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Monday, May 5, 2025

Guns coming in legal packages at T&T ports

by

Shane Superville
435 days ago
20240225
 The barrel of guns found at the Medway warehouse at Old Southern Main Road, off St Mary's Junction, in March 2022.

The barrel of guns found at the Medway warehouse at Old Southern Main Road, off St Mary's Junction, in March 2022.

Last No­vem­ber, Guardian Me­dia’s In­ves­ti­ga­tions Desk re­port­ed on the gum ram­page plagu­ing T&T af­ter the Trinidad and To­ba­go Po­lice (TTPS) made sig­nif­i­cant gun hauls.

To date, no one was ar­rest­ed for the cache of ar­se­nal that in­clud­ed AR-15s, M16s, mi­ni Uzis, 50 cal­i­bre ri­fles and 12-gauge shot­guns.

Il­le­gal weapons have been flood­ing the streets of T&T for the past decade.

While it is tra­di­tion­al­ly be­lieved that guns are en­ter­ing T&T through the coun­try’s porous bor­ders, in our con­tin­ued re­port­ing we learnt how arms traf­fick­ers are us­ing le­gal ports of en­try.

Shane Su­perville

Se­nior Re­porter

shane.su­perville@guardian.co.tt

Most peo­ple may not think that the pack­age con­tain­ing their hu­mid­i­fi­er, tele­vi­sion stand or oth­er in­no­cent house­hold items is shipped along­side a dan­ger­ous weapon ca­pa­ble of mass mur­der in the same con­tain­er.

But this is the re­al­i­ty that con­tin­ues to con­front lo­cal au­thor­i­ties and re­mains a con­cern to ship­ping in­dus­try stake­hold­ers.

Speak­ing with Sun­day Guardian on con­di­tion of anonymi­ty, one source who is close to the ship­ping in­dus­try said he was alarmed at the spate with which high-pow­ered guns and am­mu­ni­tion con­tin­ue to slip past cus­toms of­fi­cials in Trinidad.

On the af­ter­noon of Feb­ru­ary 9, of­fi­cers of the North-Cen­tral Di­vi­sion went to a bond in Trinci­ty where they found four dis­man­tled AR 15s and six mag­a­zines hid­den in a pack­age con­tain­ing a hu­mid­i­fi­er. No one was ar­rest­ed in con­nec­tion with the seizure.

This ship­ment of weapons was one of the first no­tice­able seizures made by po­lice in 2024.

In April 2021, a joint team of po­lice and Cus­toms and Ex­cise Di­vi­sion of­fi­cers found and seized 30 guns and 762 rounds of am­mu­ni­tion in­side a bond pack­age at the Pi­ar­co In­ter­na­tion­al Air­port.

The dis­cov­ery of these weapons con­firmed sus­pi­cions that high-pow­ered guns, of­ten fea­tured in bloody lo­cal gang feuds, were not be­ing shipped via shady, un­con­ven­tion­al means but along­side le­git­i­mate car­go through es­tab­lished ports.

Such dis­cov­er­ies have al­so added to con­cerns over whether cur­rent bor­der se­cu­ri­ty mech­a­nisms in place are suf­fi­cient to ef­fec­tive­ly clamp down on the in­flux of il­le­gal weapons.

The of­fi­cial told the Sun­day Guardian that while more strin­gent search­es and checks have of­ten been called for, it is eas­i­er said than done.

“Peo­ple will say we scanned that con­tain­er. So how do you check every tiny box if some­one or­dered cof­fee or tea; did you send a snif­fer dog?

“Mean­while, there are ten or 15 con­tain­ers be­hind wait­ing, so when are those pack­ages go­ing to leave the port?

“Tech­nol­o­gy has to play a more in­te­gral role in the man­age­ment of our bor­ders from scan­ning to sim­ple record-keep­ing.”

But even if tech­nol­o­gy is in­te­grat­ed in­to more ac­tiv­i­ties along­side the Cus­toms and Ex­cise Di­vi­sion of­fi­cers, it may not be enough, the source said.

The re­source­ful and cre­ative crim­i­nal or­gan­i­sa­tions are find­ing new ways of cam­ou­flag­ing weapons, which in­clude dis­man­tling weapons and dis­guis­ing the com­po­nents in pack­ages con­tain­ing house­hold items of a sim­i­lar shape.

“If you take out a bar­rel of a firearm in­side a pack­age with steel pipes of sim­i­lar length and di­am­e­ter will an X-Ray pick that up on what is a re­al pipe for plumb­ing and the bar­rel of a ri­fle?

An­oth­er source has dis­closed that traf­fick­ers smug­gle guns in pack­ages marked as house­hold items and are care­ful to en­sure the weight record­ed on the box is the weight of the item placed in the pack­age so as not to arouse sus­pi­cion.

This at­ten­tion to de­tail, the source said, is a big part of the suc­cess of arms traf­fick­ers.

“Let’s not as­sume the tech­nol­o­gy is all that it needs to fil­ter out what’s com­ing in pack­ages,” a source said

“What’s al­so need­ed is the train­ing of staff to recog­nise ir­reg­u­lar­i­ties, how to look and what they should be look­ing for.”

They al­so sug­gest­ed up­grad­ing the Cus­toms and Ex­cise Act to keep pace with the cur­rent de­mands of nar­co and arms traf­fick­ing.

Fab­ri­cat­ed names on pack­ages

Ac­cord­ing to sta­tis­tics from the TTPS Crime and Prob­lem Analy­sis (CA­PA) branch, as of Feb­ru­ary 19, po­lice have found and seized 71 guns com­pared to 111 guns for the same pe­ri­od in 2023.

At least one po­lice source said that it may be too ear­ly to cel­e­brate as few­er guns be­ing found may not nec­es­sar­i­ly equate to few­er guns en­ter­ing T&T.

He notes this drop in guns be­ing dis­cov­ered could like­ly mean that traf­fick­ers have lim­it­ed the num­ber of guns they ship through cer­tain ports that they deem “too hot”, ow­ing to the at­ten­tion be­ing paid to pack­ages at cer­tain bond ware­hous­es.

Re­fer­ring to the gun seizures in 2021, the of­fi­cer said it was un­like­ly that traf­fick­ers would at­tempt to trans­port such a large quan­ti­ty of weapons through a le­gal port again, not­ing how ob­vi­ous it would be to check.

“That was a se­ri­ous em­bar­rass­ment on the part of the Cus­toms and Ex­cise Di­vi­sion as to how the weapons came in. But a lull in the num­ber of weapons found could mean that the traf­fick­ers are sim­ply switch­ing up their ap­proach. They will ex­plore dif­fer­ent routes to see where there are weak­ness­es they can ex­ploit.”

Pre­vent­ing the guns from reach­ing the coun­try is one thing, but what about the in­ves­ti­ga­tions that be­gin once a cache of weapons is found?

While the pack­ages of­ten car­ry names and ad­dress­es, the of­fi­cer said in­quiries of­ten lead to dead ends as the names are usu­al­ly fab­ri­cat­ed.

“As part of the in­quiry, we vis­it the ad­dress­es where these pack­ages were des­tined to go, but all the time the per­sons that live there are not the per­son whose name is on the box.

“But this is part of the crim­i­nal in­ves­ti­ga­tion that goes along­side the sci­en­tif­ic analy­sis and pro­cess­ing of the gun with bal­lis­tics and foren­sic test­ing to see where the gun could have orig­i­nat­ed from.”

Po­lice sources posit that through­out the 1980s and 1990s, il­le­gal weapons en­ter­ing T&T were “sec­ond-hand” Cold War-era guns ob­tained from con­flicts in Latin Amer­i­ca.

How­ev­er, in re­cent times, the weapons be­ing brought in are not on­ly new­er but al­so seem to be Amer­i­can-made.

Dur­ing a me­dia brief­ing in ear­ly Feb­ru­ary, Prime Min­is­ter Dr Kei­th Row­ley an­nounced that he met with of­fi­cials from the CIA and FBI to dis­cuss se­cu­ri­ty con­cerns, not­ing that in­ter­na­tion­al crim­i­nals took a “lik­ing” to T&T.

In an­oth­er me­dia con­fer­ence days lat­er, Dr Row­ley re­marked that peo­ple ship­ping the guns to T&T may be ex­pat cit­i­zens or the rel­a­tives of lo­cals.

“The peo­ple who are buy­ing those guns know Trinidad and To­ba­go, are prob­a­bly even cit­i­zens or fam­i­ly mem­bers of cit­i­zens or they see us as a place where they can make a prof­it so we have a lot in com­mon with the US au­thor­i­ties,” he had said.

In Oc­to­ber 2022, it was re­port­ed that two T&T cit­i­zens and a US cit­i­zen were charged for send­ing guns through a Pi­ar­co couri­er.

Tri­nis Tevin O’Bri­an Oliv­er and Jameal Ka­ia Phillip, who were liv­ing in Flori­da, were joint­ly charged with con­spir­a­cy to smug­gle goods from the US.

The charges were laid dur­ing an an­nounce­ment from US at­tor­ney Roger Hand­berg.

The in­dict­ment al­so al­leged that Oliv­er and Phillip un­law­ful­ly shipped firearms, firearm com­po­nents and re­lat­ed items from Flori­da to T&T be­tween 2019 and 2022.

One se­nior of­fi­cer said in­ci­dents of Trinida­di­ans liv­ing abroad or the rel­a­tives of Trinida­di­ans abroad send­ing firearms to lo­cals might be a big part of the is­sue of gun traf­fick­ing.

“This is a re­al thing that has been go­ing on for years. It’s through col­lab­o­ra­tions with US au­thor­i­ties we are able to find and make these kinds of in­roads in in­quiries.”

The of­fi­cer not­ed that in cer­tain south­ern US dis­tricts like Flori­da, where leg­is­la­tion over firearm own­er­ship may be more re­laxed, some peo­ple might have tak­en ad­van­tage of this by buy­ing weapons for ship­ping to T&T.

It is in this re­gard the of­fi­cer is op­ti­mistic that the pro­posed strength­ened col­lab­o­ra­tions with the FBI and CIA can yield some ben­e­fits through more in­tel­li­gence gath­er­ing and shar­ing.

But the as­sis­tance from for­eign agen­cies can on­ly go so far and must be sup­port­ed by lo­cal au­thor­i­ties.

Po­lice: We are work­ing as­sid­u­ous­ly, col­lab­o­rat­ing with oth­er agen­cies

The Pi­ar­co In­ter­na­tion­al Air­port is lo­cat­ed in the Pi­ar­co Po­lice Sta­tion dis­trict which is part of the North-Cen­tral Di­vi­sion.

Speak­ing with the Sun­day Guardian, head of the di­vi­sion Snr Supt Richard Smith said while it was a chal­lenge, he as­sured that dis­trict au­thor­i­ties took the is­sue of il­le­gal firearm in­ter­dic­tion se­ri­ous­ly.

“The air­port is an im­por­tant in­stal­la­tion that we have in our di­vi­sion so we have col­lab­o­ra­tion with our air­port se­cu­ri­ty, we have month­ly stake­hold­er meet­ings with the air­port se­cu­ri­ty, we have month­ly stake­hold­er meet­ings with the fire sta­tion of­fi­cer who al­so is in charge of that area at the air­port.

“We have the sta­tion com­man­der in the Pi­ar­co Po­lice Sta­tion who is one of my best com­man­ders there, we have mock ex­er­cis­es as it re­lates to any in­ci­dent that may oc­cur, and we con­tin­ue to col­lab­o­rate with the Air­ports Au­thor­i­ty and oth­er units that are lo­cat­ed at the air­port.”

Smith said among the agen­cies in close com­mu­ni­ca­tion with the po­lice was the Cus­toms and Ex­cise Di­vi­sion.

“We want to en­sure that firearms do not come through the air­port. If it does, it has to be a small amount, and we should be able to dis­cov­er it at any point in time when it comes through, so that is the kind of as­sur­ance we want to give mem­bers of the pub­lic that we are, in fact, work­ing as­sid­u­ous­ly and col­lab­o­rat­ing with the oth­er agen­cies.”

While Smith is con­fi­dent in the abil­i­ty of the po­lice and part­ner agen­cies to re­spond to the threat of il­le­gal firearms traf­fick­ers, it re­mains a ma­jor is­sue for all cit­i­zens.


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