Senior Reporter
anna-lisa.paul@guardian.co.tt
Commissioner of Police (CoP) Allister Guevarro has no intention of stepping down or bowing out – despite mounting public calls for him to be removed as head of the country’s leading national security agency.
Speaking with Guardian Media during an impromptu interview at the Police Administration Building, Port-of-Spain, yesterday, Guevarro, when confronted with the online furore over the police killing of Joshua Samaroo and calls for him to step down over his handling of it, said, “There is no need to step aside.”
Extending condolences to grieving relatives, he said, “The loss of any life is sad and regrettable.”
He urged the public to trust the robust systems in place as simultaneous and independent investigations into Samaroo’s killing continue, assuring that the T&T Police Service was cooperating fully with the Professional Standards Bureau (PSB) and the Police Complaints Authority (PCA) in the probe of the matter.
In the face of pushback from the population and relatives of the deceased, demanding he step aside and even resign, he said, “There is no need to step aside.”
Samaroo was shot dead by police after he crashed his car at the corner of Bassie Street Extension and Dookiesingh Street in St Augustine, following a high-speed chase that started in Maloney on January 20th. His wife, Kaia Sealy, was also shot in the incident but has since been released from hospital and is recuperating at home.
The police initially said Samaroo was killed in a shootout but a subsequent video that was posted to social media appeared to show him putting both hands outside the car before he was shot by officers.
Asked about his continued stance not to suspend the officers involved in the fatal shooting, or to place them on administrative leave for the duration of the investigation, Guevarro revealed, “The officers are no longer functioning where they were. They are not interfacing with the public.”
Appealing to Samaroo’s family and the public to allow the agencies investigating the extrajudicial shooting to allow it to take its course, Guevarro said, “In due time, all will be revealed.”
He dismissed claims that he spoke prematurely and insisted his statements were made based on information available to him.
Asked if after viewing video footage captured by a resident’s security camera warranted a change of heart, he said, “Having viewed that footage as well as others, there is an investigation currently underway. And I will have information in my possession or data in my possession that the members of the public are not privy to.”
He added, “It pains my heart that I wanted to release this information to the public, but I was advised against it because they said legally, that that would prejudice the outcome of the investigation, and I don’t want to go down in history as the person to have put something out into the public that was inimical to the investigative process. So again, I urge the public to allow the process to take its course.”
On why he has not sent the officers on leave, he said, “As the investigation progresses and additional data comes to me, then I will examine the data that is presented to me, and a decision will be made at that time. But at this time, there is no information to guide or suggest that those officers should be placed on suspension administratively.”
He denied the decision was a hardline stance or an arrogant defence.
“The officers are not on suspension. They have not been placed on administrative leave. But as far as I can tell you, they are not currently functioning in the area that they were functioning in. They’re not interfacing with the public at this time,” he confirmed.
He outlined the process to be followed whenever there is a police-involved shooting. He said a First Division officer is appointed to investigate and simultaneously, the Professional Standards Bureau and the Police Complaints Authority, which is an independent body, also investigate to see if there was any malfeasance on the part of the police or during the investigation itself.
“With that in mind, the DPP must now give a pronouncement, and he would also guide the investigator or the investigations towards proving or disproving the facts. If it is that no one is charged criminally, you know that there is still an option available now that has always been there. In any fatal police shooting that no one is charged, there is a coroner’s inquest.”
Regarding the call by Samaroo’s relatives for him to step aside as the investigation continues, as they are worried about interference and cover-up, the top cop stated, “I have no direct involvement in the investigation and there is no reason for me to step aside.”
He also welcomed the T&T Police Service Social and Welfare Association’s endorsement of his decision.
“They are all part of the same professional organisation, where we are taking an oath to protect and serve the members of the public. And thus, being police officers themselves, they are well aware of some of the situations that may arise that cause police officers to be placed in these very precarious positions.”
