya Bulgin in Granville, St. James, on Sunday, May 17.
Chuck was addressing an Alternative Dispute Resolution policy development and estate planning forum in Trelawny yesterday. He said officers are allowed to use reasonable force when taking a felon into custody, and that such force may be deadly depending on the circumstances.
The minister said police should not have to use added force to carry out arrests. He urged persons not to resist, saying anyone who believes they were wrongly held can seek remedy through the courts.
Syndicated from Jamaica Inquirer · originally published .
Legal context · powered by Jurifi
Get the legal angle on this story. Pick a prompt and Jurifi's AI will explain it using Jamaican law.
AI replies are based on Jamaican law via Jurifi. Not legal advice.
Other coverage

Isat Buchanan condemns alarming disregard for the Constitution in comments on police use of deadly force
Our Today
JFJ 'deeply disturbed' by Granville police shooting and handling of woman's body
Jamaica Gleaner
‘The lady didn’t deserve this’ - Senior cop says police forced to make ‘quick decisions’ as Granville continues to reel after police shooting
Jamaica Gleaner
Opposition says Latoya Bulgin killing “deeply troubling”
Jamaica Observer
JFJ expresses ‘grave concern’ over Granville fatal shooting; raises questions about handling of crime scene
Jamaica Observer