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Friday, June 20, 2025

Don’t feed criminals and blame police­—Griffith

by

Faine Richards
2162 days ago
20190719
Guard and Emergency officers during an exercise in St Barb’s Laventille, on Friday. 

Guard and Emergency officers during an exercise in St Barb’s Laventille, on Friday. 

Nicole Drayton

Com­mis­sion­er of Po­lice Gary Grif­fith in­sists it is “ab­solute mad­ness” for any­one in au­thor­i­ty to con­tend that a gang mem­ber with­out pend­ing crim­i­nal charges can con­tin­ue re­ceiv­ing State con­tracts, os­ten­si­bly chal­leng­ing a state­ment by Prime Min­is­ter Dr Kei­th Row­ley that it is sole­ly the du­ty of the Po­lice Ser­vice to bring down crim­i­nal gangs.

Grif­fith dou­bled down on his po­si­tion on Fri­day as he re­spond­ed to the ar­gu­ment that po­lice try­ing to crack down on gang vi­o­lence should gath­er ev­i­dence to charge gang mem­bers un­der the An­ti-Gang Act.

Grif­fith has re­peat­ed­ly called out the State for fund­ing crim­i­nal en­ter­pris­es by giv­ing gang lead­ers lu­cra­tive con­tracts for in­fra­struc­ture projects.

Po­lice have blamed gang vi­o­lence for the re­cent surge in homi­cides.

As the mur­der count bar­rels to­ward 300, the T&T Po­lice Ser­vice (TTPS) yes­ter­day con­firmed that 19 peo­ple were killed be­tween Sun­day and yes­ter­day af­ter­noon.

The com­mis­sion­er said the po­lice should not be sin­gled out for what per­sons in lead­er­ship fail to do.

“It is ab­solute mad­ness that any­body that holds a po­si­tion of au­thor­i­ty could feel that by giv­ing crim­i­nal el­e­ments funds and mon­ey that you feel you could ac­tu­al­ly be Pon­tius Pi­late, turn a blind eye, and throw blame on the Po­lice Ser­vice. I will not in any way have any­one throw blame on the Po­lice Ser­vice when they are not do­ing their job,” Grif­fith said dur­ing a tele­phone in­ter­view with Guardian Me­dia yes­ter­day.

“You do not try to feed an en­e­my and then af­ter tell law en­force­ment to deal with the en­e­my,” the com­mis­sion­er said.

At the post-Cab­i­net me­dia brief­ing on Thurs­day, Prime Min­is­ter Dr Kei­th Row­ley was asked to re­spond to the con­tents of a Spe­cial Branch re­port which said sev­en gang lead­ers had ben­e­fit­ed from mul­ti-mil­lion con­tracts from two re­gion­al cor­po­ra­tions con­trolled by the in­cum­bent Peo­ple’s Na­tion­al Move­ment.

Row­ley said the Gov­ern­ment is “not go­ing to get in­volved” in the re­spon­si­bil­i­ty of the TTPS to gath­er ev­i­dence and charge gang mem­bers. He said gov­ern­ment passed the An­ti-Gang law in Par­lia­ment to make mem­ber­ship in a gang a crim­i­nal of­fence, giv­ing the TTPS the leg­isla­tive tool to bring gang lead­ers to book.

He said if there is in­for­ma­tion that some­one is a gang mem­ber, “then they should be charged. And not be­ing charged for get­ting a con­tract but be­ing charged for be­ing in­volved in gang ac­tiv­i­ty.” He stopped short of ad­dress­ing whether some­one sus­pect­ed of be­ing a gang leader should be re­ceiv­ing funds from the State.

Grif­fith said yes­ter­day he did not want to re­spond to the Prime Min­is­ter’s com­ments.

But he in­sist­ed, “There will be civil­ians who will not un­der­stand law en­force­ment. Be­cause some­one is in­volved in crim­i­nal ac­tiv­i­ty it does not mean that you can eas­i­ly ar­rest them.

“A civil­ian will not un­der­stand the dif­fer­ence be­tween in­for­ma­tion, in­tel­li­gence and ev­i­dence, so telling peo­ple, ‘Well, you know who the crim­i­nals are, so ar­rest them.’ it does not make any sense.”

The com­mis­sion­er said gang lead­ers in­vest the rev­enue from State con­tracts in­to oth­er busi­ness­es. He said they al­so use the funds to buy-out of­fi­cials in the Ju­di­cia­ry and law en­force­ment, mak­ing it dif­fi­cult to mount a suc­cess­ful pros­e­cu­tion un­der the An­ti-Gang Act.

Grif­fith sits on the Na­tion­al Se­cu­ri­ty Coun­cil, which is chaired by the Prime Min­is­ter. The Na­tion­al Se­cu­ri­ty Min­is­ter, who is the line min­is­ter for the TTPS, is al­so a mem­ber of the coun­cil.

Asked whether he has spo­ken di­rect­ly with Na­tion­al Se­cu­ri­ty Min­is­ter Stu­art Young about yank­ing State con­tracts from the hands of gang lead­ers, Grif­fith said it would be in­ap­pro­pri­ate to com­ment on con­fi­den­tial com­mu­ni­ca­tions with the min­is­ter.

But Grif­fith did say the TTPS has giv­en the State “all in­for­ma­tion re­quired to show that the State is mak­ing it dif­fi­cult” for po­lice of­fi­cers to crack down on gang vi­o­lence.

“The State, through in­tel­li­gence, you can ver­i­fy that these in­di­vid­u­als have been in­stru­men­tal in crim­i­nal-re­lat­ed ac­tiv­i­ty. Why give them tax­pay­ers mon­ey through State con­tracts?” Grif­fith ques­tioned.

Does the com­mis­sion­er be­lieve mem­bers of gov­ern­ment are lis­ten­ing to his ap­peals?

“The ju­ry will be still out on that,” he replied.

Does he be­lieve he is be­ing set up to fail?

“I will con­tin­ue to do and say what is re­quired to make this a safe coun­try and if it falls in any­one’s gar­den, well, in lo­cal par­lance, it’s a hard luck,” he re­spond­ed.

Guardian Me­dia sent ques­tions to the Prime Min­is­ter via What­sApp on Fri­day ask­ing why the State would wait for an of­fi­cial charge to redi­rect con­tracts away from peo­ple whom in­tel­li­gence sug­gests are in­volved in crim­i­nal en­ter­pris­es.

He did not re­spond.


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