Compol Says Four Murders Solved During SOE

Nearly three weeks after the expiration of a controversial state of emergency (SOE) in Belize District, the nation’s top law enforcement official is pushing back against widespread criticism of the security measure, highlighting key progress that the extra powers brought to long-stalled homicide investigations. The SOE, which concluded its run on June 8, 2026, has faced sharp public pushback after multiple fatal shootings, including a high-profile murder in a busy central location, occurred within the designated security zones the measure was supposed to protect.

Commissioner of Police Dr. Richard Rosado defended the policy in a press briefing this week, pushing back on narratives that the SOE represented a failure of Belize’s policing strategy. He emphasized that public safety observers and critics have misunderstood the core mandate of the recently implemented emergency order.

“One of the primary goals of this state of emergency was to give our investigative teams space to advance their work without obstruction from criminal networks or outside interference,” Rosado told reporters. “On that front, we delivered: we were able to close out at least four murder cases that would likely have remained open without the expanded authorities we received during this period.”

The extra law enforcement powers granted under the SOE gave detectives critical leeway to pursue leads, interview persons of interest, and break through barriers that had frozen progress on cold and active homicide investigations for months, Rosado explained. Without these special provisions, many of these breakthroughs would not have been possible, he added.

Dr. Rosado also addressed one of the most high-profile questions raised by critics: how a murder could take place on Albert Street, a heavily policed central commercial corridor, during peak Saturday afternoon traffic, when pedestrian and vehicle activity is at its highest. The incident has fueled speculation that criminal groups have grown emboldened and no longer fear intervention from Belizean law enforcement.

In response, Rosado acknowledged that criminals will always exploit gaps in security when they believe an opportunity exists to act. He reaffirmed the police service’s core commitment to holding violent offenders accountable: “Regardless of when or where criminals choose to strike, our mandate remains unchanged: we will identify every perpetrator, address every act of violence, and bring those responsible to justice.”

The debate over the effectiveness of emergency policing measures in Belize District continues, with residents and public safety advocates split on whether the temporary expansion of police powers delivers enough public good to justify the potential restrictions on civil liberties that come with SOE declarations.