‘Bredda Dawg’ sets Monday date with cops after claims he has issued death threats

A high-stakes situation unfolding in eastern Jamaica has taken an unexpected turn, as the attorney for an accused gang leader says his client will voluntarily turn himself in to Portland law enforcement next week, pushing back against widespread claims that he threatened to kill local police officers.

The chain of events began in the early hours of Wednesday, when members of the Portland Police Division fatally shot two men identified as 21-year-old Troy McKenzie and 21-year-old Marlon Lewis in the Sherwood Forest neighborhood. Law enforcement officials report the shooting occurred during an exchange of gunfire with the pair, who they say are linked to the Corporate Area-based Gully Gang. Following the confrontation, officers recovered two unregistered firearms from the scene.

Within hours of the shooting, reports began to spread that 39-year-old Marious Alanzo Davis — more widely known by his alias “Bredda Dog” and alleged to be a leading figure in the gang — had been spotted near the Port Antonio Police Station and had publicly vowed retaliation against officers for the killings. By Friday, Portland police had been placed on heightened security alert over fears of imminent attacks on members of the force. Unverified posts circulating widely on social media attached Davis’s image to the claims of threats against police.

But Davis’s newly retained legal counsel, attorney Rodain Richardson, has forcefully rejected these accusations, speaking publicly to the *Jamaica Observer* on Friday. Richardson says Davis, who is described as a working poultry farmer operating a legitimate business, had no connection to any threats against the Jamaica Constabulary Force, and is ready to cooperate with authorities to clear his name.

“We are strongly refuting the claims that Mr Davis has made threats against the Jamaica Constabulary Force and intends to allow his name to be cleared in the appropriate manner,” Richardson stated in the interview. “I find this development to be quite curious. We intend to get a full appreciation at the appropriate time as to what exactly is unfolding. Mr Davis has no involvement with respect to any threat being made.”

Richardson also pushed back against recent media coverage that labeled his client a wanted man and linked him to a string of serious criminal cases spanning Jamaica and the United States. He emphasized that Davis is a law-abiding, contributing member of Jamaican society, noting that his client currently runs a small poultry operation selling chickens to local buyers.

“Anything of note about his past is just that — his past,” Richardson added. After seeing the widespread negative reports about him, Davis reached out to his attorney directly to arrange a voluntary surrender. Richardson subsequently negotiated a time and location with a Portland division superintendent, and the pair will attend the Port Antonio Police Station on Monday to complete the process and address all allegations formally.