Damning claims of high-level mismanagement, wild spending and improper procurement practices made by low-level employees, which showed a pattern of misbehaviour by top company officials, sparked the in-depth audit into the operations of State-owned Angostura Holdings Ltd.
The company, which has an asset base of over $3 billion, is one of the top performing subsidiaries of the CL Financial empire acquired by Government after CLF was unable to pay its debt from the 2009 bailout of the company. Its shares were also used by the Government to support the National Investment Fund in raising $4 billion to off-set the national budget deficit.
The NIF bond is supported by some of the strongest CLF companies, with a collective market value of approximately $7.9 billion, including shares of Republic Financial Holdings Limited, One Caribbean Media Limited, West Indian Tobacco Company Limited, Angostura and Trinidad Generation Unlimited. The Government said the initial offer was over-subscribed and plans on second venture next year.
Since news of the Angostura investigation broke, however, people and organisations which invested in the NIF remain anxious about the outcome of the probe, according to one big investor. But there has been silence from the Ministry of Finance and other Government ministries on the matter, although Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley has been on a recent campaign denouncing white-collar crime.
And in the face of the audit and the company being in the media spotlight, one Angostura director, Kirby Anthony Hosang, resigned suddenly last week. No reason was given by chairman Terrence Bharath, who faced the media on Thursday and confirmed the audit but gave little other details about the allegations raised in an exclusive Guardian Media article last week.
Angostura confirmed Hosang’s departure, effective October 31, in advertisements in yesterday’s newspapers.
Copies of the bombshell complaint, filed by an anonymous whistleblower, have been made available to Guardian Media exclusively.
Accounting firm PriceWaterhouseCoopers, which is being assisted by law firm Fitzwilliam Stone Furness-Smith and Morgan, will meet with the company’s Chief Executive Officer Genevieve Jodhan tomorrow to give her an opportunity to respond to troubling allegations over the award of multi-million dollar security contracts to MH Tactical, a company with close ties to a serving police officer, Sgt Mark Hernandez, who has been described as “an asset to the State and National Security.”
Police Commissioner Gary Griffith has defended Hernandez, 42, a highly-trained operative who is assigned to an elite unit—the Special Operations Response Team—saying a former commissioner of police had authorised the Special Reserve Police officer to be a consultant at a St Augustine-based company owned by Hernandez’s wife.
However, Hernandez describes himself as the executive chairman and owner of MH Tactical Response Group on his LinkedIn profile and is the face of the company on its Facebook page.
Hernandez is one of the officers who played a key role in rescuing kidnap victim Natalie Pollonais from her abductors in El Socorro in September and has led a hand-picked team of police and soldiers in other major anti-crime operations, according to National Security sources.
Jodhan, who has opted to proceed on 20 days vacation leave effective October 29, has maintained that her authorisation of the contracts, valued at $2.2 million, to MH Tactical and two subsidiaries—New Order Security Services (NOSS) and Corporate Asset Management (CAP) were above board. Another contract to Building Spaces Ltd is also under review, according to company officials.
Sources close to Jodhan said she intends to defend her name tomorrow and will instead point fingers at top company officials as having an agenda to remove her from office. She had initially been sent on administrative leave after she returned from Harvard University on study leave, but that decision was retracted after she agreed to go on vacation.
An investigation into the allegation by former judge of the Caribbean Court of Justice Rolston Nelson did not result in any disciplinary action.
Complaint to mangement
The whistleblower complaint states NOSS, which is made up of serving police officers and soldiers, has provided training to senior employees on anti-kidnapping techniques, defensive security measures for field managers and internal employees at a average cost of $3,000 per employee. The company is also responsible for securing the company’s assets, including two holiday homes on Gasparee Island, two condominiums at Tobago Plantations, Solimar liquor shops and its Laventille facility.
The former Angostura security manager was replaced by a senior police officer, Supt Radcliff Boxhill, who has now been employed as a consultant in that role, company insiders said.
The whistleblower claimed Hernandez was a frequent visitor to the CEO’s office and claimed NOSS is set to take over another lucrative security contract currently held by Allied Security. The worker claimed Jodhan had allegedly commandeered three armed security officers for her personal use, one of whom escorts her around the plant.
“There is no tenders committee and contracts are handed out on an ad-hoc and personal basis. Money is being spent recklessly and without regard to costs. Top executives manage the company by threats and intimidation,” the complaint stated.
The worker claimed that even the union representing the workers, the Seamen Waterfront Workers’ Trade Union, was not active enough, noting that a recent shutdown of operations in May never made it to the media.
The complaint also referred to a top-heavy management level at an exorbitant cost and abuse of company assets in Gasparee Island and in Tobago.
“Now that the Government is considering offering shares of Angostura to the public (NIF), please sir, do something about this runaway and free spending management, “ the whistleblower pleaded.
$572m in revenue for 2017
For the year ended December 31, 2017, the Angostura Group recorded revenue of $575.2 million versus $620.5 million in 2016, a decrease of $45.3 million (7.3%).
The revenue in 2017 was due to the strategic decision to downsize the loss-making export bulk rum business and focus on brand building. Bulk rum sales represented 6% of the group’s revenue in 2017 compared to 18% in 2016, a reduction of $60.9 million. The rum brands and signature Angostura aromatic bitters businesses performed favourably with revenue growth of 6%, to $537.7 million, and increased operating profit of $22 million, or 9.8%, in 2017.
Source: 2017 Angostura financial report dated March 27, 2018.