Senior Multimedia Journalist
joshua.seemungal@guardian.co.tt
Businessman Michael St John is suing the Commissioner of Police (CoP) after the Trinidad and Tobago Police Service’s (TTPS) database incorrectly listed him for years as a convicted drug dealer, impacting his reputation.
St John is the owner of Tower Promotion Company Limited and D’Dial Fitness. According to one of St John’s attorneys, Om Lalla, the database matter should be of concern to every citizen because seemingly anyone could have illegitimate charges to their name, undermining their ability to obtain visas to travel abroad or affecting their livelihoods.
St John, also represented by former attorney general Ramesh Lawrence Maharaj, SC, is accusing the CoP of infringing on his human and constitutional rights.
The businessman, who survived an assassination attempt outside his Long Circular Mall gym in January 2024 after he was shot in the face, alleged that incorrect information about him was present in the database called Versadex.
His attorneys said the incorrect information had been present on the database for as many as eight years, despite numerous attempts to have the record corrected.
According to the legal documents, after being denied a United States green card in 2017 because of ‘certain information against him,’ St John began investigating the case. He was given screenshots of his profile on the TTPS database, which listed him as being convicted of drug trafficking in August 2002 and a subsequent deportee from the US.
According to Lalla, it is not an isolated event, as three other clients also had incorrect charges on the TTPS database. He did not provide further evidence for his claim, saying that his clients were concerned about being identified and targeted for speaking up.
Guardian Media obtained a copy of the legal documents filed electronically by St John’s legal team with the Supreme Court of Justice on February 5. St John was granted leave for judicial review on Friday after applying on September 13. Acting CoP Junior Benjamin, who replaced suspended CoP Erla Harewood-Cristopher, must attend a virtual case management conference on March 6 or the office will face a default judgment.
St John said the information was false, as he was never convicted of drug trafficking.
“The second screenshot incorrectly stated, ‘Drug trafficking, status convicted, and Place New York. The fourth screenshot incorrectly stated ‘Foreign offence, Offence cocaine—sell, status convicted and place New York.’
“The seventh screenshot, incorrectly stated deportation and 2022 Aug 15. In the body of the document, it states, ‘Known offender Michael St John was deported from the US on 9th December 2022 for attempting to enter the US on 30 March 2022 by using a forged passport. Please be advised that all narcotic charges against the subject were dropped to expedite the subject’s deportation on false passport charges,” the legal document stated.
In April 2024, St John sent a pre-action protocol letter to CoP Harewood-Cristopher, giving her 14 days to respond.
“It has affected his trading and business interests, which require him to apply for licences, regulatory permits, insurance, and loans for his businesses. This has posed a significant obstacle to his business,” Maharaj said at a press conference in April 2024.
“If this system continues, the TTPS can give you a clean record certificate, a certificate of good record, but on a Versadex system on a TTPS database, you have information about yourself which is not true and which could be disseminated to embassies, banks, insurance companies, whatever it is, damage and destroy your reputation, but the information cannot be corrected by the TTPS.
“You can go and get several certificates of good character and clean records, but you do not know what somebody is recording against you,” Maharaj said in April about the case.
He is now suing the CoP for the failure/refusal to exercise the power and duty under Section 36(1) of the Freedom of Information Act to correct the inaccurate personal information of the claimant stored in the TTPS database, which includes its Versedex database.
According to Section 36(1) of the FOIA Act, “Where a document contains personal information of an individual and that individual alleges that the information is inaccurate, the public authority which holds the document may, on the application, in writing, of that individual, correct the information.”
St John is seeking an order compelling the CoP to correct the inaccurate information in the TTPS database within seven days and a declaration that the impugned decision of the CoP was unlawful and is null and void.
The businessman’s legal team said its client is not looking for money but to clear his reputation.