Former instructor at the Police Training Academy and law enforcement instructor, Oluyemi Mashama, is urging police officers to be mindful of the extent of force they use to respond to threats.
His comment comes in the wake of an incident involving police and a patron after the One Caribbean Music Festival at the Queen’s Park Savannah, Port-of-Spain, on Sunday morning.
After the concert, several unhappy fans threw glass bottles at the stage front. In responding to the incidents, officers of the Guard and Emergency Branch (GEB) were seen confronting a man who reportedly threw objects, before beating him several times with a baton and throwing him to the ground, where he was also kicked.
The incident was recorded and shared on social media and stirred outcry with some people accusing the officers of using excessive force.
Contacted for comment yesterday, Mashama, who served as a training instructor at the academy for 13 years, with specialty in defence and arrest tactics, said he did not want to say whether the officers acted appropriately or not, as the matter was still being investigated by police.
However, he noted that officers should be mindful that when responding to threats, officers must ensure their actions when confronting attackers are proportional to the threat they face.
“In analysing the video, we have to ask ourselves the questions, if the response of the police officers proportional to the response of the said patron? Was it lawful? Are they going to be held accountable for their actions whether good or bad and was it necessary?” he said.
“Keeping in mind it was one patron and keeping in mind it was seven to ten police officers fully geared up. Let’s say for argument’s sake the person was being assaultive, then you must have the presence of your fellow officers, communication throughout —which the officers were doing —you must go into tactical considerations in these situations, then you have options of escort techniques, physical control and then you have mechanical control.”
The incident was one of several separate bouts of confusion where disgruntled concert-goers expressed their dissatisfaction with the non-performance of several headline acts, including Jamaican dancehall star Vybz Kartel.
Mashama urged the public and police alike to be mindful of their rights.
“I know normally these events would have different sections of police there for whatever may arise. But I always tell police officers that it’s firstly about self-preservation and that doesn’t always mean being reactive and fighting people, it means understanding the law, your rights and what you can and cannot do.”
Responding to Guardian Media’s questions on the matter via email yesterday, the Police Complaints Authority (PCA) also said it was looking into the incident.
“The footage has drawn the attention of the authority and a preliminary investigation has since been initiated. The PCA is actively monitoring the situation and will provide further information or comment when deemed appropriate.”
Guardian Media attempted to contact acting Police Commissioner Junior Benjamin for comment on whether he had received a report into the incident yet but had not received a response up to press time.
Former police commissioner Gary Griffith also condemned the officers’ response on social media over the weekend.
In a social media post, he said, “Anything like this in a professional Police Service, and these officers would be suspended immediately. How could these men be in a tactical unit and not understand use of force policy? If the individual broke the law, or was a serious threat and could not be controlled, you don’t go jabbing and swinging batons and kicking him as if it is two drunk men fighting in a bar.”
Griffith suggested that to suppress the patron, the officers should have taken him to the ground and handcuffed him or used pepper spray.