🗣 TRENDING - TOPIC 🗣

News Round-Up: Celebrity Losses, Windrush Fallout, Katie Price Scam Claims, and Reggae Land 2026 Dominates.

FOLLOW ALL ANGLES UK BLOG Here are your All Angles UK news round‑up: From emotional celebrity losses and fresh scrutiny of the Windrush fallout to festival updates, rising Hollywood talent, and new twists in the Katie Price “Danish Deception” saga follow the links to dive into each full story Snoop Dogg’s Granddaughter Dies . Snoop Dogg’s family is grieving after the heartbreaking loss of his young granddaughter, a tragedy that has shaken fans across the world. The child’s passing has prompted an outpouring of sympathy, with supporters and fellow artists flooding social media with messages of love, prayers, and solidarity. Many have highlighted the family’s long history of resilience, urging them to stay strong during what is undoubtedly an unimaginably painful moment. The loss has also sparked wider conversations about cherishing loved ones and the fragility of life, as the music community rallies around the family in their time of mourning. West Midlands Trains Returns to Public ...

START REGGAELAND 2026 EARLY - GO ON - PRESS PLAY

CURRENT TOPICS OF DISCUSSION - VOICE YOUR OPINION BELOW

Show more

Anguilla Bets on New Forensic Provider and Expanded CCTV in 2026 — Commissioner Confident Justice Will Come for 2025’s Unsolved Killings


Follow us on Socials: Facebook and Instagram

Anguilla is entering a defining moment in its fight against violent crime, and all eyes are on Commissioner of Police Robert M. Clark as the island grapples with a troubling pattern of unsolved homicides. With eleven murders from 2025 still without resolution and new killings already recorded in 2026, public confidence in the justice system is stretched thin. Residents are demanding more than promises — they want visible action, stronger investigative tools, and a police force equipped to meet the scale of the crisis.

The Government of Anguilla held a press conference following the recent murders that have shaken the nation.

Commissioner Clark has confirmed that Anguilla will transition to a new UK‑supported forensic provider following a review of the previous arrangements used in 2025. This shift aligns Anguilla with other Overseas Territories such as the British Virgin Islands and the Turks and Caicos Islands, where UK‑backed forensic teams assist with evidence processing and major crime investigations. 

Anguilla had a 0% homicide clearance rate for the year 2025 — a rare and troubling statistic for any jurisdiction, especially one as small and tightly knit as Anguilla

Yet even with these regional partnerships, conviction rates across the Caribbean remain uneven, hindered by witness reluctance, gang‑related violence, and limited local capacity. Anguilla’s adoption of a new forensic provider is a critical step forward, but it will only be effective if paired with stronger on‑island investigative resources.

Recording of press conference can be seen below: or Click Here.

That is where the Commissioner’s second announcement becomes crucial: the long‑awaited National CCTV Infrastructure is finally scheduled for delivery this year. Expanded surveillance coverage will give investigators access to reliable visual evidence in cases where community silence has stalled progress. 

Advertisement

CCTV alone cannot solve crime, but it can strengthen cases, support prosecutions, and provide the kind of evidential clarity Anguilla has desperately lacked. Combined with improved forensic support, the island is poised to modernize its investigative framework — but technology cannot replace manpower.

Second Homicide of 2026 Deepens Anguilla’s Crisis: 11 Murders from Last Year Still Without Justice

Anguilla’s police force remains understaffed for the scale of the challenges it faces. If the island is serious about reversing its homicide trend, it must invest in recruiting, training, and retaining more officers. Forensics and CCTV will strengthen investigations, but without enough boots on the ground — officers who can respond quickly, gather intelligence, build community trust, and follow leads — the island risks repeating the failures of 2025. 

Advertisement 

Commissioner Clark’s announcements signal progress, but the real test will be whether Anguilla pairs these upgrades with the human resources needed to deliver justice. Until then, the island remains at a crossroads, caught between new tools and old problems, waiting to see whether this moment becomes a turning point or another missed opportunity.

📣 Share this story from ALL ANGLES UK:

Comments

Follow Us on Social Media

Instagram Facebook Bluesky