Director of Public Prosecutions Roger Gaspard does not know of 10 new attorneys who have reportedly been hired for the Office of the DPP and no such attorneys have reported there as yet.
Gaspard confirmed this briefly yesterday, following a report in a newspaper that amid the issues with Government - following the DPP’s expressed concerns about lack of staffing - 10 attorneys have been hired for his department.
Responding to T&T Guardian’s queries on this, Gaspard said, “Ten new attorneys hired? I don’t know about that. No such attorneys have reported here as yet. I can’t say much more about that.”
Gaspard’s comment came ahead of today’s meeting which Attorney General Reginald Armour who has called on Gaspard to discuss the staff shortage, which affects the DPP Office’s ability to properly prosecute cases, and accommodation issues.
The DPP’s Office only has 58 prosecutors when it requires 129 and is still located at Winsure Building despite Government renting a Park Street building for it since 2019.
The DPP’s Office, while an independent office, does not have its own budget and financial issues are under the AG’s Ministry.
Armour didn’t reply to queries yesterday on the reported 10 new attorneys for the DPP’s Office.
Last Saturday, Armour, responding to queries on the lack of resources for the DPP, had said there were no political benefits in the Government under-resourcing the DPP and “that is an unsatisfactory explanation for the underperformance of the DPP.”
Amour said other critical arms of the criminal justice system were also operating below capacity, “yet far more effectively” and there was need to “critically examine what are the systematic issues hampering” the performance of the DPP’s Office.
Gaspard’s comments came in the wake of the discontinuation of the Piarco Airport Three case against former Prime Minister Basdeo Panday, his wife Oma, former minister Carlos John and businessman Ishwar Galbaransingh last week.
The DPP has drawn attention to staff shortages for several years, including at Joint Select Committee meetings (2016/17). However, former AG Faris Al-Rawi, in 2019, claimed the lag in filling vacancies arose from the DPP’s inaction in giving recommendations.
After Gaspard’s concerns last Tuesday, the situation was compounded by Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley’s subsequent statements at a PNM meeting, where he countered that Government has been renting a building for the DPP’s Office for the past three years but it’s remained unoccupied although millions in rent had been paid.
The building, on eastern Park Street, is extensively glass.
Rowley said Special Branch had recommended bullet-proof glass which was installed, then a wall was also recommended until the landlord halted further “interference with his building.”
Rowley said there was a three-year “contract” for the building. The monthly rent is reportedly $600,000 - costing $21m since handover in 2019, plus a $24m cost for Nidco to retrofit.
Yesterday, Government sources confirmed the building’s three-year lease had ended and there’s now a month-to-month arrangement.
Neither Rowley nor National Security Minister Fitzgerald Hinds responded to queries on their views/hopes for today’s AG/DPP meeting.
Hinds has said two more courts will come on stream soon for human trafficking.
Sources said the issue of whether the Park Street building is retained and staffing for the DPP are “all in the AG’s hands.”
“Government outfitted the building fully in accordance with the DPP’s designs, paid rent for three years and bullet-proofed the building, surely he can shift around his office floors.”
On queries about safety in the location, with close proximity to East PoS hotspots heights and related factors, sources said the Winsure building isn’t bullet- proof either. They claimed the DPP hadn’t made recommendations for promotions, so job appraisals are absent.
Armour will be speaking subsequently in the week. After Rowley spoke, Gaspard said he’d seek advice before responding.
The Criminal Bar Association (which was to meet yesterday on the issue) and Law Association members are monitoring the issue before commenting, members of each said.
Request for Gaspard at JSC today
UNC deputy leader Roodal Moonilal had said the Park Street building’s owners had approached the People’s Partnership government with an offer to rent and the government had offered it to the DPP. Safety issues were made known then also.
Up to 2015, when the PP left office, no decision was made to place the DPP there, Moonilal added.
Yesterday, Moonilal said he and UNC Senator Jayanti Lutchmedial will raise the need for the DPP to speak at another meeting of Parliament’s Joint Select committee on National Security. They’ll do that at today’s JSC meeting on the T&T Defence Force.