Senior Reporter
jensen.lavende@guardian.co.tt
Police Commissioner Allister Guevarro has warned that making threats on social media is against the law and will not be tolerated.
“Your words today can have you in handcuffs tomorrow,” he said.
His warning came in a media release yesterday following two highly publicised incidents in which the lives of the Prime Minister and Opposition Senator Dr Amery Browne were threatened on social media.
Guevarro said: “This behaviour is unlawful, dangerous, and will not be tolerated.”
He added that he “has observed with serious concern” an increase in social media posts in which people made threats of violence against each other, as well as threats directed at public officials.
On Monday, a Diego Martin man who allegedly threatened to murder Opposition Senator Dr Amery Browne was detained for questioning.
Police said the man was being interviewed, but did not provide details on when he was detained or which unit took him into custody. The man is accused of posting threatening messages on Facebook, which Browne reported to police on Saturday.
In a Facebook post, Browne wrote: “I have made a full report to the Police Service based on online death threats made against me and members of my family in the form of specific comments on my Facebook wall. I have been involved in the active politics of Trinidad and Tobago since 2007 and have never experienced anything like this. I am treating the issue very seriously.”
One of the poster’s comments read: “Any time I see u public, I go walk up to yuh and shoot yuh in yuh head.” Another said: “I going a wait outside Parliament when I see yuh I go shoot u.” A third read: “I go send men to kill yuh children.”
Yesterday, Guevarro said that while he supported freedom of expression as a right and believed citizens were free to share their thoughts and opinions, such freedoms end where criminal conduct begins.
“No one has the right to incite violence, intimidate others, or use online platforms to threaten harm. Such actions undermine public safety, destabilise communities, and erode the peace and order that citizens deserve.”
The Police Commissioner added that, in accordance with paragraph 2 of the Schedule of the Emergency Powers Regulations 2025, the minister responsible for national security is empowered to issue a Preventive Detention Order to any person to prevent them from acting in a manner prejudicial to public safety.
“This power is activated when individuals use social media to publish posts or comments that incite violence, invite external interference, or otherwise endanger the safety and stability of the nation. The TTPS will take decisive action. Any individual who uses social media or any digital platform to issue threats, encourage violence, or endanger the safety of any person, including government officials, will face the full force of the law. Our Cyber and Social Media Unit continues to track these offences, and once evidence is gathered, offenders will be identified, located, and prosecuted,” he stated.
Guevarro urged all citizens to conduct themselves responsibly online.
“Share your views, raise your concerns, and participate in national dialogue, but do so within the boundaries of the law. Don’t take chain up from anyone. Your words today can have you in handcuffs tomorrow. Words have consequences, and those who choose to threaten or incite violence will be held accountable.”
Last week, the detention of Olive Green-Jack was gazetted. The order, made on 12 November, stated that Green-Jack should be held for her social media post.
The order said that Green-Jack, of Diego Martin, “made and published public posts and/or comments on social media addressed to the Venezuelan government in an attempt to influence public opinion in a manner likely to be prejudicial to public safety.”
It added that the posts and comments invited violence against the Prime Minister, the Government of Trinidad and Tobago, and members of the public by Venezuela and/or external persons, which revealed “an imminent threat to public safety.”
Green-Jack is being held at the Women’s Prison until February next year.
Guevarro’s warning about social media comes as Homeland Security Minister Roger Alexander said he would write to the Charge d’Affaires of the US Embassy, Dr Jenifer Neidhart de Ortiz, suggesting that the US government revoke the visas of US-based social media users who spread “propaganda and fear” and “place our security forces at risk.”
Alexander also suggested greater policing of social media posts, citing China as an example.
