In a powerful address marking the opening of the new legal year, Director of Public Prosecutions Sherma Dalrymple has issued a urgent mandate to legal professionals across small island states, demanding concrete action against escalating gun violence. Speaking at the State House Conference Centre, Dalrymple challenged judges, attorneys, court administrators, and prosecutors to actively champion respect for the law through decisive measures.
The prosecution chief emphasized that legal associations must break their silence and actively educate the public about legal consequences before crimes occur. “We cannot wait until cases reach courtrooms—by then lives are already lost, families grieve, and individual liberties hang in balance,” Dalrymple asserted, criticizing passive discussions at bar association meetings while societal violence worsens.
Dalrymple highlighted the particular vulnerability of small island communities where gun violence “runs as a disease,” casting shadows over cultural celebrations, carnivals, and holiday gatherings. She noted with concern how media reports regularly shock communities with phrases like ‘double murders’ and ‘young men in critical condition after sustaining gunshot wounds.’
While acknowledging existing robust legislative frameworks within Organization of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS) members—including firearms acts, anti-gang laws, and sentencing guidelines designed to deter violence—Dalrymple insisted legal professionals must shoulder responsibility rather than blaming society alone. “We must consider whether we, as justice system administrators, are truly making the law respectable while advocating against this plague,” she concluded, calling for updated protocols, guidelines, and laws through regional cooperation.
