A prison officer attached to the Port-of-Spain Prison has been placed under a Preventative Detention Order (PDO) after being arrested on suspicion of facilitating the introduction of prohibited items into a correctional facility.
According to a media release, the officer was arrested on May 1 while on duty at the prison after officers conducted a search of his locker and found several prohibited articles.
A month before, the detention of prison officer Keron Lewis was gazetted. It was said Lewis was identified as a key facilitator in the coordination of criminal activities between incarcerated individuals and external actors.
The release stated that the latest officer had been under surveillance before the arrest. Investigators reportedly received intelligence alleging that the officer was involved in facilitating prohibited items to inmates within the prison system.
Police said the inmates were allegedly coordinating criminal activities from inside the prison.
The operation was coordinated by Commissioner of Police Allister Guevarro, Commissioner of Prisons Carlos Corrapse and Deputy Commissioner of Police Suzette Martin.
The release did not state the type of prohibited articles that were discovered during the search. It also did not indicate whether any charges had been laid against the officer up to the time of the release.
A Preventative Detention Order allows authorities to detain a person for investigative and security purposes while inquiries continue.
The arrest forms part of ongoing efforts by law enforcement and prison authorities to address the movement of prohibited items into correctional facilities and the use of prisons to coordinate criminal activity.
The Port-of-Spain Prison has been the focus of several operations in recent years aimed at intercepting contraband and identifying persons suspected of involvement in illegal activities within the prison system.
Officials have repeatedly stated that intelligence-led operations are being used to target the movement of prohibited items into prisons and to disrupt communication between inmates and criminal networks outside correctional facilities.
Police and prison officials said investigations into the matter are continuing.
