Senior Reporter
anna-lisa.paul@guardian.co.tt
Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar says there is no need for a curfew following the killing of a municipal police officer at the San Fernando City Corporation Municipal Police Station on King’s Wharf.
In a statement yesterday, Persad-Bissessar said she had been advised that the incident at the station was not an external attack on the Trinidad and Tobago Police Service (TTPS) or other national security agencies. Instead, she said it was an “internal betrayal” within the Trinidad and Tobago Municipal Police Service (TTMPS).
She stressed that the TTPS is a separate entity from the TTMPS and said TTPS officers were not involved in the incident.
The Prime Minister said the Ministry of Homeland Security and the TTPS would provide full support to the municipal police service, San Fernando Mayor Robert Parris and the San Fernando City Corporation to investigate the matter, recover the stolen items and bring the situation to closure.
The body of acting Cpl Anushka Eversley, 42, was discovered at the Municipal Police Headquarters, Lady Hailes Avenue, San Fernando, around 4.40 am yesterday. Some 62 guns and 4,000 rounds of ammunition were also stolen from the station’s armoury.
The mother of three children, aged 18, 15 and seven, had been fatally shot in the upper body. Eversley had over 19 years of service.
The killing has sparked concern among members of the public, with calls in some quarters for stronger emergency measures. However, Persad-Bissessar said such measures were not necessary at this time.
“There is no need for any curfew,” she said, adding that law enforcement agencies continue to make progress in addressing the country’s crime situation, which she described as a long-standing issue.
She urged citizens to continue their normal routines.
“Law-abiding citizens are encouraged to go about their lawful business as usual,” she said.
CoP: Law enforcement not under attack
Meanwhile, Commissioner of Police Allister Guevarro has also moved to calm fears, saying law enforcement is not under attack and describing the incident as a “one-off situation.” He said the state’s security apparatus remains strong and operational, with no evidence of a targeted attack against law enforcement.
On the question of whether a curfew would be introduced, he said, “I do not think that there is a need at this point in time to cause any undue panic in the public about curfew and increasing whatever with the SoE.”
While all law enforcement agencies remain on high alert as investigations continue into the murder and theft, Homeland Security Minister Roger Alexander has expressed full confidence in Guevarro and his management of the TTPS.
Addressing reporters during a media briefing at the Police Administration Building in San Fernando yesterday, Guevarro admitted that, along with the dead officer, “a quantity of weapons and ammunition has also been reported missing from that facility.”
The CoP assured, “All necessary resources have been deployed to ensure a thorough inquiry and the recovery of those weapons.”
Extending condolences to Eversley’s family and fellow officers, Guevarro stressed that investigations were in progress.
He confirmed that a number of specialist units had been engaged to assist in the investigation, including the Southern Division CID, the Southern Division Task Force (SDTF), the Homicide Bureau of Investigations (HBI), the Inter-Agency Task Force (IATF), the Multi-Operational Police Section (MOPS), and the Coastal and Air Support Unit.
While he refused to confirm whether figures circulating on social media about the stolen firearms and ammunition were accurate, the Commissioner said, “All of the weapons are said to be the property of the Municipal Police Department, and none from any private citizens.”
The list being circulated on social media claimed a total of 52 Glock pistols, six shotguns, four MPX weapons and 4,000 rounds of 9mm ammunition contained in a security vault at the police station had been stolen.
Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP) in charge of Municipal Police, Surrendra Sagramsingh, said seven officers had been assigned to the same shift as Eversley. However, he noted, “Persons were deployed to other sub-stations.”
Pressed on whether it was customary for a single officer to be left in a station, he said, “We have protocols that we usually follow based on available strength.”
He added, “I am certain that every effort would have been made, based on that strength, to have the requisite amount of police to man the station at the time.”
Interrupting the line of questioning, Guevarro said certain information was being withheld while the investigation is ongoing. However, Sagramsingh’s admission that Eversley was not alone at the station prompted further questions as to whether any other officer was harmed and what led to her killing. Reporters were later told no other officer had been injured during the incident.
Cop linked to
murder detained
Guevarro promised an update within 24 hours, but information around 5 pm indicated that a raid had been carried out at the home of a municipal officer in Claxton Bay, who was detained in relation to the incident.
Pressed earlier in the day on how he would feel if fellow officers were linked to the murder, the CoP said, “I would feel very disheartened that an officer, a sworn officer, sworn to protect the rights of citizens and uphold the laws of T&T, could do something so heinous to one of his own fellow officers.”
Searches continued into the night yesterday in several areas, including Sea Lots, for the stolen weapons and ammunition.
