If you are not already aware, the One Order Gang was considered to be the gang that was affiliated with the Jamaica Labour Party (JLP). Their rival, the Klansman Gang, was deemed to be affiliated with the People’s National Party (PNP). Whether you want to interpret the word “affiliation” as “ally” is entirely up to you, but for this crime reporter, the word “affiliated” only means that people labeled them as such.
Bunman was the leader of the One Order Gang. He had an agreement with Bulby of the rival gang that allowed them to coexist. However, Bulby died in 2005. In a regular scenario, with regular people who do not own guns, there are certain things that would essentially make a contract null and void. One thing would be one party no longer working with the small organization you signed with, another would be one person moving out of the country. Bulby did both of those things when he died. He was no longer part of the Klansman Gang, and he was no longer living in Jamaica. In more direct terms, he died. So there could be no agreement between the two.
It seems, however, that Bulby did not take this into consideration when he was living lhis life like it wasn’t in danger. In our previous story, we mentioned that there are certain idiosyncrasies that are common knowledge amongst gangsters, one of them being hiding when you are being hunted. Now that the agreement was null and void, it was time for Bunman to act as such: prey.
The other men who formed the Klansman gang were now all vying for leadership. And let’s just say, no one made the agreement with Bunman but Bulby. And even if they held off killing him for years, now that their leader, or for some, fellow gang member, had died, they did not care to follow his orders. He could no longer punish them.
Bunman’s failure to consider all the possibilities started leading to his expiration.
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