Special Envoy Demands Action After Cop’s Domestic Abuse Case Collapses in Court

A high-profile domestic abuse case against a serving Belizean police officer has ended in dismissal after the victim withdrew her cooperation, sparking urgent calls for administrative action from the country’s top family and children’s welfare official.

On Monday, a local magistrate threw out all charges against 39-year-old Phillip Garbutt, a constable with the department’s Traffic Support Unit, after 38-year-old Deidra Jacobs, Garbutt’s common-law wife and the alleged victim, told the court she did not wish to proceed with the prosecution. Jacobs, a caregiver who alleged Garbutt attacked her and her 8-year-old son during a February 17 altercation at their Watermelon Street home, denied under questioning from prosecutors that she had been threatened, coerced, or bribed to drop the case. With no cooperating complainant, the prosecution had no evidence to present, forcing the magistrate’s ruling to dismiss both the wounding charge connected to Jacobs and the harm charge linked to her son, and Garbutt — who represented himself in court — was released immediately.

The case first gained widespread public attention after graphic security footage from inside the family home circulated widely across social media platforms. Official police allegations outline that during the dispute, Garbutt choked and punched Jacobs multiple times. When the child stepped in to defend his mother, Garbutt slapped him, resulting in injuries classified as wounding for Jacobs and harm for the child per medical examinations.

Rossana Briceño, Belize’s Special Envoy for the Development of Families and Children, has publicly decried the outcome, releasing an official statement expressing deep concern and outrage over the alleged incident. Briceño’s office emphasized that the accused’s status as a sworn police officer — a role that requires him to protect public safety and uphold the law — makes the alleged abuse even more disturbing.

The Special Envoy’s office is now pushing for urgent administrative intervention from senior government and law enforcement leadership, including the Minister of Police, the Chief Executive Officer of the Ministry of Home Affairs, and the Commissioner of Police. The office is calling for Garbutt to be immediately removed from active duty and held accountable through internal police disciplinary processes, regardless of the collapsed criminal prosecution.

“No officer should ever stand above the law,” the official release read. “Those who fail in their fundamental duty to protect citizens — even more so when the violence is committed against their own family inside their home — forfeit the privilege of wearing the police uniform.”

The collapsed case has reignited public debate in the country over barriers to prosecuting domestic violence, particularly when perpetrators serve in law enforcement, with advocates noting that victim intimidation often goes unreported even when victims deny coercion on the stand.