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Gun Court
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Gun Court : ウィキペディア英語版
Gun Court

The Gun Court is the branch of the Jamaican judicial system that tries criminal cases involving firearms. The Court was established by Parliament in 1974 to combat rising gun violence, and empowered to try suspects ''in camera'', without a jury. The Supreme Court, Circuit Courts, and Resident Magistrate's Courts function as Gun Courts whenever they hear firearms cases. There is also a Western Regional Gun Court in Montego Bay. Those convicted by the Gun Court are imprisoned in a dedicated prison compound at South Camp in Kingston. Until 1999, the Gun Court sessions were also held in the same facility.
The long sentences of the Gun Court and its restrictions on the rights of the accused have given rise to constitutional challenges, some of which have been appealed to the Privy Council in London. These cases have resulted in some modifications to the court, but have upheld it on the whole. The Gun Court system has also been the target of criticism because of its lengthy delay in hearing cases, and the continuing rise in gun violence since its adoption.
== Background ==
In the early 1970s, Jamaica experienced a rise in violence associated with criminal gangs and political polarization between supporters of the People's National Party and the Jamaica Labour Party.
After a rash of killings of lawyers and businessmen in 1974,
the government of Michael Manley attempted to restore order by granting broad new law enforcement powers in the Suppression of Crime Act and the Gun Court Act. The Suppression of Crime Act allowed the police and the military to work together in a novel way to disarm the people: soldiers sealed off entire neighbourhoods, and policemen systematically searched the houses inside for weapons
without requiring a warrant.
The goal was to expedite and improve enforcement of the 1967 Firearms Act,〔
which imposed licensing requirements on
ownership and possession of guns and ammunition,
and prohibited automatic weapons entirely.〔The Firearms Act, 2.(1):
"prohibited weapon" means-

:::(A) any artillery or automatic firearm; or
:::(B) any grenade, bomb or other like missile."

The Firearms Act, 29.(2):
No licence, certificate or permit shall be granted in relation to any prohibited weapon.

Firearm licences in Jamaica require a background check, inspection and payment of a yearly fee,
and can make legal gun ownership difficult for ordinary citizens.
The new judicial procedures of the Gun Court Act were designed to ensure that firearms violations would be tried quickly and harshly punished.〔
Prime Minister Michael Manley expressed his determination to take stronger action against firearms, predicting that "It will be a long war. No country can win a war against crime overnight, but we shall win. By the time we have finished with them, Jamaican gunmen will be sorry they ever heard of a thing called a gun."〔 In order to win this war, Manley believed it necessary to fully disarm the public: "There is no place in this society for the gun, now or ever."〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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