A beloved inspector, broadcaster and community pillar whose fairness and humility touched every corner of the island. Share Anguilla is mourning a man whose presence was so steady, so familiar, and so quietly influential that his passing feels like a break in the island’s rhythm. Leroy “Brother Lee” Richardson was more than a public health pioneer, more than a cultural contributor, more than a voice on Kool FM — he was one of those rare Anguillians who managed to touch every corner of community life with a spirit that was pleasant, professional, fair, and unfailingly reasonable. His loss has swept across the island like a firestorm because he was woven into the everyday fabric of Anguilla in ways people often didn’t realise until now. “An older photograph of Brother Lee captures the quiet strength he carried throughout his life — a man whose pleasant nature, professionalism and unwavering fairness shaped Anguilla far beyond the roles he held.” For...
The violent confrontation at a gas station in Whithorn, Westmoreland has taken a tragic turn, as 40‑year‑old Dacia Forrester, the woman set ablaze during a dispute with a pump attendant — has died after weeks of battling catastrophic burns.
Dacia Forrester, the 40‑year‑old Westmoreland woman who suffered severe burns during the gas station confrontation, later died in hospital while undergoing treatment for her injuries.
Forrester, who suffered third‑degree burns over approximately 70 per cent of her body, was pronounced dead on Friday at Cornwall Regional Hospital, her sister confirmed. Her death follows a February 19 altercation that shocked Jamaica and ignited fierce national.
Official reports of Dacia Forrester's passing by the Jamaica Observer.
Witness accounts and police reports indicate that Swaby threatened to douse Forrester with gasoline before carrying out the act, setting her alight in full view of bystanders. The attack left Forrester engulfed in flames as onlookers rushed to help, an incident captured in graphic cellphone footage that spread rapidly online.Swaby was initially charged with assault occasioning grievous bodily harm, a charge that now sits under renewed scrutiny following Forrester’s death.
The case has split public opinion across Jamaica: some argue that the attendant acted out of fear after an ongoing dispute and perceived threat, while others insist the response was wildly disproportionate and amounted to a deliberate, lethal attack. With no official indication that Forrester was armed, and with the level of force used resulting in fatal injuries, questions are mounting about whether this was self‑defence gone catastrophically wrong — or an act of extreme violence that demands a murder charge.
As investigators reassess the case in light of Forrester’s death, Jamaica is left grappling with a disturbing reality: a routine workplace dispute escalated into one of the country’s most shocking acts of public violence in recent years.
Collate Swaby, the gas station attendant involved in the Westmoreland fire incident. She was charged after the confrontation that left Dacia Forrester critically injured and later dead, as investigators continue to review the circumstances surrounding the case.
The legal system must now determine whether fear can justify the use of fire as a weapon — and whether the boundaries of self‑defence were shattered the moment a human body became the battleground.