Acting Police Commissioner speaks on gun violence in Trinidad and Tobago

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Piarco International Airport (File Photo)

PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad – The Trinidad and Tobago Police Service (TTPS) Monday warned that some of the country’s main ports of entry, including the Piarco International Airport, have been compromised as law enforcement authorities said they had so far seized 60 high powered rifles this year as compared to 60 in 2021.

Acting Police Commissioner, McDonald Jacob, speaking on a radio program here, said that just like Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago is battling the use of persons using illegal firearms to commit murders.

“The idea that most of our firearms may be coming from the mainland in Venezuela, we have proven that …the bulk of our guns is not necessarily coming from there.

“We have the factual information. We have persons who were charged in Georgia and other places for sending up to 36 firearms to Trinidad and Tobago…because once you purchase firearms and are involved in criminal activities in another country within two years, you can be charged in North America for so doing.”

Jacob said the authorities here are working with all the various agencies in the United States, including Homeland Security.

‘We have firearms even coming in from Miami. A lot of work has to be done to prevent the level of weapons (illegally) coming into the country.

“Jamaica is going through the same issue, “Jacob said, noting that media reports Monday was quoting Prime Minister Andrew Holness as sending a warning to criminals.”

He said the warning from the Jamaican prime minister is similar to what is being said here.

“We are talking about the firearms coming in barrels. We held persons recently with firearms in washing machines. We intercepted vehicles coming from the ports…so the same problems we are having here, Jamaica is having the same problems”.

He said Jamaica had recorded more than 800 murders this year “with a high level of gun violence.

“So, they are now changing their laws to prevent persons from getting bail for possession of firearms. They will do some form of amnesty, and they will tighten up their laws about firearm possession”.

Jacob said that the problem in Trinidad and Tobago is compounded by the fact that many young people feel empowered when possessing a gun.

“Our concern now in Trinidad is just not it is illegal, we may have other issues with legal firearms also…and I mentioned to the media over the weekend about the psychology of firearm possession, and I told them it will take a 14-year-old boy to become a man because he has a firearm in his hand…

“They want to know why we have this brazen shooting because when persons have a high-powered weapon, they are empowered, they feel strong, invincible. It is not a matter of not having police patrols or police presence; it is the psychology of firearms and how it will make people feel…and then you have some charismatic gang leader talking to these young men. The end product is what we see on the streets of Trinidad and Tobago,” Jacob told radio listeners.

Over the last weekend, the island recorded several murders, including two men shot by shooters pretending to be law enforcement officers on Saturday night.

In one of the incidents, police said they had recovered 35 spent shells at the scene, with 10 bearing the markings of the Trinidad and Tobago Regiment (TTR15).

Police also reported that a 28-year-old man was shot dead while having sex with his 30-year-old girlfriend in Valencia, northeast of here, on Saturday night.

Jacob said the police had introduced several strategies to deal with the upsurge in criminal activities, including canceling leave for police officers.

So far, the country has recorded more than 260 murders this year. Last year, Trinidad and Tobago recorded 450 murders.

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