Chester Ain’t Going Nowhere
After reflecting on the latter half of 2024 at the biannual COMPSTAT meeting in Belmopan, the police commanders came together to review crime trends and the strategies they’ve been implementing under Chester Williams’s leadership in his 6th year as Commissioner of Police.
Williams, who said that six years in the role has felt like a long time, credited many of the department’s successes to the support he receives from the commanders and officers he works with.
While he is starting to think about his next steps, Williams made it clear he still wants to stay in public service. This is after he said last year that he would retire this year. “I am not saying that I am leaving now, but certainly I have started to contemplate my next plan, my next move, what I will do after this,” he said. “Yes, I am an attorney. I have a profession I can go to. But believe you me, I have fought all my life to put criminals behind bars. I don’t see myself fighting to take them out.”
In a separate interview yesterday, Williams stated that for now, he “remains a police officer.” He added that there is no need for him to request an extension, saying, “I’ll continue to serve until the minister and prime minister would say otherwise or decide otherwise.” He added that he is a “tenured public officer” set to retire at the age of 55 and is far from such age.
When asked if there was a possibility of him staying on as Commissioner of Police until 2035, Williams laughed and dismissed the idea.
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