St. Elizabeth gunfight kills one as police seize firearms in Operation Reset
Police in St. Elizabeth are searching for three armed men after a fatal shoot-out during an early-morning break-in at a mini mart in Ballard Valley, near Junction, on Saturday, 11 July 2026.
A senior source said officers responding to a burglary around 3:00 a.m. were challenged by four gunmen. One was shot, taken to Black River Hospital, and pronounced dead. During Operation Reset over 12 hours, police seized two firearms and arrested two men linked to multiple break-ins and robberies. Acting on intelligence, they searched Oxford and a burnt savannah where the weapons were found.
In St. Catherine, farmer Peter Fable, 36, of Boyce Content, Old Harbour, was remanded Friday on a murder charge after telling the court he could not afford a lawyer. Judge Janelle Nelson Gale ordered custody until 22 September, citing an incomplete case file. Fable is charged over bus driver Mario Swell, 33, also of Boyce Content. Reports say that around 10:00 p.m. on 1 July, Swell was on the Boyce Content main road when Fable allegedly told him he had something for him, then plunged a pitchfork into his upper body before fleeing. Swell died at May Pen Hospital. Fable was arrested and charged after a question-and-answer session.
A 32-year-old St. Catherine man, name withheld, was arrested after officers allegedly found four 9 mm rounds in Nike sneakers during a raid in Pennie District, Kittentown, on Thursday, 9 July, around 2:30 p.m. Guabville police searched under the Firearms (Prohibition, Restriction and Regulation) Act; investigations continue.
Detective Sergeant Dave Francis of the Jamaica Constabulary Force Stolen Motor Vehicle Unit urged used-car buyers to check identification numbers. On the Police Civilian Oversight Authority Sentences Corner podcast, Francis said, "If we were to stop that vehicle out on the road, first the thing we are looking at is the chassis number, then the engine number, and we are looking at the vehicle identification number tag." He said tampered numbers are restored by etching and checked against stolen-vehicle records, and warned of car cloning.
Island Traffic Authority figures released 10 July show 160 killed in 145 fatal crashes this year, down 19 per cent in fatalities and 16 per cent in crashes. Pedestrians and motorcyclists accounted for 57 per cent; motorcyclists 42 (26 per cent), pedestrians 41 (26 per cent), private drivers 38 (24 per cent), and their passengers 25 (16 per cent). Vulnerable road users totalled 56 per cent; all passengers 19 per cent. Males accounted for 84 per cent of deaths, females 16 per cent.
The Integrity Commission says staff security remains unresolved despite stakeholder engagement. Executive Director Craig Bareris Ford noted the concern in the 2025–2026 report; former chairman Retired Justice Seymour Panton had raised it from 2023 until leaving office last year.
Syndicated from Realnews Yt · originally published .
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