Pastor and ex-convict Glen Awong, the man who operated Transformed Life Ministries in Arouca, where police raided and rescued 69 people last year, has been charged with kidnapping, false imprisonment and trafficking in persons.
Awong was charged at the Arima Police Station Thursday night, having initially surrendered to police at the Arouca Police Station together with his wife, who was later released, on Monday last.
Awong's charges came almost two and a half months after the police raid last October that was prompted by a two-month Guardian Media investigation into operations at the facility.
Senior police sources told Guardian Media that Awong was charged by Corporal Mc Kain of the Special Operations Response Team (SORT). He was charged with kidnapping a man, as well as false imprisonment and trafficking of persons between the period January 30, 2019 to July 2019. Police also expect to lay several other similar charges against Awong in the coming days.
Ingrid Jaggernauth from Central Trinidad, who is the relative of a lawyer, was also charged by Corporal Mc Kain for trafficking in persons. Jaggernauth had been in police custody at the St Joseph Police Station but was taken to the Arima station on Thursday night where she was officially charged.
A civil lawyer and three other people who had been detained for questioning over the trafficking of persons in the ongoing investigation last Saturday were released pending further investigations according to sources.
Senior police sources say they have been working tirelessly around the clock over the last two and a half months to piece this delicate and extesive investigation together, which saw them speaking with several of the victims rescued.
Sixty-nine people raning in ages from 19 to 70 years were found locked away in cages at a church lcated along the Eastern Main Road in Arouca in early October. Following the raids, Commissioner of Police Gary Griffith described the case as one of a major human trafficking ring that was cracked.