Jim Brown honed his skills during the politically turbulent 1970s
BY KARYL WALKER 
Sunday Observer staff reporter 
walkerk@jamaicaobserver.com
Sunday, January 27, 2008
This series of articles is not intended to lionise 
or glorify the acts of criminals but to put a historical perspective on 
criminality in Jamaica, with the hope of shedding light on why the 
country is now teetering on the edge of lawlessness. Of significant 
note, as well, is the fact that the subjects of these stories die 
violently and very young.
AFTER the demise of Tivoli Gardens enforcer Claudius Massop, who died
 in a hail of police bullets, and his chief honcho, Carl 'Byah' 
Mitchell, who succumbed to a drug overdose, an opening was created for 
Lester Lloyd Coke, popularly known as 'Jim Brown'. He stepped in to fill
 the breach left by the two men just before the Jamaica Labour Party 
(JLP) landslide victory at the polls in 1980.
Although he was known by the name 'Jim Brown', Coke's original moniker 
was 'Ba Bye', and those who knew him say he was a tough, no-nonsense 
type of man, who fought tooth and nail for his party's honour.
Like Massop, Coke was nabbed by agents of the state, thrown behind bars 
and slapped with a murder charge. After a few months in jail, Coke was 
freed after the main witness to the murder was slain.
It was after his release from jail that Coke shed the moniker 'Ba Bye' 
and took upon himself the nickname 'Jim Brown', after the hall of fame 
American football player.
It is said that Coke honed his skills as a steel-nerved and feared 
enforcer during the politically turbulent 1970s, when the rules of 
engagement in politically volatile areas like the neighbouring 
constituencies of Western Kingston and South St Andrew demanded that the
 enemy be pushed back.
This scenario provided the perfect breeding ground for Coke and others 
of his ilk to evolve. Coke was responsible for keeping his political 
rivals, who would wish to attack his community and inflict violence upon
 its citizens, on the back foot.
Coke, like many before him, was the product of a divisive political system charted by early politicians.
But unlike Massop and Mitchell, Coke was wily enough to wean himself off
 political largesse and, perhaps, can be described as the first 
political enforcer to free himself from the economic shackles foisted on
 him and others of the same ilk by political power brokers.
After the JLP victory in 1980, Jamaica, which was one of the major 
suppliers of marijuana to the United States, Canada and the United 
Kingdom, evolved into a major transshipment port for the deadly drug, 
cocaine. The JLP had chosen to join the US side in the Cold War, and at 
that government's behest, embarked upon a major ganja eradication 
campaign.
The anti-marijuana initiative caused an economic fallout among the 
growers and traders of the illegal crop and forced drug traffickers to 
seek alternative means to make their money.
Cocaine commands a much higher market price than ganja and proved the 
perfect foil for drug traders who diverted their skills to satisfying an
 overwhelming demand for the drug, especially in the United States.
It was during this time that Coke, along with his confidante, Vivian 
Blake, developed a massive drug-running empire, with bases in Florida, 
New York, New Jersey, Philadelphia, Chicago and other parts of the US.
United States federal authorities would be jolted by the brutal 
dispensation and modus operandi of the Jamaican gangsters, among them 
the Spanglers Posse - bitter enemies of the Shower Posse - whose 
original members hailed from Matthews Lane and other nearby areas 
affiliated to the People's National Party.
The Shower Posse, so called because of their penchant for spraying their
 enemies with bullets, were so feared by their rivals abroad that the US
 Government was forced to launch a massive counter offensive aimed at 
destabilising the gang.
The Spanglers Posse were no less brutal, and the political violence 
which had been bred since the 1940s played itself out in the streets of 
North America. That gang was also a target of police investigations.
While Blake was the brain behind the empire, Coke provided the brawn 
and, in the process, gained enough wealth to ignore the feed in the 
political trough which was dispensed in too little amounts by political 
representatives.
But his wealth did not mean that he would lapse in his political duties.
In 1984, Coke reportedly led a team of men from his stronghold of Tivoli
 Gardens into Wilton Gardens, also known as Rema, then a JLP-aligned 
community run by orders from the bosses in 'Garden' (another name for 
Tivoli).
For years Rema was regarded as a sort of bastard cousin of the more 
developed and powerful Tivoli Gardens. But Rema had itself spawned 
fierce street warriors who were hardened in the art of criminal warfare 
by their daily experiences living in an area which was the first line of
 defence against PNP thugs who launched repeated attacks from Arnett 
Gardens.
A disagreement between persons from Tivoli Gardens and Rema prompted 
Coke and his gang's foray into Rema. When the gang left, seven men lay 
dead.
Soon after, police arrested Coke and charged him with seven counts of 
murder. But Coke was again freed after no one came forward to testify 
against him.
On the day of his release, heavily-armed men celebrated by firing a 
barrage of gunshots in the air directly in front of the Supreme Court, 
sending police officers, court staff and members of the bar scampering 
for cover and cowering in fear. 
Coke was held high by the crowd and carried back to his fortress in Tivoli Gardens.
Soon after, then prime minister and member of parliament for West 
Kingston Edward Seaga, along with other JLP officials, visited Rema and 
appealed to the residents to 'let bygones be bygones'.
With his legal troubles in Jamaica behind him and his political 
connections rock solid, Coke now had time to continue his illegal quest 
at wealth creation.
In 1986, federal authorities in the United States reported that the 
Shower Posse had spread their wings to over a dozen US cities and were 
raking in a substantial portion of the 25 per cent of the billion dollar
 illegal drug trade that Jamaican gangs earned.
But as the Shower Posse grew in stature, so did the federal 
investigation into their activities, and in November 1988, 53 Shower 
Posse members were arrested in New Jersey on drug distribution charges.
A month before, a federal grand jury indicted 34 members of the Shower 
Posse, including, Coke, Blake and Blake's two half-brothers, Errol 
Hussing and Tony Bruce.
Coke managed to remain a free man until the beginning of the       1990s
 when international police investigations began closing in on the Shower
 Posse.
Richard 'Storitella' Morrison, a leading posse member, was 'captured' in
 Jamaica by US authorities and illegally whisked abroad to stand trial.
In February 1991, Coke was arrested by local police and locked up at the
 General Penitentiary, now called the Tower Street Adult Correctional 
Facility, after the US Government requested that he be extradited to 
that country to answer to murder and drug trafficking charges.
Coke's bid to acquire a special leave to appeal was rejected by the 
United Kingdom Privy Council and after a year of legal wrangling the 
writing was on the wall.
While Coke languished in prison, his son, Mark Coke, also known as 'Jah 
T', was shot dead as he rode a motorcycle along Maxfield Avenue on 
February 2, 1992.
Jah T was in the process of preparing for a memorial dance in honour of Claudius Massop when he was killed.
The killing of Coke's son sparked a new round of political bloodletting 
and, in the weeks that followed, shootings occurred in Hannah Town, 
Arnett Gardens, Denham Town, Rose Lane and Matthews Lane, prompting then
 prime minister Michael Manley to call for a meeting with Seaga. The 
violence also sparked a march by a group of churches through the 
affected communities.
But the violence would also     spread abroad.
The Florida-based website, www.emergency.com, posted this report in August, 1992.
Miami, FL - A drug gang war that started in Kingston, Jamaica, early in 
1992 may have recently spilled over into the streets and bars of Miami. 
Reportedly, an early Saturday morning nightclub shooting of twenty-two 
(22) people involved members of the Jamaican "Shower Posse". Gang Crimes
 officers of the Broward County Sheriff's Office say that the nightclub 
killings may have been retribution for the February killing of Mark 
Coke, a leader of the Jamaican "Shower Posse" drug gang. The "Shower 
Posse" supposedly gets its name from the "shower" of lead it shoots at  
   rival gangs.
An agent of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms says that 
Saturday's shootings "had all the earmarks" of a Jamaican "Posse" hit. 
Special Agent Joe Vince was quoted by the United Press International as 
saying, "the posses are the most vicious organised crime group in the 
United States today". Capt Al Lambeti of the Broward County Sheriff's 
Office said that the shooting was a "...perfect textbook example of how 
the posse does business".
The younger Coke's murder was rumoured to stem from a dispute between 
Shower Posse members and members of the Black Roses Crew, which was then
 led by William 'Willie Haggart' Moore, who would eventually be killed, 
at a weekly dance called 'Beachline' held at the Hellshire Beach in St 
Catherine.
Popular dancer, Gerald 'Bogle' Levy, was reportedly doused with alcohol 
during the dispute which was diffused by police officers who were on the
 scene.
Three weeks later, the very day his son was buried, Coke was burnt to death in a mysterious fire inside his cell.
Unconfirmed reports suggest that the notorious gangster committed 
suicide because he realised that he would be handed over to the US 
authorities, but this claim has been refuted by others who say his death
 was as a result of a botched escape attempt. Still others say Coke was 
murdered to keep him from spilling the beans to the Americans.
Responses
Just wanted to say carry on the good work of informing Jamaicans of our 
past and how it shapes our present and future.... I missed a few of your
 articles and the archive on the Observer website does not allow access 
to same.
By any chance do you           have a link to a blog with all  the articles... if not.. consider doing one.
Thanks
Courtney Bowen 
ridim1027@yahoo.com
Mr Walker,
I myself left Jamaica in 1974, and before I left I would hear mention of
 some of these names. I knew they were thugs but that was the extent of 
it. Some of the names I never heard of until I came to the United States
 and met people from some of those communities and the media. They never
 got into details like you did in your articles. As a matter of fact, I 
was at a house party in the 70s and there was a woman there with one of 
these notorious men's name tattooed on her arm.
These articles that you write are very informative, especially to those 
of us like myself who were ignorant to what was really going on in 
Jamaica in that time period. It's a kind of history that people from 
Jamaica and their offspring should know about, as strange as it might 
sound. I think you should compile these article in a book and publish 
it. I just wish that there were pictures to go with these names. I 
wanted to see what they looked like. What about their relatives, I 
wonder what was their reaction? These young thugs should learn from 
those that preceded them. When you live by the gun you also die by the 
gun.
I have learned a lot from your articles. all I have to say is, my 
brother, please continue publishing these articles. I look forward to 
reading the Observer on line on a Sunday. Thanks for the information. 
PReid1@nyc.rr.com
Hi,
I am a Jamaican living in Toronto and I wanted you to know that I am 
impressed with your series. I think you are doing a great work by 
researching the roots of our garrisons in Jamaica. You are not afraid of
 exposing the faults of both political parties for being involved in the
 gang development and you do a great job of acknowledging the place 
these gangsters in our society, both as enforcers and protectors.
However, if there is one aspect of your article that I would like to 
critique would be the structure and flow of the story. In reading your 
article it seemed a hodge podge of facts were put together, but I did 
not see a chronological order nor flow of events from paragraph to 
paragraph. To me it seemed you ran with an idea, finished it and 
realised there was another idea to input so you just threw it in the 
next paragraph. For your next article I would hope you put together a 
better       flow, but thanks for the education. It is an important 
topic to discuss.
Regards,
Interested Torontonian
waynekash@gmail.com
I'm fascinated with this part of Jamaican history, seeing that I was born in volatile 1970 Kingston..and have vague and vivid memories of this era..I recalled Massop's death in '79, I was only nine, poisoned flour, the likes of Starky & Hutch, Michigan and Smiley toasted about them in one of their songs..George Flash and Tony Brown, 2 PNP political enforcers who exiled themselves to Cuba after the JLP victory in the 1980 general election..Love your editorial..keep it coming..
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