Shane Superville
Senior Reporter
shane.superville@guardian.co.tt
A series of early morning police exercises led to the seizure of unauthorised video cameras, which officers suspect may have been used in monitoring their patrols and the movements of rival criminal gangs.
The exercises, which began at around 3 am, involved officers of the Besson Street CID, the Port-of-Spain Task Force, the Inter Agency Task Force (IATF), the Guard and Emergency Branch (GEB) and the T&T Regiment. The joint unit visited several areas on Production Avenue and later Pioneer Drive, where there had been community violence recently, following a brawl among residents on Carnival Monday (March 3).
As has been a custom when they are going into “hotspot” communities, the officers invited a T&T Electricity Commission (T&TEC) crew to check for illegal electricity connections, having noticed such activity as a trend in such areas.
As police searched several houses, the T&TEC technicians indeed found illegal connections and began disconnecting electricity cables and wires to the offending properties.
During the disconnection exercise, though, the technicians and police also noticed several security cameras which were fixed on lampposts at street corners and trees, with a few pointing to the Sea Lots coastline.
One senior officer told Guardian Media officers believe the cameras were being used to monitor the movements of police patrolling the neighbourhood, and possibly the movements of Coast Guard officials along the shore.
Twenty-two cameras and four Digital Video Recorders (DVRs) were confiscated by police during the exercise.
DVRs are used to capture, store and manage video footage collected by the cameras.
Sources said Cyber Crime Unit officers may be brought in to follow the origin and networks behind the cameras as inquiries continue over the next few weeks.
The illegal electricity connections, which were made using alligator clamps, clips and other makeshift connections, led to several structures throughout Sea Lots.
One officer at the scene told Guardian Media that they suspected the theft of electricity was part of wider criminal activity where gangs allowed residents to make the connections to electricity poles for power, in exchange for cash.
During the exercise, six men and three women were arrested for the theft of electricity.
Addressing the issue during a TTPS media briefing yesterday, ACP North-West Garvin Henry confirmed the exercise took place but could not verify the seizure of unauthorised cameras and was unable to provide a final figure on the number of persons arrested at that time.
“That operation did in fact take place and I do not think it is quite completed so to give a tally, it may not be accurate,” Henry said.
“But yes, persons were caught and arrested for stealing of electricity and other offences. As far as the cameras are concerned, I will have to confirm that part of it.”
Investigators suspect that the person who installed the Sea Lots cameras may have already been arrested as part of ongoing State of Emergency (SoE) activities over the past two months.
Another officer who asked not to be named said the presence of the cameras was not a new phenomenon, but was hopeful they could find the culprits responsible for the installation of the devices.
“It would be difficult, because Sea Lots is a very close-knit community and persons may be unwilling to come forward and give information to the police out of loyalty, or out of fear of reprisal, but as the matter is still fresh, we hope we can at least make some inroads in the investigation.”
Also contacted for comment, Minister in the Ministry of National Security Keith Scotland said he would not comment on the matter.
Guardian Media sent questions to T&TEC’s corporate communications unit via email but did not receive a response up to press time.
The exercise was led by acting ASP Soodeen, ASP Cadette and acting Insp Durga, of the Port-of-Spain Division.
2nd troubling incident
Yesterday’s incident was similar to one last May, when officers of the North-Central Division removed 23 cameras which were also illegally installed on T&TEC light poles.
The cameras were removed from streets on Monte Grande, Tunapuna and Bassanta Trace, St Augustine, and were believed to be used to monitor police patrols, while also serving as an “early warning” system for criminals.
Responding to this discovery last May, National Security Minister Fitzgerald Hinds was reported as saying that the discovery of the cameras was “nothing new,” as criminals have always wanted to spy on police operations.
“We have seen this in Trinidad and Tobago before, this occurs across the world and is not unique to Trinidad and Tobago,” Hinds said at the time.
As of yesterday, one officer in an investigative section confirmed that the enquiry into the discovery of those cameras from last May was unable to discover who installed the devices, despite the intervention of the police Cyber Crime Unit and the Tunapuna Police Station’s CSI unit.
The officer, however, maintained that once credible investigation surfaced, they would be able to “revisit” the matter.
Gangster caught during exercise
As part of yesterday’s exercises, police arrested a man described as a “high-ranking” gang member in Port-of- Spain, when they intercepted the car he was travelling in.
Police said the man was believed to be planning to leave the country over the next few days and arrested him as part of ongoing inquiries into murders and shootings.
The man—who is in his mid-forties—was arrested several times in the past.