Senior Reporter
shane.superville@guardian.co.tt
There has been a decrease in the murder detection rate for the first quarter of 2024.
Data from the Trinidad and Tobago Police Service (TTPS), which analysed 142 murders committed between January 1, 2024, and April 1, 2024, recorded an eight per cent detection rate. For the same period in 2023, there was a 16 per cent detection rate for the 141 murders recorded.
The overall poor detection rate of murders is not a new phenomenon, as the actual figure tends to drift below 20 per cent in any given year.
One of the highest detection rates in T&T was reported in 1990, with 69 per cent at a time when there were only 84 murders.
In December 2022, criminologist and former chair of the Police Service Commission (PolSC), Prof Ramesh Deosaran, reported that the lowest annual detection rate for murders in local history—only eight per cent—was recorded in 2019.
He said the detection rate for murders rose slightly to 14 per cent in 2020 during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic in T&T when the number of murders for that year was a relatively low 399.
Data compiled by the Crime and Problem Analysis (CAPA) branch of the police service also reported that the detection rate for murders in 2022 dropped again to 12.5 per cent when the murder toll reached the highest ever with 605 that year.
The detection rate increased slightly in 2023, at 13 per cent.
As of Thursday afternoon, there have been 158 murders in 2024, compared to 163 murders for the same period in 2023.
Murder uptick
Immediately before and after Carnival, an uptick in murders and violent crimes was reported in and around Port-of-Spain. This is believed to be a continuation of gang violence from late 2023.
One of the most noticeable incidents of violence was the murders of five men in Harpe Place, east Port-of-Spain, on March 16.
Senior police in the Port-of-Spain Division said that while one man was arrested shortly after the murders, he was eventually released. No additional arrests have been made.
In early March, homicide investigators continued work on the murder of Andy Daniel in Caroni. Daniel, 54, was killed on November 11, 2023, by gunmen in a black Nissan X-Trail who were believed to have been involved in a “hit squad” operating within the Strategic Services Agency (SSA).
Senior police sources also revealed that people of interest were already identified in Daniel’s murder but maintained that detectives were still in the process of building their case, noting that the arrest of suspects would not happen for “some time.”
The 2020 murders of logger Bryan Felix and landowner Aleem Khan were also being reviewed by homicide officers, who suspect a link with the SSA.
Another major concern is the prevalence of gender-based violence and violence towards children, as seen in the murder of Hannah Mathura, whose body was said to be buried in the backyard of her family’s Valsayn home on March 12.
Two of Mathura’s relatives, a 66-year-old man and a 62-year-old woman, were arrested in relation to her murder on March 13 but released days later due to insufficient evidence.
In the most recent incident, four-year-old Amarah Lallite was beheaded by a male relative at her family’s Arouca home on Monday night.
A 39-year-old male relative of Amarah was arrested that night. On Friday, the Director of Public Prosecutions gave instructions to charge the suspect.
Responding to questions posed by Independent Senator Paul Richards at the Joint Select Committee (JSC) on January 31, Police Commissioner Erla Harewood-Christopher said that the police failed to meet any of the objectives outlined in the previous year, including a 20 per cent drop in the murder rate.
“If you look at our previous achievements over the years, you would see that these targets were never really met. So it was an ambitious target to sort of encourage the officers to reach that target,” she said.
Harewood-Christopher said that of the intended 15 per cent reduction in serious reported crimes (SRCs), the police only achieved a two per cent reduction.
Brother of slain policeman:
Cops can’t give me closure
However, statistics alone are not enough to define the impact of crime.
Lennox Phillip, the older brother of murdered policeman Sgt Larry Phillip, said the murder was a constant reminder of the danger innocent bystanders can face.
Phillip was one of five men killed in Harpe Place in March.
Investigators believe Phillip, 51, who was assigned to the police service band as a saxophonist, was not the intended target of the killers.
Speaking with Guardian Media, Phillip said that while no one has been arrested or charged for his brother’s murder, he did not feel bitter.
The elder Phillip insisted that only God can give him closure, but he also called on the public to do their part to help the police.
“The police alone can’t do it, but at the same time, a lot of people live in fear when they want to help the police. The police can’t give me closure. Nobody can give me closure because, at the end of the day, nothing can be done by me or anybody else to change this. The most the police can do is find the perpetrators,” he said.
Police in the Homicide Bureau of Investigations said one of the main challenges encountered in being able to arrest and charge suspects is the lack of sufficient evidence.
One officer said the reluctance of witnesses to come forward and identify suspects has brought some ongoing investigations to a standstill.
However, former head of the Northern Division North, Snr Supt Kerwin Francis, during a Joint Select Committee in February 2023, said police realised this challenge and have sought to include scientific testing in murder inquiries.
“We, as an organisation, have determined we cannot rely on ‘I see’ witnesses because of that fear factor that arises, which is why we have gone the way of using forensics and other bits of technology to support our investigations.
“So, our investigations are no longer the normal, traditional, linear road we would follow of trying to get witnesses to come forward, but we are also relying on forensics, ballistics, and other technologies to gather evidence to bring charges against individuals.”
One officer said another challenge to their work is the murder of suspects themselves. An officer said that of some 30 murders for the year thus far, the victims were also suspects of earlier murders.
Noting that a murder is only considered solved once someone has been arrested or charged, the deaths of suspects can also impact the police’s detection rate.
“A lot of times, these very same suspects are killed before we gather enough evidence to arrest them and lay a charge. The streets often take matters into their own hands, and we cannot arrest someone who is already dead.”
Responding to questions during a Joint Select Committee earlier this year, the head of the Homicide Bureau of Investigations, Snr Supt Rishi Singh reported that 2,607 serious crimes were solved in 2022.
He added that in 2023, 5,853 serious crimes were solved.