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Saturday, April 5, 2025

PM reveals real reason for firing Darryl Smith

by

Sampson Nanton
1725 days ago
20200714
Darryl Smith

Darryl Smith

by Samp­son Nan­ton

Prime Min­is­ter Dr Kei­th Row­ley has dis­closed the re­al rea­son he fired for­mer Sport Min­is­ter Dar­ryl Smith, say­ing it had noth­ing to do with sex­u­al ha­rass­ment but be­cause Smith in­ter­fered with the prop­er process of the Pub­lic Ser­vice, re­sult­ing in a fi­nan­cial cost to tax­pay­ers.

The prime min­is­ter made the dis­clo­sure as he ad­dressed a pub­lic meet­ing in sup­port of the PNM's San Juan/Barataria gen­er­al elec­tion can­di­date, Ja­son Williams on Tues­day night.

Smith was fired in April 2018.

At the time of the dis­missal, there were re­ports of sex­u­al mis­con­duct in of­fice and a sub­se­quent pay­ment of $150,000 made to the al­leged vic­tim Car­rie-Ann More­au, to­geth­er with a Non-Dis­clo­sure Agree­ment that blocked any de­tails from pub­lic scruti­ny.

How­ev­er, Dr Row­ley said Tues­day that no com­plaint of sex­u­al ha­rass­ment came be­fore him.

"In my in­ves­ti­ga­tion of the Dar­ryl Smith sit­u­a­tion there was no com­plaint be­fore me and no doc­u­ment be­fore me that had any­thing to do with sex­u­al ha­rass­ment. I com­mu­ni­cat­ed with the lawyer and he con­firmed there was no com­plaint in there about sex­u­al ha­rass­ment," the prime min­is­ter said.

He told the meet­ing that while prime min­is­ters were not ob­lig­at­ed to say why they hire and fire min­is­ters, he want­ed to state why Smith was dis­missed.

"I fired Dar­ryl Smith for in­ter­fer­ing im­prop­er­ly in the Pub­lic Ser­vice. He did not want to con­tin­ue hir­ing the woman be­cause, for rea­sons giv­en to the PS (Per­ma­nent Sec­re­tary) she was un­sat­is­fac­to­ry in her job. The PS would have been told that and the PS pre­pared a dis­missal let­ter," he stat­ed.

He con­tin­ued: "When he did that and the PS put the let­ter of dis­missal and put the com­plaints by the min­is­ter - a let­ter now ex­ists about the per­son's un­sat­is­fac­to­ry per­for­mance and in­com­pe­tence - he then went to the PS and say, 'You can't do that...take out the cause be­cause if she's go­ing to get an­oth­er job, that would act against that', and the PS did that."

The prime min­is­ter said those ac­tions led to an in­dus­tri­al re­la­tions case to be made against the Min­istry.

"The PS took that in­struc­tion from the Min­is­ter and re­moved the 'cause for dis­missal' and vi­o­lat­ed the In­dus­tri­al Re­la­tions un­der­stand­ing. You can't fire some­body and not say what the cause is," Dr Row­ley said.

He said the PS ex­posed the tax­pay­er be­cause it was an easy case for the union to take to the In­dus­tri­al Court and the gov­ern­ment even­tu­al­ly had to pay.

"The Min­istry paid for the dis­missal," he said, adding, "There was no pay­ment for sex­u­al ha­rass­ment."

Dr Row­ley said that af­ter the dis­missal, there was spec­u­la­tion about the re­al rea­son, with some peo­ple even say­ing that the prime min­is­ter was to blame for the con­tro­ver­sy.

He told the meet­ing that this was one of on­ly two "scan­dals" of his Gov­ern­ment, the oth­er be­ing a high roam­ing bill run up by then Tourism Min­is­ter Sham­fa Cud­joe in 2017.

The bill ex­ceed­ed $59,000 ac­crued over a four-day pe­ri­od while she was at­tend­ing the Caribbean Tourism Or­ga­ni­za­tion’s Caribbean Trav­el Mar­ket­place in the Ba­hamas.

She had told the Par­lia­ment that it was done in er­ror be­cause she had failed to turn off the roam­ing fea­ture on her phone.

Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley and Darryl Smith at the opening of the Diego Martin walkover on October 8, 2019.

Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley and Darryl Smith at the opening of the Diego Martin walkover on October 8, 2019.

Abraham-Diaz

State­ment by PM's Of­fice on April 10, 2018 re Smith's dis­missal

When the prime min­is­ter dis­missed Smith in April 2018, the Of­fice of the Prime Min­is­ter is­sued the fol­low­ing state­ment:

"To­day, (April 10, 2018) Prime Min­is­ter Dr the Ho­n­ourable Kei­th Row­ley ad­vised Her Ex­cel­len­cy Paula-Mae Weekes, Pres­i­dent of the Re­pub­lic of Trinidad and To­ba­go in keep­ing with the pro­vi­sion of Sec­tion 3(9) of the Con­sti­tu­tion of the Re­pub­lic of Trinidad and To­ba­go, to re­voke the ap­point­ment of Mr Dar­ryl Smith as Min­is­ter in the Min­istry of Hous­ing and Ur­ban De­vel­op­ment.

This fol­low­ing a meet­ing be­tween the Prime Min­is­ter, the Min­is­ter of Plan­ning and De­vel­op­ment, the Ho­n­ourable Camille Robin­son-Reg­is and Mr Smith dur­ing which new in­for­ma­tion came to the at­ten­tion of the Prime Min­is­ter.

The meet­ing al­so re­sult­ed in the ap­point­ment of a com­mit­tee to thor­ough­ly re­view the cir­cum­stances sur­round­ing the dis­missal and pay­ment of com­pen­sa­tion to Ms Car­rie-Ann More­au at the Min­istry of Sport and Youth Af­fairs.

The com­mit­tee is to be chaired by for­mer Per­ma­nent Sec­re­tary and Hu­man Re­source Ex­pert Ms Jack­ie Wil­son, and in­cludes Ms Fo­lade Mu­to­ta of WINAD and At­tor­ney-at-Law Ms Elaine Greene. The com­mit­tee is ex­pect­ed to re­port in two weeks.

It is an­tic­i­pat­ed that all par­ties in­volved in any non-dis­clo­sure arrange­ment in this mat­ter will lift such im­ped­i­ment so as to al­low the fullest ex­am­i­na­tion of the facts for the ben­e­fit of the pub­lic."

Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley addresses a political meeting Tuesday night.

Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley addresses a political meeting Tuesday night.

What hap­pened next

The re­port sub­mit­ted by the com­mit­tee was deemed "un­us­able" by both the prime min­is­ter and At­tor­ney Gen­er­al Faris Al Rawi.

In Par­lia­ment on De­cem­ber 10, 2019, Dr Row­ley main­tained that the mat­ter in­volv­ing Smith had end­ed.

Row­ley point­ed to the in­abil­i­ty to use a re­port from the in­ves­tiga­tive com­mit­tee and said that he had done the “ul­ti­mate” and fired Smith from the gov­ern­ment.

Al­so in De­cem­ber 2019, for­mer tem­po­rary sen­a­tor Fo­lade Mu­to­ta, one of three women who in­ves­ti­gat­ed Smith, broke months of si­lence via a scathing two-page let­ter in which she con­demned what she de­scribed as the “boys club” men­tal­i­ty which kept women silent in the face of in­ap­pro­pri­ate and un­want­ed sex­u­al con­duct.

In her first pub­lic state­ment since the re­port which Mu­to­ta and two oth­er women pro­duced was deemed “un­us­able” by both men, Mu­to­ta said, “the con­duct of the Ho­n­ourable Prime Min­is­ter and Ho­n­ourable At­tor­ney Gen­er­al has been shame­ful, rep­re­hen­si­ble, misog­y­nis­tic, and an at­tack on women’s agency and women’s right to chal­lenge in­jus­tice and to be heard.”

Days af­ter, Op­po­si­tion Leader Kam­la Per­sad-Bisses­sar called for an ur­gent and im­me­di­ate in­ves­ti­ga­tion in­to the facts and cir­cum­stances sur­round­ing what she deemed as "the al­leged se­cret set­tle­ment of the sex­u­al ha­rass­ment law­suit brought against for­mer Min­is­ter of Sport Mr. Dar­ryl Smith, with the pay­ment of $150,000 from pub­lic funds."

Opposition Leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar

Opposition Leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar

Abraham Diaz

The Op­po­si­tion Leader wrote to the Com­mis­sion­er of Po­lice, the Di­rec­tor of Pub­lic Pros­e­cu­tions and the Chair­man of the In­tegri­ty Com­mis­sion, stat­ing that there are “strong grounds for sus­pect­ing that sev­er­al crim­i­nal of­fences may have been com­mit­ted as well as the pos­si­ble breach of sev­er­al pro­vi­sions of the In­tegri­ty in Pub­lic Life Act and the Code of Con­duct”.

Per­sad-Bisses­sar said the re­port raised an un­de­ni­able pri­ma fa­cie case for the pos­si­bil­i­ty of the com­mis­sion of sev­er­al very se­ri­ous crim­i­nal of­fences, in­clud­ing con­spir­a­cy to per­vert the course of pub­lic jus­tice, mis­be­hav­iour in pub­lic of­fice, and a breach of the In­tegri­ty in Pub­lic Life Act Chap­ter 22:01 by sev­er­al per­sons, in­clud­ing the Prime Min­is­ter, the At­tor­ney Gen­er­al, Smith, and the then Per­ma­nent Sec­re­tary in the Min­istry of Sport and Youth Af­fairs.

In Feb­ru­ary 2020, po­lice con­firmed that As­sis­tant Supt Ju­ri of the An­ti-Cor­rup­tion In­ves­ti­ga­tion Bu­reau was con­duct­ing an in­ves­ti­ga­tion in­to a re­port of "al­leged cor­rup­tion" in the Smith mat­ter.

Po­lice said the in­ves­ti­ga­tion did not specif­i­cal­ly in­volve Smith but all pub­lic ser­vants at the Sport Min­istry who were in­volved in the mat­ter.

Xaria Roxburgh

General Elections2025 General Election


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