US court rules Jamaican sniper Lee Boyd Malvo to be resentenced Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Maryland’s highest court has ruled that Washington, DC-area sniper Lee Boyd Malvo must be resentenced, because of US Supreme Court decisions relating to constitutional protections for juveniles made after Malvo was sentenced to six life sentences without the possibility of parole.

In its 4-3 ruling, however, the Maryland Court of Appeals said it’s very unlikely Malvo would ever be released from custody, because he is also serving separate life sentences for murders in Virginia.

“As a practical matter, this may be an academic question in Mr Malvo’s case, as he would first have to be granted parole in Virginia before his consecutive life sentences in Maryland even begin,” Judge Robert McDonald wrote in the majority opinion released Friday.

McDonald wrote that it’s ultimately not up to the Court of Appeals to decide the appropriate sentence for Malvo, or whether he should ever be released from his Maryland sentences.

“We hold only that the Eighth Amendment requires that he receive a new sentencing hearing at which the sentencing court, now cognizant of the principles elucidated by the Supreme Court, is able to consider whether or not he is constitutionally eligible for life without parole under those decisions,” McDonald wrote.

Malvo, 37, is now confined at the Red Onion State Prison in Virginia.

Malvo and his mentor, John Allen Muhammad, shot people in Virginia, Maryland and Washington as they pumped gas, loaded packages into their cars and went about their everyday business during a three-week period in 2002. Malvo was 17 at the time; Muhammad was 41.

Muhammad was sentenced to death and was executed in Virginia in 2009.

In Maryland, Malvo voluntarily testified against Muhammad. In 2006, Malvo pleaded guilty to six counts of first-degree murder in Montgomery County in the suburbs of the nation’s capital.

At his sentencing that year, the prosecutor stated that Malvo, once under the sway of an “evil man”, had changed and “grown tremendously” since his participation in the crimes, according to the Court of Appeals ruling.

The ruling said Malvo’s sentence was “consistent with the pertinent State statute and with the advisory State sentencing guidelines at that time.”

“Since then, however, the Supreme Court has held that the Eighth Amendment does not permit a sentence of life without parole for a juvenile homicide offender if a sentencing court determines that the offender’s crime was the result of transient immaturity, as opposed to permanent incorrigibility,” the ruling said.

The ruling also noted that the Supreme Court has held that the legal constraint applies retroactively and applies to Malvo’s case.

Judges Jonathan Biran, Brynja Booth and Joseph Getty joined McDonald in the majority. Judges Shirley Watts, Michele Hotten and Steven Gould dissented.

Watts wrote that the sentencing court took Malvo’s status as a juvenile into account.

“The record demonstrates that Mr Malvo received a personalised sentencing procedure at which his youth and its attendant characteristics were considered, and the circuit court was aware that it had the discretion to impose a lesser sentence,” Watts wrote.

Hotten wrote that any alleged finding of corrigibility “did not render petitioner’s sentences unconstitutional disproportionate as applied”.

“Rather the proportionality of Petitioner’s sentences must be weighed against the severity of his crimes,” Hotten wrote. “Petitioner committed some of the worst crimes in the history of the State. It was not grossly disproportionate that a heavy penalty was imposed.”

By BRIAN WITTE

Associated Press

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HEART offers globally competitive training to develop labour force Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

The Human Employment and Resource Training/National Service Training Agency (HEART/NSTA Trust) remains committed to developing Jamaica’s labour force, by offering globally competitive training and employment opportunities.

This is being done through the organisation’s Triple Access Strategy, which outlines three priority areas of focus for the strategic period (2022-2026) and is in alignment with the Vision 2030 National Development Goal 1, which is to ensure that “Jamaicans are empowered to achieve their fullest potential”.

The strategy is also aligned to Sustainable Development Goal 4, which focuses on quality education.

Addressing a JIS ‘Think Tank’, on August 26, Managing Director of the HEART/NSTA Trust, Dr. Taneisha Ingleton, outlined the priority areas of focus for the agency.

“We have a particular strategic direction that we want Jamaica to understand. The Trust’s work is underpinned by what we refer to as the Triple Access Strategy and everything we do is underpinned by that vision,” she explained.

The first component of the strategy, she informed, aims to enhance the quality of training and certification towards improving Jamaica’s global ranking in the quality of technical vocational education and training (TVET).

Citing the 2019 Global Competitiveness Report Index, which indicated that Jamaica was ranked 36th of 141 countries for quality of vocational training, Dr Ingleton said “this shows that the work that we have been doing in TVET is so exceptional that we would have received such a ranking”.

She added that emphasis will be placed on certifying Jamaicans in labour market-driven and emerging skills and the facilitation of decent work.

Dr Ingleton noted that the second area of focus for the Triple Access Strategy is that “we want to increase services to youth at risk,” adding that “Jamaica’s safety, productivity and competitiveness partly depend on how well its most vulnerable citizens can find meaningful employment.”

Unattached youth, particularly those in volatile communities, will need access to quality training, certification, and other services if they are to break the cycle of being disadvantaged and be integrated into the labour market as skilled, productive citizens.

In response to this, the HEART/NSTA Trust is providing youth at risk with the right training and development opportunities which will enable them to participate in the economic and social life of their community and country.

The third component of the Triple Access Strategy is to strengthen the TVET ecosystem.

To do this, the HEART/NSTA Trust will focus on strengthening industry partnerships, embracing a multi-agency approach to service delivery, and strengthening TVET integration in the general education system.

Additionally, the agency will also seek to strengthen entrepreneurship, business support, placement services and enhance career development and lifelong learning services and strengthen linkages to international TVET organisations.

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Veteran broadcaster, Francois St Juste has died Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Veteran broadcaster, Francois St Juste has died

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itel sets hiring target of 1,500 new people over coming weeks Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Following the launch of its Chalmers site in Kingston, customer experience provider itel is embarking on a massive recruitment campaign.

itel has said it is looking to hire 1,500 new employees across its three Jamaica sites in Montego Bay and Kingston over the next four weeks.

This large-scale talent search will enable itel to meet the needs of its retail, travel, and hospitality clients, who are preparing for the busy shopping season.

What’s more, as large international brands grapple with ongoing labour shortages, especially across the US, their need for nearshore outsourcing services is skyrocketing.

Now more than ever, they are looking to Jamaica and other key spots in the Caribbean for their customer experience delivery. As a result, the local-global services market is expected to bring US$1 billion into the economy by the end of 2023, with itel positioning itself to take a lead role in this push.

To meet this demand, itel is working with its clients to fill critical positions, such as sales agents, tech support and customer service representatives. These roles often serve as a brand’s first point of contact across telephone, chat and email services.

“We started 10 years ago with seven employees and this year reached 7,000. This was not achieved by sitting back and letting opportunities for our company and our team slip through the cracks,” stated Yoni Epstein, Founding Chairman and CEO. “Right now, our clients are counting on us to find the best talent across the island, and we are ready to meet the challenge.”

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Only Chinese companies bid for ECD road upgrade project

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana
The ECD highway

Two Chinese companies were the lone bidders for the contract to widen and upgrade various sections of the East Coast of Demerara (ECD) highway when the bids were opened at the National Procurement and Tender Administration Board (NPTAB).

The tenders were issued by the Public Works Ministry, for the ECD public road widening and improvement project; phase 2, from Annandale to Mahaica, and on the railway embankment from Sheriff Street to Orange Nassau.

China Harbour Engineering Company (CHEC), one of the Chinese companies that bid for the project, is no stranger to Guyana. They have been involved in projects in Guyana such as the upgrade works at the Cheddi Jagan International Airport (CJIA).

It was only in July that CHEC completed extended works that were agreed upon with the Government at the CJIA, in keeping with the deadline of June 30. An extension to the structure will now enable larger aircraft to enter Guyana, creating additional benefits for travellers.

Back in April, Hadi’s World Incorporated, a subsidiary of Mohamed’s Enterprise, partnered with CHEC Guyana Inc to pursue its US$25 million quarry project to cater to the needs of the country’s booming construction sector.

The other Chinese company, China Railway First Group Company Limited, is also no stranger to Guyana, having been in talks with the Government since last year on the Amaila Falls Hydropower Project (AFHP), to construct it in a Build-Own-Operate-Transfer (BOOT) arrangement.

The State-owned Chinese company has been involved in the AFHP since 2008 when the initiative was first conceptualised under a previous People’s Progressive Party/Civic (PPP/C) Administration.

At that time, Sithe Global, a United States-based company, as the investor of the project and beneficiary of the concession rights, publicised the invitation to bid for the project across the globe in May 2008, and CRFG participated in the bidding process.

In November 2008, CRFG was announced the successful bidder for the Engineering, Procurement, and Construction (EPC) contract of the Amaila Falls Hydropower Project, which was officially signed between CRFG and Sithe Global in September 2012.

But in August 2013, Sithe Global, due to the expiration of the concession rights for the project, exited the development of the Guyana Amaila Falls Hydropower Project, resulting in the project being set aside.

This year, some $49.2 billion was allocated for road works. Of this amount, money was set aside for the widening of the ECD highway from Annandale to Mahaica, as well as upgrading the railway embankment from Sheriff Street to Orange Nassau.

There is another contract, the redesign, and widening of the road from Belfield, ECD to Rosignol, West Coast Berbice (WCB), for which a total of 10 international and local contractors threw their hats in the ring.

The Belfield to Rosignol road widening was intended to be a continuation of the East Coast Road Widening and Expansion Project, which was commissioned in 2020. The US$50.2 million project was supposed to have two components: a four-lane expansion from Better Hope to Annandale, and an upgrade to the existing two-lane road from Annandale to Belfield.

Back in 2019, a grant of Kuwaiti Dinars (KD) 500,000 was approved by the Kuwait Fund for Arab Economic Development to conduct a technical and economic feasibility study for this very project – the redesign of the Belfield to Rosignol road network.

In 2016, the Government of Guyana and the People’s Republic of China had, through the China Export-Import Bank, signed a $9.6 billion (US$45.5 million) concessional loan for the completion of the widening of the road between Better Hope and Belfield. The Government had contributed approximately $3 billion towards the project.

Last year, it was announced that the Government had gotten approval from its counterparts in China to utilise the sums saved on the ECD road widening and improvement contract (when the road was commissioned, the cost at the time was US$43 million) to execute 24 additional connector roads linked to the project.

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SLFS Rescues Woman Floating In Water At Vieux Fort Beach – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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Saint Lucia Fire Service (SLFS) personnel rushed to the rescue after receiving a distress call regarding a woman floating in shallow water at Il Pirata Beach, Vieux Fort.

The incident occurred on Saturday.

Emergency personnel said after responding to the distress call around 7:26 pm, they found an unconscious 36-year-old female.

The emergency personnel immediately performed CPR and continued the procedure while an ambulance transported the woman to St Jude Hospital.

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And they reported that on the way, the woman regained consciousness and was left in the care of medical staff.

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Corrección esta en “mute” con casos de confinados fallecidos en instituciones carcelarias

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

Brenda Ortega y Carlos López continúan a la espera de los resultados de la autopsia que confirme de qué falleció su hermano, Fernando Vélez López, en un complejo correccional en Bayamón.

Según el Departamento de Corrección y Rehabilitación (DCR), el Instituto de Ciencias Forenses (ICF) culminó su autopsia, pero no pueden dar todos los detalles hasta que no terminen unos análisis toxicológicos.

“Hasta este mismo momento, hoy, a este mismo momento, a las 10:29 a.m., a mí nadie me ha llamado. Y me parece muy curioso que ni tan siquiera los trabajadores sociales se hayan comunicado, ni tan siquiera el subsecretario ni la secretaria, nadie que tenga que ver con esto se ha comunicado con nosotros”, denunció Brenda Ortega, hermana del occiso, al asegurar que no son la única familia a la espera de un informe que indique de qué murió Vélez López.

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Ortega cuestionó si es que hay algo que el Estado quiera ocultar en dicho caso y denunció que para las agencias los fallecidos parecen ser solo confinados. A su vez, exigió que tomen responsabilidad al respecto.

Nota relacionada: “Se lo dije con lágrimas en los ojos, que no me lo dejaran morir, que él necesitaba asistencia médica”

Un caso similar lo vive Viviana Berríos, prima hermana de Luis Ortiz, quien también murió en la institución 501 de Bayamón.

“Yo no he recibido ninguna comunicación tampoco […] La realidad es que se han quedado en mute”, aseguró. Además, informó que ayer falleció otro recluso.

El reclamo y desespero representan a múltiples familias que viven tal situación con las agencias gubernamentales a las cuales les piden empatía. 

“El familiar no recibe ninguna información. El familiar, la única llamada que recibe es la del fallecimiento. Y eso, realmente, en mi opinión, no es algo que debe perpetuarse, sino modificarse. Y el Departamento deberia tomar acción y debería responder, no hacerse de oídos sordos”, finalizó Berríos.

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Aumentan querellas contra empresas de placas solares

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

El secretario del Departamento de Asuntos del Consumidor (DACO), Edan Rivera Rodríguez, alertó sobre un patrón de aumento en las querellas contra empresas de placas solares en el presente mes, que ascienden a 60 por ciento respecto al mes de julio, para un total de unas 400 querellas en el último año.

“Nosotros, durante el último mes, particularmente, en el mes de agosto hemos visto un aumento considerable en el tipo de querellas que se presentan contra compañías de placas solares”, indicó Rivera Rodríguez.

A modo de recomendación, el líder de agencia sugirió a toda aquella persona interesada en implementar dicho servicio, que corroboren que la compañía esté registrada bajo el DACO como contratista, que no cuente con demasiadas querellas bajo la agencia (lo cual puede corroborar en www.daco.pr.gov) y que lean detenidamente los contratos previo a la firma.

Sobre las prácticas comunes, Rivera Rodríguez detalló que hay incumplimiento con garantías, lo cual implica que ni siquiera las están honrando, y quejas respecto a la cantidad de placas instaladas. 

Sobre el tiempo de respuesta de la agencia para atender dichas querellas, aseguró que “nosotros estamos agilizando los procesos en DACO, nosotros hemos reducido en 52 por ciento el atraso que tenía DACO, estamos sacando más resoluciones por mes que antes, más de 700 por mes, así que estamos mejorando los servicios en el Departamento para que el consumidor tenga el remedio rápido”, finalizó el secretario.

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Evalúan aumentar precios del café local

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

El secretario del Departamento de Agricultura, Ramón González Beiró, informó que ya entró en funciones un comité evaluador del precio del café que está en conversaciones para contemplar un posible aumento en el producto, que ha sido motivo de reclamo por los trabajadores de la industria de cosecha.

“El Departamento de Agricultura no es quien está facultado en ley para revisar los precios; es el DACO. En este momento, desde junio, nosotros estamos alertando al DACO y ya, finalmente, se le dio forma al comité evaluador del precio del café. De hecho, hoy están en su tercera reunión mirando tanto el mínimo a pagarle al agricultor, como el precio al que nosotros vendemos el café importado”, los cuales son los mismos desde el 2015. Asimismo, explicó que los caficultores deben cobrar entre $18 y $20 por cada almud de café.

En respuesta al reclamo de alcaldes y la legislatura respecto a una Orden Administrativa de la agencia que, supuestamente, pondría en aprietos a la industria y que entra en vigor hoy, el líder de la agencia explicó que “lo que está haciendo esa orden es obligando a los torrefactores que quieran comprar café allí a que tienen que comprometerse a comprar, por lo menos, el 20 por ciento de su producción local”, indicó González Beiró.

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Nota relacionada: En peligro de perderse la cosecha del café local en Puerto Rico

El alcalde de Yauco, Ángel Luis Torres Ortiz, fue uno de los que se posicionó a favor de la producción local del café, que implica a más de 100 caficultores en su municipio, y anticipó que de no resolverse la problemática, se perderán los productores y se impactará la economía del país .

“Es muy lamentable ver cómo largos días y horas de trabajo intenso se pierdan, son muchos los beneficiadores que aún cuentan con inventario de la cosecha pasada y hemos recibido información que este inventario de producto local lo están mezclando con café importado, el cual compran a menor precio. Esta situación afecta no tan solo a los productores del café sino a nosotros los consumidores del café puertorriqueño. Es de suma importancia que DACO intervenga en este asunto de inmediato”, destacó el primer ejecutivo municipal.

Por su parte, el secretario del Departamento de Asuntos del Consumidor (DACO), Edán Rivera Rodríguez, responsabilizó a Agricultura de encargarse de la política pública para el funcionamiento y bienestar de dicha industria, y aseguró que no vislumbra que se pierda la cosecha del producto.

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Asimismo, estableció que los caficultores no han pedido una revisión de precios: “Desde que yo soy secretario, nunca se nos ha hecho una petición de revisar la orden vigente. E importante: DACO no fija el precio del café […] DACO puede imponer unos precios mínimos”, aclaró.

El líder relevó al comité evaluador la responsabilidad de realizar los estudios económicos necesarios para considerar la subida de precios. A partir de los resultados, el DACO sugerirá un precio mínimo, que hoy ronda desde los $12 a $14.

“Fijate, no vislumbro la pérdida de cosecha porque en Puerto Rico hay un programa completo que se dedica a eso, es un programa de compraventa de café […] Desde acá, yo, honestamente no veo ese escenario. Le damos deferencia al Departamento de Agricultura […] que ejecute la política publica que tiene que hacer”, finalizó Rivera Rodríguez.

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ST. LUCIA-TOURISM-St. Lucia attracting millions of dollars in tourism investments-PM

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cana News Business

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