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Monday, July 7, 2025

CoP on one-year achieve­ments

Murder count could have been over 1,000

by

Peter Christopher
2151 days ago
20190816
Commissioner of Police Gary Griffith speaks to member of the media yesterday during the review of his first year in office at TTPS Admin building, Port-of-spain.

Commissioner of Police Gary Griffith speaks to member of the media yesterday during the review of his first year in office at TTPS Admin building, Port-of-spain.

Abraham Diaz

Com­mis­sion­er of Po­lice Gary Grif­fith says de­spite his achieve­ments over the last year in of­fice, mur­ders and the fear of crime con­tin­ues to be his biggest chal­lenges.

The mur­der count for this year has equalled the last year’s fig­ure with the lat­est killing tak­ing place on Thurs­day night in Mor­vant.

Grif­fith ac­knowl­edged that had it not been for the good work of his of­fi­cers, it could have been worse.

“There have been some sit­u­a­tions where based on prop­er in­tel­li­gence and prop­er op­er­a­tions some­times over 10-15 per­sons could have been killed in one night,” said Grif­fith.

“Per­sons will try to crit­i­cise the Trinidad and To­ba­go Po­lice Ser­vice based on what you would have seen with the homi­cide rate, but I can as­sure you that the homi­cide rate in re­la­tion to the pop­u­la­tion if you look at the num­ber of firearms we have and the oth­er sig­nif­i­cant fac­tors that we en­counter on a dai­ly ba­sis. The homi­cide rate could be well have been over 1,000 per an­num,” said Grif­fith.

“If had not been for the hard work, the ded­i­ca­tion to du­ty and per­form­ing be­yond the call of du­ty where po­lice of­fi­cers have put their lives on the line to en­sure they can ac­tu­al­ly re­duce the homi­cides that were tak­ing place.”

He said while there had been crit­ics of the ac­tions of the Po­lice Ser­vice un­der his watch, his of­fi­cers had been act­ing in the in­ter­est of the na­tion’s se­cu­ri­ty.

He point­ed to the re­cent out­cry fol­low­ing a po­lice op­er­a­tion in Las Cuevas as an ex­am­ple.

“There was a very suc­cess­ful op­er­a­tion that took place re­cent­ly in Las Cuevas, had it not been for that there would have prob­a­bly been an es­ca­la­tion in homi­cides. But the main pho­to­graph be­ing tak­en was of a la­dy’s door be­ing bro­ken in­to rather than the fact that we did could have pre­vent­ed oth­er homi­cides from tak­ing place,” said Grif­fith.

On Thurs­day, dur­ing a mas­sive sweep in the com­mu­ni­ty once con­trolled by mur­dered gang leader Vaughn “Sand­man” Mieres, po­lice de­tained 22 peo­ple and seized guns, am­mu­ni­tion.

Grif­fith said there were sev­er­al chal­lenges which hin­dered the po­lice’s fight to ar­rest the mur­der rate; in­clud­ing the pre­vi­ous in­car­na­tion of the Firearms Act which saw sev­er­al peo­ple re­leased less than a year af­ter be­ing ar­rest­ed and the fact that many pris­on­ers were al­lowed to mas­ter­mind hits from be­hind bars.

The Firearms Act was amend­ed in Par­lia­ment re­cent­ly and in­creas­es the penal­ty for of­fend­ers—up to life im­pris­on­ment on the third con­vic­tion.

Pris­on­ers or­dered 50 killings

The Com­mis­sion­er said at least 50 mur­ders had be con­duct­ed fol­low­ing or­ders sent from the na­tion’s pris­ons.

“There have been a num­ber of dif­fer­ent fac­tors that we can look at, that it is much more than just the Trinidad and To­ba­go Po­lice Ser­vice. The ac­cess to pris­on­ers call­ing shots from the in­side. Over 50 homi­cides this year, through in­tel­li­gence gath­er­ing, have been re­lat­ed to per­sons in pris­ons call­ing hits on per­sons,” said Grif­fith, who said there would soon be a col­lab­o­ra­tion with the Pris­ons Ser­vice to cur­tail such acts.

Grif­fith said de­spite the chal­lenges, as head of the or­gan­i­sa­tion he had been mak­ing moves every week to im­prove the Po­lice Ser­vice.

He said over 75 poli­cies had put in place with the es­tab­lish­ment of the Spe­cial Op­er­a­tions Re­sponse Team, and the re­duc­tion of the over­time pay­ments from over $300 mil­lion to $126 mil­lion as some of his achieve­ments in the past year.

Con­verse­ly, Grif­fith said in his first year had not been prop­er­ly able to bud­get for his plans and was look­ing for­ward to do­ing so in his sec­ond year.

He al­so laud­ed the train­ing work done for of­fi­cers so that a Gen­der-Based Vi­o­lence Unit can be es­tab­lished in the com­ing year.

Grif­fith not­ed that about 40 mur­ders a year are con­nect­ed to do­mes­tic vi­o­lence.

He said that with the es­tab­lish­ment of this unit more vic­tims of do­mes­tic vi­o­lence may be will­ing to come for­ward with their re­ports with­out fear of em­bar­rass­ment or stig­ma­ti­sa­tion.

Grif­fith said he aimed to re­duce the mur­der toll by 10 per cent an­nu­al­ly for the next decade, which would halve the mur­der count in five years.

How­ev­er, he said that this would not nec­es­sar­i­ly lead to a pub­lic per­cep­tion that crime is down.

“Crime re­duc­tion and the per­cep­tion and fear of crime are two dif­fer­ent things. In 1999, there was a cer­tain Prime Min­is­ter where the homi­cide rate was 95. And the coun­try thought that he was fail­ing be­cause they still spoke about how he threw his hands in the air. And the homi­cide rate was less than 100, so it meant that even though the homi­cide rate was low the per­cep­tion and fear of crime was still there,” said Grif­fith, “My op­er­a­tion is two-fold, it is to re­duce crime but to al­so take away the per­cep­tion and fear of crime.”

Dur­ing the press con­fer­ence, Grif­fith al­so show­cased the brand new po­lice badge, sim­i­lar to those used by po­lice of­fi­cers in the US, which would be added to of­fi­cer’s uni­form in the com­ing year.

TECH­NOL­O­GY

 Three Op­er­a­tion Com­mand Cen­tres

 Of­fi­cers Equipped with Body Cam­eras

 50 Ve­hi­cles Out­fit­ted with Cam­eras

 Emer­gency Re­sponse Pa­trol Ve­hi­cles Mon­i­tored via GPS

NEW/IM­PROVED UNIT

 Emer­gency Re­sponse Pa­trol (ERP)

 Spe­cial Op­er­a­tions Re­sponse Team (SORT)

 Spe­cial In­ves­ti­ga­tions Unit (SIU)

 Cold Case Miss­ing Per­sons Unit

 White Col­lar Crime Unit

 Spe­cialised Team as­signed to Max­i­mum Se­cu­ri­ty Pris­ons

 Re­vamped E-999

OP­ER­A­TIONS

 Op­er­a­tion Strike Back: 27 ex­er­cis­es, 940 ar­rests, 33 guns, 370 rounds of am­mo & 123.5 kgs in nar­cotics seized

 Solved 11 high-pro­file kid­nap­ping cas­es with­out ran­soms be­ing paid, 5 mul­ti­mil­lion-dol­lar drug dusts in West­moor­ings, Val­sayn and Cunu­pia

 Cracked hu­man traf­fick­ing rings in West­ern Di­vi­sion

 Re­cap­tured 14 prison es­capees

TRAIN­ING

 Gen­der-Based Vi­o­lence

 Hu­man Traf­fick­ing

 New Foren­sic Sci­ence/ Crime Scene In­ves­ti­ga­tions tech­niques

 Use of Non-Lethal Weapons

 Cus­tomer Ser­vice & Pub­lic Re­la­tions

TRANS­FOR­MA­TION PLANS

 In­tro­duced poly­graph & ran­dom drug test­ing for all of­fi­cers

 Closed out­stand­ing high-pro­file cas­es (Email­gate, etc)

 Is­sued over 1,500 Firearm User’s Li­cens­es

 Re­duced over­time bill from $360 M to $120 M

 Re­struc­tured or­gan­i­sa­tion­al flow of TTPS

 Re­vamped Le­gal Unit

 I Sup­port Our Ser­vice (ISOS) & Con­verge

 Com­mis­sion­er’s Cup Foot­ball Tour­na­ment

 Ac­quired over 100 non-lethal weapons

 Un­veiled Memo­r­i­al Stone


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