A high-stakes legal confrontation unfolded Friday in the Supreme Court of Jamaica as defense attorneys for 25 alleged members of the Tesha Miller Klansman Gang faction unsuccessfully attempted to undermine the credibility of a key prosecution witness. The dramatic courtroom exchange centered on forensic evidence collected from a 2017 murder scene in Spanish Town, St. Catherine.
Detective Corporal [Name], a forensic crime scene investigator, provided detailed testimony about processing the scene where George Richards was fatally shot in September 2017. The officer described discovering a vehicle with multiple bullet holes in the windshield, blood smears on the passenger door, spent shell casings nearby, and a substantial pool of blood near the vehicle’s front alongside discarded brown slippers.
Following protocol, the investigator documented the chain of custody for all evidence before proceeding to Spanish Town Hospital where he photographed and processed the victim’s body—a male with Rastafarian hairstyle displaying apparent gunshot wounds to the upper chest. The body was properly tagged, sealed in a white body bag with initialed seals, and documented before transfer to morgue attendants.
Defense attorneys Javed Grant and Tamika Harris launched an aggressive challenge, accusing the detective of recently fabricating evidence about a container collected from the crime scene. Grant pointedly questioned why this container wasn’t mentioned in the officer’s original 2017 statement, crime scene photographs, or schematic drawings.
‘The suggestion is that your reference to obtaining a container on September 16, 2017, is a recent fabrication,’ Grant asserted during cross-examination. ‘There is nothing in your documentation to support any presence of a container that day.’
The prosecution effectively countered this challenge by recalling the evidence disc entered Thursday and displaying two separate photographs that clearly showed the disputed container at the crime scene. An acting deputy director of public prosecutions emphasized that the defense’s insistence on the container’s absence necessitated this photographic verification.
This case represents the second major judicial proceeding against factions of the Klansman Gang, with all 25 defendants pleading not guilty to 16 separate offenses allegedly committed between August 2017 and November 2022. The trial continues Monday before Supreme Court Justice Dale Palmer, who is hearing evidence without a jury.
