Joshua Seemungal
Senior Investigative Journalist
joshua.seemungal@guardian.co.tt
Freedom of Information Act documents show the Unemployment Relief Programme (URP) during the People’s National Movement (PNM) tenure paid large sums of money to a notorious gangster, senior police officers, as well as a former PNM General Election candidate.
It has run through several administrations, with the United National Congress Government acting decisively to shut it down last year.
The payments raise questions about the alleged misuse of taxpayer funds throughout the programme’s history.
According to the documents, on September 21, 2018, a company owned by former Muslim Gang affiliate, car dealer and businessman Sheron Sukhdeo received a URP contract worth $399,966.
The type of service offered by Sukhdeo’s company, Revolving Real Estate & Promotions Limited, was not listed in the documents.
According to Indar Parasram, URP’s Programme Manager under the PNM, the contract awarded to Sukhdeo’s company did not come under his leadership.
“Nah. We never had anything to do with that. We never give no contract for that. What could happen is that with contracts ending in 2015 with the General Elections, the UNC gave out millions of dollars in contracts where they never had anybody sign off on it. They just used to assign contracts. Payments would have flowed over for us to pay,” he said.
According to Parasram, the URP under the PNM never awarded a single contract between 2016 and 2025.
“Since I was Programme Manager, we never gave out a single contract. We did in-house work, which is where we hired people and they did pavement and drains and so forth,” he said.
But, the Minister of Rural Development and Local Government, Khadijah Ameen, revealed to the Sunday Guardian that since the closure of URP, the police have already questioned people as investigations into the programme continue.
“We are in the process of winding up URP. We have had cause to send some files to the Fraud Squad. Persons have been questioned by the police in their investigations. Certain annual audits that are required by law will be done, and where necessary, further reports will be made to the TTPS.
“The programme really lost its way under the last administration. Instead of trying to blame UNC, they should be apologising for the abuse of taxpayers’ money. By rooting out corruption, this Government will have more money to employ real persons. People need work. We are cleaning up the mess,” she said.
Revolving Real Estate & Promotions Limited, according to company registry documents, was directed by Sukhdeo and a close female relative.
The company last filed annual returns in 2022 and remains active.
Known as World Boss, Sheron was murdered in March of 2018 – six months before his company received payment from the URP.
Sukhdeo had been charged with assaulting his wife in 2016, but the charges were later dropped. A year later, he was charged with receiving two stolen cars and fraud. He had also been linked to murders, kidnappings, drug dealing, extortions and vehicle thefts, but was never successfully prosecuted.
Two senior officers collect $682,000 in a year from URP
Meanwhile, according to the FOIA documents, between September 2019 and August 2022, the Trinidad and Tobago Police Service’s Guard and Emergency Branch, two senior police officers, and the TTPS Northern Division received more than two million dollars in URP payments.
According to the URP documents, a senior officer of the TTPS’ Guard and Emergency Branch received payments on September 26, 2019, totalling $318,312.
The senior officer was named in the document, but Guardian Media’s Investigations Desk could not successfully contact the retired senior superintendent for comment, so his name was omitted.
The September 2019 payments to the senior Guard and Emergency Branch officer were: $40,008, $29,352, $45,008, $40,304, $33,736, $46,768, $44,464 and $38,672.
According to the documents, a day later, the “a Supt of Guard & Emergency Branch” was paid another $364,538 in total from 12 payments. However, the police officer was not named.
The September 2019 payments to ‘Supt Guard & Emergency Branch were: $30,504, $30,624, $30,312, $21,664, $33,408, $23,104, $21,440, $36,704, $23,224, $48,114, $31,648 and $33,792.
Other police payments
On March 9, 2023, the TTPS Northern Division received $333,320.
No reason for the payment was provided in the documents.
In 2022, the TTPS Guard and Emergency Branch collected $540,662.
On March 23, 2020, the TTPS collected another $136,807 for extra duty work in Diego Martin, Port-of-Spain, Arima and at the URP Head Office.
Three months later, the TTPS received another $333,784 for four separate extra-duty payments at the URP head office and other URP offices.
A retired senior police officer said he was not aware whether the payments could have been part of a clandestine arrangement, but confirmed that police officers were allowed to provide extra duty work for any client.
“All I can tell you is that anybody can use the police service to get officers to work extra duty. If they are in the area and a threat exists, they will, in fact, go and pay for the police officers to work and carry out that duty.
“I remember that happening in Arima and different places. Even some contractors use them in areas where they are doing work, where they feel people might extort them, they would hire police, other than the normal police doing patrols, and they would come off leave and vacation and work a few hours,” the retired officer said.
Meanwhile, Gary Griffith, who was the Commissioner of Police for three years from 2018 to 2021, said extra duty and overtime were among the major sources of police corruption during his tenure.
“There were certain stations and certain units that were blatant. We started giving a certain cap, and when we put that cap, we were able to reduce overtime corruption by over $100 million per annum. I have to verify this particular situation, but overtime is not something you need from the Commissioner of Police, and that is why certain stations and divisions were running wild with it, and it was a major element of police corruption, and because of that, we put a dent in a major enterprise that was over $100 million per annum,” he said.
The 18 payments made to the TTPS’ Guard and Emergency Branch dated August 24, 2022 are $25,136, $26,896, $30,808, $31,104, $23,328, $28,080, $24,184, $6,872, $15,552, $12,480, $22,264, $48,104, $60,064, $39,376, $31,872, $19,576, $20,800 and $14,488. The payments totalled $480,984.
Political connections: $15M for companies linked to PNM General Election candidate
Two companies, once directed by Aaron Sheraz Mohammed, received more than $15.3 million in URP contracts between 2018 and 2025, according to documents.
Mohammed was the PNM’s 2025 General Election candidate for Couva South and its 2019 Local Government election candidate for Claxton Bay/Point-a-Pierre.
The companies in receipt of the contracts were AM Sales and Services, as well as SASA Distributors.
Mohammed was removed as a director from the companies, according to company registry documents, but relatives with the same listed address remained as directors.
Mohammed’s LinkedIn profile still lists him as a manager at AM Sales.
AM Sales and Services received $12.6 million from URP between 2018 and 2025.
Between 2021 and 2024 alone, it collected $10.6 million.
The services offered included: More than $65,000 in September 2019 for works/equipment associated with a box drain at Tulip Avenue, Point-a-Pierre; $28,966 in August 2020 for concrete for works at Calebash Alley; more than $60,000 for concrete paving in Sangre Grande; and $45,697.50 without description in July 2023.
AM Sales and Services was incorporated in September 2018, registered to a Claxton Bay address and provides hardware equipment and building supplies.
A company with the same name was previously incorporated in November 2004, but was removed from the company listing.
URP Payments to AM Sales and Services
2018/2019 - $640,480
2019/2020 - $619, 345
2021/2022 - $4,392,758
2022/2023 - $3,206,402
2023/2024 - $2,988,668
2024/2025 - $758,154
Meanwhile, the second company linked to Mohammed, SASA Distributors, received $2.7 million from URP between 2018 and 2025.
The services offered, among others, included $1,316 in September 2019 for material for the construction of a box drain at Tulip Avenue; $22,948 for ‘Couva Building Renovations’ in February 2022; $11,174 for ‘Head of Construction, Chaguanas’ in August 2022; and $58,500 for ‘Reg. 5 Building Finish’ in May 2024.
SASA was incorporated in October 2006 and was registered at a San Fernando address.
Mohammed was removed as a director in 2020, but two relatives with the same listed address remained as directors.
URP Payments to SASA Distributors
2018/2019 - $6,230
2019/2020 - $20,535
2021/2022 - $930,531
2022/2023 - $812,153
2023/2024 - $537,482
2024/2025 - $399,543
Former URP Programme Manager Indar Parasram confirmed that Mohammed’s companies received payments.
“That is for material purchase. That is not a contract. Contract is different. A contract is when you award a tender. This is where you purchase material to do in-house labour. Just supply material, nothing to do with contracts,” he said.
Guardian Media’s Investigations Desk called AM Sales and Services several times over the last two weeks.
Employees said they could not give out Mohammed’s number, but promised they would take a message and have him return our calls for comment.
The calls were never returned.
Guardian Media’s Investigations Desk then obtained Mohammed’s number, but he did not answer calls or respond to messages.
Emails were also sent, as well as messages to Mohammed’s social media election campaign pages. No response was received.
