Posts Tagged ‘Anthony Collymore’
Monday, May 4th, 2009
I’Akobi Tacuma Maloney, 23, of Hutson’s Alley, Reed Street, St Michael, died on June 17, 2008, at Land Lock, St Lucy. The circumstances of his death were investigated by the Coroner’s Court and recently, Coroner Faith Marshall-Harris in her verdict said his death was due to misadventure. The following is Part 6 of an edited version of the verdict which began on Monday. It concludes in tomorrow’s DAILY NATION.
ONCE AGAIN, Walkes, who was particularly sensitive to the situation and who had conveyed as much by way of the time-honoured gesture showing that someone is deranged, asked why he was on the cliff and he said he was under a lot of pressure. Walkes asked him why, Maloney said his back was hurting him…
Walkes then wanted to know from Maloney if he had ever seen a psychiatrist. Headley took Maloney’s ID which had been found in his wallet and went to the van and reported to Operations Control. He told Operations Control that he believed that Maloney’s faculties were not intact and that they would bring him in…
When Headley returned, he told Maloney that he would like him to accompany them to the police station to interview him. These may have seemed like ominous words to a young man of extreme sensitivity… (more…)
Tags: Anthony Collymore, Barbados Defence Force, boots, choppy sea, Coast Guard, Constable Sandra Dottin, Constable Wendell Walkes, Corey Applewaithe, Coroner, David Binks, Dr. Carl Winskog, Dr. Jasmine Crump, Faith Marshall-Harris, firearms, Forensics Laboratory, Holetown Police Station, Marguerita Maloney, Marson Harris, mental faculties, operations control, Rastafari community, rumours, safety rope, Sergeant Trevor Reece, Shawn Hall, Two Sons Funeral Home, verdict, Wingrove Headley
Posted in Coroner Inquest, News | 1 Comment »
Saturday, May 2nd, 2009
I’Akobi Tacuma Maloney, 23, of Hutson’s Alley, Reed Street, St Michael, died on June 17, 2008, at Land Lock, St Lucy. The circumstances of his death were investigated by the Coroner’s Court and last Friday, Coroner Faith Marshall-Harris in her verdict said his death was due to misadventure. The following is Part 4 of an edited version of the verdict which began on Monday. It continues in tomorrow’s SUNDAY SUN.
MALONEY HAD certainly never mentioned any personal problems, any problems with work colleagues or with cement dust and sinusitis nor articulated any problems working at Arawak, apart from the temporary status.
Once again the resignation was a total surprise and he thought the response, “I am taking responsibility for my back”, sounded totally unlike Maloney.
It now appeared to Adesegha that when Maloney came to his lab that morning briefly and then left with his bag to see Collymore he had already made up his mind to resign.
Approximately 10:15 that morning, Maloney called his mother who was at her usual spot in Holetown under the trees close to the taxi stand. The conversation between them, as reported seems contradictory. She reported that he said “Mumz, Mumz, Mumz, I feel real good, I fire the work. I was here in Speightstown for a while just checking the scenes and it feels boring and monotonous. (more…)
Tags: Adesegha, Anthony Collymore, cliff, Clyde Collymore, Coroner, drugs, Faith Marshall-Harris, Jason Collymore, Marguerita Maloney, misadventure, Nicolai Phillips, operations control, Reed Street, resignation, Royal Barbados Police Force, sinus problems, turn-table, verdict
Posted in Coroner Inquest, News | No Comments »
Saturday, April 25th, 2009
by Maria Bradshaw
I’AKOBI MALONEY was not killed by police, neither did he commit suicide. His death was ruled a misadventure.

SERGEANT WINGROVE HEADLEY (right) being escorted into the officer of the Coroner's Court by uniformed officers yesterday.
Coroner Faith Marshall-Harris handed down this decision yesterday six months after the start of the inquiry into the death of the 23-year-old Exhibition winner whom police said jumped off a 50-ft cliff at Landlock, St Lucy, last June 17, as he was about to be escorted to the Holetown Police Station.
The coroner found there was no evidence to substantiate that Maloney had been unlawfully killed by the police or that he committed suicide.
She surmised that Maloney, a Rastafarian, may have felt some form of harassment when the police requested that he accompany them to the station and so “he panicked and made a sudden dash for freedom”.
But while the coroner cited the mutual distrust between the Rastafarian community and the police and called for improved relations between the two, the verdict was not accepted by the many Rastafarian brethren who turned out yesterday.
They gathered in the courtyard surrounding Maloney’s grieving mother, Marguerita, and let it be known that there would be no peace between them and the police.
Marshall-Harris spent close to two hours reviewing the case and analysing the evidence. (more…)
Tags: Anthony Collymore, Anthony Walkes, Arawak Cement Plant, choppy sea, Coroner, Curvan Harvey, custody, decision, diary, distrust, Dr. Ermine Belle, drugs, Faith Marshall-Harris, harassment, Holetown Police Station, homosexual, improved relations, lacerations, Marguerita Maloney, misadventure, poetry, Rastafari community, sudden dash for freedom, verdict, Wingrove Headley
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Tuesday, April 7th, 2009

ATTORNEYS Andrew Pilgrim (right) and David Comissiong (second right) speaking to Mandela Maloney, brother of deceased I’Akobi Maloney, as a friend and his mother Marguerita Maloney look on.
DID police officers engage in profiling when they encountered I’Akobi Maloney, a six-foot Rastafarian standing alone on a secluded cliff?
Was there some level of aggression or conflict between them and that Rastaman?
Was he pushed or was he trying to escape?
These were scenarios which attorneys for the Maloney family, Andrew Pilgrim and David Comissiong, submitted to coroner Faith Marshall-Harris during their addresses, when the inquest into the 23 year-old man’s death resumed in the coroner’s court yesterday.
They asked the coroner to reject the evidence of the two police officers Sergeant Wingrove Headley and Constable Anthony Walkes who were with Maloney when he allegedly jumped off a 50-ft cliff to his death.
Comissiong told the court that given that the police had received a report about a boat, a Rastaman and drugs in the area that it was fair to assume they went to Land Lock, St Lucy, “all keyed up”. (more…)
Tags: 50 feet, Andrew Pilgrim, Anthony Collymore, Anthony Walkes, collusion, Coroner, David Comissiong, evidence, Faith Marshall-Harris, independent investigation, Rastafari profiling, sine qua non, statement, suicide, Wingrove Headley
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Tuesday, January 27th, 2009
THE POLICE INVESTIGATOR who carried out the investigations into the death of I’Akobi Maloney said yesterday he was not concerned that the statements of the two police officers who were with Maloney when he died, were identical.
Assistant Superintendent Curvan Harvey told the coroner’s inquest investigating the young man’s death that he was more concerned about the typographical errors contained in the statements.
At the time he was being questioned by Andrew Pilgrim who is representing the Maloney family. (more…)
Tags: ammunition, Andrew Pilgrim, Anthony Collymore, ASP, boxer shorts, Constable Wendell Walkes, Curvan Harvey, firearms, investigation, investigator, rumours
Posted in Coroner Inquest, News, Police Actions | No Comments »
Tuesday, November 18th, 2008
THE POLICE OFFICER who dealt with I’Akobi Maloney minutes before he died, said yesterday that he and his colleague discussed what they were going to write in their statements surrounding Maloney’s death.
When Andrew Pilgrim, who is representing the Maloney family, asked Acting Sergeant Walter Headley why he and Constable 1320 Walkes’ statements were identical, Headley said the two of them “had a discussion”
However, he denied suggestions by Pilgrim that they agreed to write exactly the same words or and that they copied each other’s words. His explanation for the identical statements was that “we saw the same thing”. (more…)
Tags: Acting Sergeant, Andrew Pilgrim, Anthony Collymore, Constable 1320 Walkes, Coroner, Cove Bay, David Comissiong, discussion, Faith Marshall-Harris, fireman, inquest, jumped off, Marguerita Maloney, mental faculties, red eyes, statement, Wingrove Headley
Posted in Coroner Inquest, News, Police Actions | 1 Comment »
Tuesday, November 11th, 2008
A fireman who called police after seeing a stranger in the area of his house in Pie Corner, St Lucy, earlier this year, yesterday denied to a coroner’s inquest that his actions were bigoted.
Anthony Collymore, who lives at Glitter Bay, Pie Corner, St Lucy, testified that he did not call 211 simply because he saw a man with Rasta dreadlocks, but because he saw a stranger in an area well-known for illegal drug activity.
Collymore was the fifth person to give evidence on the first day of the coroner’s inquest into the unnatural death of I’Akobi Maloney.
He told the court that on arriving home on June 17, he noticed a barebacked man with dreadlocks stooping about six feet from a cliff’s edge near his home. Using his binoculars, he noticed a white boat out to sea. (more…)
Tags: 211, Anthony Collymore, Barbados Defence Force, binoculars, called the police, Coroner, dialogue, dreadlocks, drugs, Faith Marshall-Harris, fireman, inquest, jumped, plain-clothed, police, Rasta, suspicion, white boat, witness
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