Derek Achong
A television station has been ordered to pay over $350,000 in compensation to a customs officer it accused of being a terrorist linked to the Islamic State (ISIS).
High Court Judge Avason Quinlan-Williams ordered the compensation this week as she upheld Clint Rivers' defamation case against One Caribbean Media Limited (OCM) and investigative journalist Mark Bassant.
The lawsuit centred around an investigative report from Bassant that was aired on OCM's television station CCN TV6 on April 15, 2015.
Rivers claimed that the report alleged that he had ties to ISIS and left Trinidad in 2014 to travel to the Middle East to serve as a foreign fighter.
In his lawsuit, Rivers, whose legal team was led by attorney Wayne Sturge before he stopped practising law to serve as a Cabinet minister, claimed that the allegations were completely false.
"Although the Claimant is a follower of Islam, the Claimant has in no way been involved with the international organisation known as ISIS or any other terrorist organisation whether locally or internationally based," his lawyers said.
They claimed if Bassant and the station had conducted proper investigations with immigration authorities, they would have learned that he left Trinidad in 2014 to perform Hajj in Saudi Arabia.
Rivers claimed that the report gravely affected his and his family's life.
He claimed that in February 2018, police arrested him while he was at home with his seven young children.
He was detained for several days during which he was questioned over purported links to ISIS and an alleged plot to destabilise Carnival celebrations.
"The Claimant and his family have suffered considerable hurt, distress, and embarrassment," his lawyers said, as they claimed that his children were bullied at school based on the allegations.
They also claimed that he lost clients who he would provide private transportation services in his spare time.
In determining the case, Justice Quinlan-Williams found that the statements in the report were defamatory to Rivers as claimed.
She rejected the company's defence that the report was the product of responsible journalism.
In deciding on the compensation for Rivers, Justice Quinlan-Williams did not consider his arrest and detention almost three years after the report was aired.
The company was also ordered to pay Rivers' legal costs for pursuing the case.
Rivers was also represented by Lemuel Murphy, and Alexia Romero, of Regius Chambers.