Commissioner of Police Owen Ellington says he is fully satisfied with the work of the Forensic Science Laboratory in Kingston.
Speaking with reporters, after an introductory tour of the facility
along with the National Security Minister, Hon Peter Bunting,
Commissioner Ellington said he was “thoroughly impressed” with the
quality of work done at the Lab and the staff’s commitment to supporting
investigations, despite the capacity limitations.
Commissioner Ellington said that the forensic component is critical to
the arsenal of the police, in the task of fighting crime.
Pointing to the importance of civilian or ‘I see” witnesses, and the
threat they are increasingly coming under, the most logical solution is
to resort to increased scientific evidence, and that is what the lab is
all about, Mr. Ellington stated.
“All cases involving drugs, guns, murder and a significant amount of
sexual assault cases have to be processed by the lab, and the evidence
provided is always crucial to the success of those cases, when it gets
to the prosecution stage,” he explained.
Addressing the matter of the public tampering with crime scenes and
hampering effective and thorough investigations, the Commissioner
appealed to citizens, especially those disputing police action, not to
invade crime scenes for spent shell casings and other pieces of
evidence, as this only makes the investigators’ job harder.
“There have been many instances where we’ve had differences of opinion
between the police and criminals, and citizens dispute the account of
the Police. But, tampering hurts the crime scene and doesn’t enable us
to prove the citizens correct, if indeed they are,” he said.
He pointed out that, on occasions when the Police have to go into a
crime scene, they minimize the disturbance and they are trained to
reconstruct any area that is disturbed.
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