SHALIZA HASSANALI
Senior Reporter
shaliza.hassanali@guardian.co.tt
Contractor Kenroy Dopwell, well known in the Sea Lots community as “Big Man”, calls himself a community activist. He is denying that the “Big Man” identified as Rasta City’s gang leader in a 2019 Special Branch report is him.
The name “Big Man” appears in the eight-page Special Branch report and is identified as one of seven reputed gang leaders who had benefited from state contracts worth close to $6 million in the Port-of-Spain and Diego Martin areas between 2015 and 2018, according to a daily newspaper article in 2019.
“Big Man” had collected $665,000 for latrine eradication and drainage projects at Pioneer Drive including the installation of a play park at Concession Road in Sea Lots, the report stated.
Then police commissioner Gary Griffith had blamed the State for placing funds in the hands of gang bosses to fuel wars and contribute to killings.
“I was classified as the lieutenant of the Rasta City gang,” Dopwell said.
But, describing himself as a businessman in a telephone interview with the Sunday Guardian last Tuesday, Dopwell denied any involvement with the Port-of-Spain gang.
‘First truce has to be in Parliament with Red and Yellow gangs’
The Sunday Guardian reached out to Dopwell following reports of peace talks with alleged gang leaders and the police as the country experiences a spike in crime.
Asked if these warring factions should call a truce, Dopwell said the first people to make a peace offering are the 41 MPs.
“Look how they does behave inside there (Parliament). So if that is happening in Parliament where it is supposed to have educated people, what do you expect to happen on the streets? What we really doing is spinning top in mud. So the first truce has to be in Parliament where respect, manners and discipline are supposed to be.
“So when we are talking about the Sixx and Seven gangs, let we talk about the Red and Yellow gangs because that is the two biggest gangs the country have.”
Dopwell was referring to the Government and Opposition who have been engaged in a never-ending battle while citizens have been gripped with fear about the escalating homicide rate.
“You can’t tell me the Parliament having bacchanal in it but you don’t want Duncan Street and St Paul Street to have bacchanal. They have to operate as leaders for us to go in a positive direction.”
He said having a peace agreement meeting with gang bosses would set them up to be identified and killed.
“If you go that meeting is like an ID parade for an assassination.”
For criminals to surrender their guns and ammunition, Dopwell said, they would become defenceless, powerless and vulnerable.
“When they put down their guns what are you offering them in return? Will it be sustainable jobs to better the lives of their families?”
In Sea Lots, Dopwell said, the Rasta City gang has a presence.
“The Rasta City and the Seven gangs are the same. The Laventille area is dominated by the Sixx and Muslims,” he said, stating that certain areas of “the Flats” are also under the control of the Seven gang.
He raised the issue of gangs squaring off with each other which is believed to be responsible for the recent spate of shootings and murders along the East-West corridor.
Dopwell drew one conclusion–that the Government has been ignoring communities in need and “things have not been trickling down” to youths who are frustrated, unemployed, hungry and misguided.
“We does hear some 14, 15 and 16 year olds saying it is my time now. They have no fear of death because some of them have been asking the question, what is the sense of living? It is easier for them to die.”
The cries of these troubled men, he said, have been falling on deaf ears, and wondered if any politician could feel their pain.
“Is only who feel it, know it. And only who feel it could react to it.”
‘Discriminated against because of my involvement with Burks’
Dopwell, 52, said that when he shifted to the Sea Lots hot spot area in 1992, he used to visit the basketball court to exercise but never revealed his name to the residents. Residents gave him the nickname “Big Man”.
Close to three decades later, “Big Man” would be the label for “a gang leader” in the report who received state contracts.
Except for a “COVID case”, Dopwell claimed, he was never charged or appeared before a court for joining a gang but admitted that the police tried to pin things on him several times.
The initial “CB” was also listed in the report as receiving $236,183.40 for three drainage and latrine eradication projects at Production Avenue.
Aliases “Doggy” and “Sprang” were identified and initials “T,” “SR” and “Su ... Y” were also listed.
Dopwell disclosed that “CB” referred to his long-standing friend and business associate Cedric “Burkie” Burke who died in 2020 of the COVID-19 virus.
Dopwell said those who do not know him will cast judgement and “point their fingers” at him.
“My personality and who you are would speak for itself ... Sometimes out of evil cometh good because I am a contractor, as you know, (with) Good Vibes and Company Ltd. We continue to do work, we continue to receive contracts and stuff like that. You still do you. I have a good record,” he said during a telephone interview on Tuesday.
Dopwell told Guardian Media in 2017 that he was a director on two wholly-owned state enterprises–the New City Mall and East Side Plaza, Port-of-Spain–which fall under the remit of the Ministry of Housing and Urban Development once managed by then PNM minister Marlene McDonald.
Dopwell said he was discriminated against because of his ‘personal’ involvement with Burke.
“We did business and everything together.”
He jokingly spoke about the 2017 swearing-in ceremony of then Port-of-Spain South MP Marlene McDonald as Public Utilities minister at President’s House, St Ann’s, which they attended uninvited.
But less than 48 hours after McDonald’s ministerial appointment, facing flack from the public, Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley fired her, stating it was a direct result of her alignment with Burke.
Well-known to the police, Burke was arrested on several occasions but released.
Dopwell also denied allegations that his partner, whom he affectionately referred to as “Burks”, was a gang leader, He insisted Burke was “a very successful businessman”.