Senior Reporter
shane.superville@guardian.co.tt
Days after a Preventative Detention Order (PDO) was issued for a Guapo teenager for firearm offences and suspected gang affiliation, Police Commissioner Allister Guevarro says he is particularly concerned by the involvement of children in serious criminal activity.
The legal notice, issued on Tuesday, identified the teen being involved in “ongoing gang-related conflict, retaliatory firearm violence and is associated with individuals engaged in organised criminal activity” in Guapo, Point Fortin and La Brea. Another teenager, from Tunapuna, was placed on a PDO in March.
Speaking with reporters after a forum at the T&T Chamber of Commerce in Westmoorings yesterday, Guevarro said such situations warranted more focus on intervention for at-risk children.
“This is one of the reasons I mentioned the additional resources towards expanding certain elements of policing, one of them being the School-Oriented Police Programme, coming up for this new year, we’ll be seeing from September.”
The programme, which was introduced in September 2025, involved deploying specially-trained police officers to secondary schools identified as prone to school violence.
On the topic of the State of Emergency (SoE), Guevarro declined to speak on whether he would be making any recommendations for additional provisions, such as a curfew, to be introduced.
He noted that the TTPS’ anti-crime strategy would take time to achieve the desired results, but was looking forward to tangible benefits once introduced.
“Once we have all the dominoes lined up properly, we will be able to see that taking place without a state of emergency. I don’t want to see Trinidad and Tobago having a state of emergency, but at the end of the day we want to ensure that the country is safe.”
Referring to past murder statistics in 2022 and 2024, where the country broke its own records with 605 and 626 respectively, Guevarro said such figures were crazy, but was optimistic that better would be done in securing the country.
