Senior Reporter
jensen.lavende@guardian.co.tt
Homeland Security Minister Roger Alexander has called for a report into the multi-million-dollar contract for body cameras and supporting infrastructure issued under former police commissioner Gary Griffith.
Speaking during a post-Carnival media briefing yesterday, Commissioner of Police Allister Guevarro said the contract cost the country about $100 million but did not give the T&T Police Service full control of the cameras. He said under Griffith, some 1,000 cameras were acquired through the improper execution of a contract. He said Griffith, as the accounting officer of the police service, did not execute the contract.
“The body cameras were purchased for $3.4 million dollars and there was a Bluetooth feature added for $600,000. That’s a subtotal of $4 million. We have a licensing and maintenance for the said cameras for the period 2021 to 2025 cost $22 million. So, the average cost of each one of those body cameras ended up being $34,000 per unit,” he said.
“That’s just one aspect. The body camera contract was interwoven with a GPS contract that already existed in the TTPS and between last year and this year, I’ve been called upon to pay 100 million dollars for that contract. Is that value for money?”
Asked if the award of the contract needed to be investigated, Guevarro said, “What I can tell you is that following the initial article that appeared on the Guardian, the Minister of Homeland Security contacted me and instructed me to supply him with a report, which is being done at this point in time.”
And while no timeline was given, Guevarro said the report should be completed soon. However, he said there were aspects of the contract the TTPS could have handled and did not need external support.
“I wasn’t sitting here at the time. So, you need to ask that where it’s supposed to go. With me, I would not sign a contract to burden the taxpayers with that hefty fee, knowing that I have the expertise in-house.”
He added that a licensing fee also meant when the contract ended the cameras could not be used, likening it to an unpaid cable bill, where the box remains in the hands of the owner, who now can’t watch anything.
Guevarro said after that contract, his predecessor, Erla Harewood-Christopher, began the process of procuring some 3,000 cameras. That $24.9 million contract was cancelled last year by the Homeland Security Minister to save money he said, as only 17. 9 per cent of police officers used body cams as at June last year.
“So, at this time, we are again looking at the procurement of body cameras and we have begun to get samples where persons would tell us, well listen, this is something that could work for you. But what we are looking for is something that we can administrate ourselves. Because it makes no sense I pay $3.4 million for 750 cameras and then over the next how much years, I pay a couple million dollars for the licensing. So at this time, one of the things I’m looking at is to see methods and means of reappropriating those devices through another licensing type arrangement, which we can administrate,” Guevarro said.
In an immediate response, however, Griffith accused Guevarro of embarking on another witch-hunt against him.
“The Commissioner of Police, instead of trying to find ways to ensure that body cameras could be installed and used by police officers, he yet again comes up with red herrings to speak about a procurement process that I had because I did what was required. I did my job and I did it well and that seems to be a problem with senior persons, certain senior persons in the police service and even the line minister.”
He then trained his guns on Alexander, questioning under what authority he requested a report into the contract.
“Roger Alexander, you’re no longer a police officer. You are asking for a report of a matter because you believe that it had questionable activity? What are you asking for a report for? You’re not a police officer. If there was a matter of questionable activity, you will think that after six years, after four police commissioners after me, somebody would have been arrested, somebody would have been charged, some name would be called.”
Griffith said this is yet another attempt at sullying his name, recalling the various investigations into the issuing of firearm user’s licences during his tenure as police commissioner.
