Anna-Lisa Paul
Senior Reporter
anna-lisa.paul@guardian.co.tt
National Security Minister Fitzgerald Hinds issued detention orders for alleged gang leaders Francis Despot and Joven Gomes yesterday.
Intelligence sources said Despot, also called “Frano” and “Mel,” was credibly identified as a member of the Oropouche Gang, which was said to be involved in narcotics and firearms trafficking and murders.
He was described as “a person conspiring with others, and intending and with the means, to execute a plan to carry out violent retaliatory reprisal murders involving the use of high powered weapons.”
Gomes, also called “Joven Garcia” and “Bobe,” was identified as the leader of the Five Rivers faction of the Resistance Gang, which was said to be “involved in trafficking of high-powered firearms, murders, kidnapping, armed robberies and extortion, and as a person orchestrating and conspiring with others, and intending and with the means, to carry out violent gang activity including the retaliatory murder of prison officers.”
A detention order was also issued for Justin Gomes, known as “Spooky” and “Spooky Dawg,” who was “credibly identified as a member, shooter and enforcer of an organised criminal group known as the Resistance Gang involved in trafficking of high-powered firearms, murders, kidnapping, armed robberies and extortion, and as a person conspiring with others, and intending, and with the means, to carry out violent gang activity including the retaliatory murder of prison officers.”
The detention orders were dated February 24.
There was also a detention order dated February 21 for Emmanuel “Mano” Bownes, an alleged high-ranking member and enforcer for the Upper Waterhole Cocorite Organised Criminal Group, which is affiliated with the Muslim “Nine” Gang.
Bownes was described as “a person assigned the task, and intending and with the means, to expand the territorial control of the first mentioned criminal organisation by using violent intimidatory tactics against members of the public including shootings and murders.”
All four will be detained at the Eastern Correctional Rehabilitation Centre in Santa Rosa, Arima.
The orders, enacted under Regulation 15 of the Emergency Powers Regulations, 2024, allow for the detention of individuals to prevent them from “acting in any manner prejudicial to public safety or public order or the defence of Trinidad and Tobago.”
The regulation further states that “any person in respect of whom a detention order is in force may be arrested without warrant by any police officer and may be detained in such place and under such conditions as the Minister may from time to time direct.”
On Tuesday, acting Deputy Commissioner of Police (DCP), Operations, Curt Simon confirmed that 28 preventive detention orders had been granted since the State of Emergency (SoE) took effect on December 30.