by Cedric ‘BIG CED’ Thornton
On July 31, the appeal judges in Jamaica determined that the case would not go back to court, setting the freedom of Kartel, who is reportedly in poor health.
Kartel has always maintained his innocence.
Kartel and his co-defendants, Shawn Campbell, Kahira Jones, and Andre St John, were given life sentences, with the dancehall artist being told he would have to spend a minimum of 35 years in prison.
After initially appealing his sentence in Jamaica courts, he took his case to the Privy Council, where the London court agreed with Kartel, and the judges said it was “fatal to the safety of the convictions which followed” and “an infringement of the [defendants’] fundamental right to a fair hearing.”
On July 31, Jamaica’s Court of Appeal’s Justice Marva McDonald-Bishop stated she and the other judges weighed up the “egregious nature and seriousness of the offense” against the amount of time passed, the lack of access to witnesses and evidence as well as the huge expense of a retrial. Another determining factor was Kartel’s “declining health” and the effects of what a new trial would have had on his physical and mental well-being.
“We conclude that the interests of justice do not require a new trial,” the court said, formally acquitting the recording artist and his co-defendants.
RELATED CONTENT: ‘No More Jumping Off Speaker Boxes’: Dancehall Artist Spice Updates Fans on Her ‘Medical Scare’
Source: Black Enterprise