Senior Reporter
otto.carring[email protected]
The lawyer representing the family of police shooting victim Joshua Samaroo says they believe Police Commissioner Allister Guevarro should step aside as the probe into the matter is carried out. They say this is because they do not believe he will be neutral given his early comments on the incident in defence of the officers involved.
“The commissioner came out with bravado and defended his officers at a stage when the facts were still unfolding,” attorney CJ Williams said during a media conference at his Port-of-Spain offices.
“Even the Law Association has indicated this may have been the wrong approach. To the ordinary citizen, that posture creates a reasonable perception of bias.”
He added that the CoP’s statements and administrative decisions must be examined to determine whether he should remain at the helm while the investigation was being conducted.
“This is about preserving the integrity of the investigation. We have to ask whether his actions meet the threshold for him to step aside at this stage. That is not a radical position.”
Williams suggested that increased oversight by the Police Service Commission may now also be necessary.
“Whatever mechanisms we have relied on before have failed us,” he said.
“The question is whether this will be another police shooting that fades away or whether this country finally decides to do something different.”
The call came amid growing public scrutiny of the fatal police encounter on January 20, which occurred during a high-speed police chase and left Samaroo dead and Sealy injured. Circulating videos of Samaroo’s final moments have fuelled national debate over police conduct, accountability and the handling of investigations into police-involved shootings.
He said the case highlights structural weaknesses in how such incidents are investigated in T&T.
“Joshua Samaroo’s situation is no longer just a family matter—it has become a public debate. We are seeing a quantum disaster in terms of public confidence in the Government, the line minister, and the Commissioner of Police.”
Williams confirmed his legal team has written to Guevarro, under the Freedom of Information Act, seeking documents and information surrounding the shooting.
“The questions we raised are very broad-based, but based on history, we expect to be told this is an active investigation and therefore the information will be denied. Families are often left in the dark while the system investigates itself.”
He also criticised the investigative framework announced by the commissioner, which involves a senior divisional officer, the Professional Standards Bureau, and the Police Complaints Authority.
“When you look at their track record, both collectively and independently, you have to ask what will be different this time. There is no pit here. There is no firewall,” he said.
While he declined to comment directly on the Minister of Homeland Security, Williams expressed cautious optimism about the Minister of Justice’s role, adding that constitutional reform may be required to address police-involved killings.
“There has to be serious discussion about constitutional reform regarding police killings in Trinidad and Tobago. Without that, public confidence in the TTPS will continue to erode,” he said.
He also urged the Prime Minister and National Security Council to treat the case as a defining national moment.
“This should be a test case to remove the negative impact on the Police Service that continues to reduce public trust and undermine any security plan the Government wants to implement,” Williams said.
Meanwhile, the family also revealed that Kaia Sealy, Samaroo’s common-law wife, was rushed back to medical care yesterday, after experiencing breathing difficulties.
Samaroo’s father, Christopher Samaroo, said his daughter-in-law had initially been discharged but was later admitted to a private medical facility after her condition worsened.
“She was discharged, but a little while ago she was rushed back to medical personnel because she was having problems breathing,” Samaroo said.
“That’s the last I heard. I don’t know how she is right now.”
Guardian Media attempted to contact Justice Minister Devish Maharaj but his phone was switched off.