Posts Tagged ‘Mandela Maloney’
Friday, May 15th, 2009
by Phillipe Aimey
APOLOGISE!
That’s what members of the Rastafarian community want the Royal Barbados Police Force to do before there is any meeting between the two bodies to discuss a long list of issues.

This was only one of the conditions outlined by the Justice Committee at a Press conference held at the I’Akobi Youth Resource Centre, Tweedside Road, St Michael, yesterday.
It was called to respond to Commissioner of Police Darwin Dottin’s invitation to meet and discuss the issue of “Rasta profiling”. (more…)
Tags: Acting Commissioner, apology, Bertie Hinds, Commissioner of Police, Coroner, Darwin Dottin, dialogue, Faith Marshall-Harris, judicial review, Justice Committee, Mandela Maloney, meeting, misadventure, olive branch, protocols ignored, Ras Ivaar, Ras KudosSage I, Rastafari community, Rastafari profiling, Royal Barbados Police Force, verdict
Posted in Civil Actions, News | No Comments »
Thursday, April 30th, 2009
The question of how I’Akobi met his death has still been left unanswered after approximately 10 months of deliberations both inside and out of court. Although the coroner had dismissed the idea of I’Akobi going to the cliff with the intention of taking his own life, the verdict of misadventure is still debatable.
In her context it was defined as the act of running from the police which inadvertently resulted in his death. Our family vehemently refutes the coroner’s claim in this regard; as the act of running towards what the police perceived to be a 60 ft. drop head first with hands outstretched in this ‘mad’ dash for freedom quintessentially describes the act of suicide.
Although the coroner removed the police’s postulations of why he had taken his life that being (depression, homosexuality, madness and drug association), she inadvertently or intentionally accepted the single report submitted by Headley and Walkes as the irrevocable truth. (more…)
Tags: 5 minute window, Anthony Walkes, autonomous, Constable Sandra Dottin, Coroner, Curvan Harvey, depression, drugs, Holetown Police Station, homosexual, iffing, irrevocable truth, madness, Mandela Maloney, misadventure, miscommunication, police, Sergeant Trevor Reece, statement, sudden dash for freedom, suicide, timeline, unanswered, verdict, Wingrove Headley
Posted in Coroner Inquest, News, Press Releases | No Comments »
Saturday, April 25th, 2009

Marguerita Maloney, mother of I'Akobi Maloney, being held up by supporters as she mourns the verdict of the inquest into her son's death. (Pictures by Donnay Deane)
I’AKOBI MALONEY’S death was a misadventure.
That was the verdict arrived at by coroner Faith Marshall-Harris at 5 p.m. this afternoon in the controversial case of the 23 year-old Rastafarian. a former Barbados Exhibitioner who allegedly jumped off a 50 ft cliff at the secluded land Lock, St Lucy, last July 17, while being escorted to the station by two police officers.
Ruling out an open verdict and death by suicide, the Magistrate surmised that Maloney may have felt some form of harassment from the police officers, especially when they requested that he accompany them to the station and that “he made a sudden dash for freedom”.
The verdict caused an uproar among family and supporters of the Maloney family who gathered in the courtyard.
I’Akobi’s grieving mother, Marguerita Maloney exited the court, raised her hands in the air, shouted “misadventure” then crumpled to the ground before berating a number of police officers regarding their conduct when I’Akobi died on June 17 last year at Landlock, St. Lucy.
The mother’s cries only fueled emotions, as I’Akobi’s father David, and his young brother Mandela, also started to shout at police officers stationed at the court.
(more…)
Tags: Andrew Pilgrim, Coroner, David Maloney, harassment, inquest, Mandela Maloney, Marguerita Maloney, misadventure, Royal Barbados Police Force, sudden dash for freedom, Task Force, verdict
Posted in Coroner Inquest, News | 6 Comments »
Wednesday, January 14th, 2009
I’AKOBI MALONEY was actively searching for another job.
His younger brother, Mandela Maloney, disclosed this at the Coroner’s Inquest into his death on Monday.
He told the court that his brother, who obtained an engineering degree at the St Augustine Campus in Trinidad was “dissatisfied with the conditions at the Arawak Cement Plant” and felt that the conditions there were not challenging enough.
Mandela pointed out that his brother started developing asthma and sinusitis and he believed it was because of the dust at the St Lucy plant. (more…)
Tags: Arawak Cement Plant, asthma, Faith Marshall-Harris, job, Mandela Maloney, Patrick Todd, sinus problems, St. Augustine Campus, Wingrove Headley
Posted in Coroner Inquest, News | No Comments »
Wednesday, December 17th, 2008
CORONER FAITH MARSHALL-HARRIS again expressed concern about two identical statements given by two police officers who testified on Monday during the inquest into the death of 23-year-old I’Akobi Maloney.
Sergeant Trevor Reece and Constable Sandra Dottin were the two police officers who visited Marguerita Maloney’s home on June 17, to inform her about the death of her son.
When they took the witness stand they each read individual statements which were so identical that it prompted attorney-at-law Andrew Pilgrim to ask them if they wrote the statements together.
While both officers denied doing so, Coroner Marshall-Harris was very critical about the similarity in police officers’ statements.
“They are identical word for word,” she stated. (more…)
Tags: Andrew Pilgrim, Constable Sandra Dottin, Court of Appeal decision, Faith Marshall-Harris, Mandela Maloney, Marguerita Maloney, rescue operation called off, Sergeant Trevor Reece, statement, Station Sergeant Dale Crichlow, word for word
Posted in Coroner Inquest, News | No Comments »
Tuesday, December 9th, 2008
by MARIA BRADSHAW
MEMBERS of the Caribbean Rastafari Organisation Inc. (CRO) offered a libation at Land Lock, St Lucy, yesterday, giving up prayers for their deceased brethren I’Akobi Tacuma Maloney.
About 50 Rastafarians, including Maloney’s mother Marguerita and brother Mandela, gathered on the cliff where the 23-year-old former Barbados Exhibitioner was said to have jumped 80 feet down to his death.
There they prayed, chanted and sang for close to an hour. They also held hands in a circle shouting “Haile Selassie I” and”Jah Rastafari” as individual members offered prayers for Maloney’s family and for justice to prevail. They also walked three laps around in a circle, singing and chanting all the while. (more…)
Tags: Caribbean Rastafari Organisation, Koomba, Landlock, libation, Mandela Maloney, Marguerita Maloney, Napthali, threw stones in the sea
Posted in Coroner Inquest, News | No Comments »
Saturday, November 8th, 2008
This was the plea yesterday at the I’Akobi Youth Resource Centre in Tweedside Road as the Justice Committee formed to promote, protect and defend the late Ras Tacuma I’Akobi Maloney’s case, met with various media houses to publicise the status of Maloney’s case.
Tacuma, whose demise at Landlock, St. Lucy on June 17th was met with much controversy, was represented by Committee members KudosSage I (Secretary of the Justice Committee), Brother Heru (Director of I’Akobi Youth Resource Centre and member of the Justice Committee) as well as Ras Lumumba (Priest of Church of Haile Selassie I), and Tacuma’s brother Mandela Maloney. Also present was the mother of I’Akobi and other Rastafari Elders. (more…)
Tags: Attorney-General, Brother Heru, change, Church of Haile Selassie I, Coroner, Cove Bay, I'Akobi Youth Resource Centre, independent investigation, inquest, Justice Committee, Landlock, Mandela Maloney, petition, Prime Minister, Ras Fela, Ras KudosSage I, Ras Lumumba, Royal Barbados Police Force, truth
Posted in Civil Actions, News, Press Releases | 4 Comments »
Friday, November 7th, 2008
MERE DAYS before the Coroner’s inquest into the death of former Barbados Exhibition winner I’Akobi Maloney , the Justice Committee has upped the ante in its fight to get an independent investigation.
Clearly stating it was not questioning the office of the Coroner, members of the committee said they specifically believed the information that would be analysed during the November 10 inquest should come from an independent body outside of the Royal Barbados Police Force.
Speaking during a Press conference at the I’Akobi Youth Resource Centre, Tweedside Road, St Michael, secretary of the Justice Committee, Ras KudosSage I, said 5200 signatures had been submitted to both the office of Prime Minister David Thompson and Attorney-General Freundel Stuart on Wednesday, citing the independent investigation as critical if justice was to be achieved. (more…)
Tags: Attorney-General, confidence, Coroner, David Thompson, Faith Marshall-Harris, Freundel Stuart, I'Akobi Youth Resource Centre, independent body, inquest, Justice Committee, Mandela Maloney, Prime Minister, Ras KudosSage I, Royal Barbados Police Force
Posted in Civil Actions, News, Press Releases | 7 Comments »
Friday, November 7th, 2008
Secretary of the Justice Committee, Ras KudosSage I, called for an independent investigation to be conducted into the death of former Barbados Exhibition winner and Engineer, I’Akobi Maloney.
He lauded the late Rastafarian as a man of exemplary character and moral standing. He says the Committee will resist any attempt to vilify Maloney’s character and his adherence to standards of excellence.
He made the call at a news conference at the I’Akobi Youth Resource Centre at Carrington Village in St. Michael. (more…)
Tags: Coroner, I'Akobi Youth Resource Centre, independent investigation, inquest, Mandela Maloney, Ras KudosSage I, suicide
Posted in Civil Actions, News, Press Releases | 14 Comments »