A ‘wow’ moment for our country

Across the globe, few nations can claim more than a handful of truly transformative, jaw-dropping ‘wow moments’ – achievements so unexpected, so extraordinary, that they redefine what a country believes it can accomplish. For Jamaica, these rare landmarks have long been tied to the dominance of its world-class athletes, from Usain Bolt’s record-breaking feats at the 2008 Beijing Olympics to the legacy of Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce, and an early upset win by the national combined martial arts team against top-ranked Japan. But for a nation that spent decades grappling with endemic gang violence and sky-high homicide rates, the most staggering ‘wow moment’ has arrived not on a track or mat, but in the crime statistics that are reshaping Jamaica’s global reputation.

The first drop in homicides that shook veteran crime fighters last year was unprecedented enough to earn the ‘wow’ label. But no one, not even those who had spent a lifetime advocating for safer communities, predicted the follow-up: as of the end of the first quarter of this year, homicides have plummeted a further 30% from 2025’s already record low. Longtime crime researcher and former law enforcement insider describes the shift as nothing short of revolutionary – a outcome he never expected to witness in his lifetime.

What makes this drop even more remarkable is the shift in policing strategy that has driven it. Where decades of crime-fighting focused on containing mass carnage and minimizing monthly murder counts, today’s force is deploying more than 100 officers to proactive operations in volatile communities to stop a single potential homicide before it occurs. This new level of preventative policing is bearing fruit across every division in Jamaica’s high-crime Area 5, which once included some of the country’s most dangerous killing zones – Spanish Town, Central Village, Grant’s Pen, Common, and 100 Lane.

In St Catherine South, the division where the author works, just five homicides have been recorded in the first quarter, down from a high of 40 in a comparable quarter decades ago. Neighboring St Catherine North, long notorious for violence in Spanish Town, has recorded seven homicides, a 46% improvement over last year, and once recorded nearly 50 murders in a single first quarter. Most strikingly, Area 5 now holds the lowest homicide count of any police division in Jamaica – a first in recorded history, a milestone that once seemed impossible for a region synonymous with gang killings. The murder clear-up rate in St Catherine North already outpaces that of Queens, New York, and the St Andrew North division, also part of Area 5, reports zero homicides for the first quarter of 2026 – a rate matching the safest divisions in Sweden, one of the world’s safest countries.

Criminologists will spend years unpacking the multiple factors that have driven this seismic shift, but the authors points to two core changes under current Police Commissioner Dr. Kevin Blake’s leadership. First, a new focus on micromanagement of crime prevention by commanding officers, paired with a push to promote young, frontline officers to leadership roles early in their careers, rather than waiting for their energy and drive to fade with age. Many of the current senior leaders cutting homicide rates cut their teeth on high-risk entry operations alongside the author, bringing on-the-ground experience to command positions and proving to young officers that there is no glass ceiling for frontline officers willing to take risks. Second, the force has seen a growing, critical role for female officers, with operational leadership regularly joining officers on the ground in harsh, high-risk conditions.

The shift is not just structural: modern resourcing has also transformed policing, bringing the Jamaican force on par with North American departments in equipment. Officers now wear level-four protective vests, drive new vehicles, and work in a culture that recognizes individual effort and provides basic support like meals during long operations – a far cry from decades past when officers carried rifles older than themselves and wore outdated colonial-style uniforms. Most importantly, this progress has been achieved while upholding democratic values and human rights, with no indefinite detention and officers who break the law prosecuted internally by the force.

If Jamaica can maintain the first quarter’s homicide rate for the rest of the year, the national annual rate will drop to 17 per 100,000 people – lower than the Pan-American average of 19 per 100,000. For St Catherine, which has a population of 500,000, the annual rate would drop to 9.6 per 100,000, nearly matching the rate of Miami-Dade County in the United States.

The pressure to maintain this historic progress is high, falling heaviest on Commissioner Blake, who has earned global acclaim as one of the most successful criminal justice leaders of the modern era, equally praised for cutting homicides and upholding human rights. The author stresses that sustaining this progress requires collective national effort: political collaboration between the government and opposition to marginalize gangs, clear recognition from human rights organizations that gangs are the primary enemy of public safety, and protection of Jamaican sovereignty against unnecessary international interference in policing. Most critically, the author argues, the government must provide Blake with full resources and ensure he remains in post to cement this new, safer normal for Jamaica – a future that once seemed unthinkable, but is now within reach.