Andrea Perez-Sobers
Senior Reporter
Former national security minister Gary Griffith has pushed back against claims raised in Parliament about the circumstances surrounding the 2014 murder of Dana Seetahal, SC, stating that during his tenure, no reports ever reached the country’s security leadership indicating she was the target of an assassination plot.
Griffith served as minister from 2012 to 2015.
His comments came after Defence Minister Wayne Sturge referenced Seetahal’s killing during a debate on the extension of the State of Emergency in Parliament last Friday.
During the debate, Sturge argued that authorities failed to act decisively despite intelligence suggesting Seetahal’s life was under threat. He told the chamber that investigators had monitored communications linked to criminal elements but did not intervene before the killing.
“Dana Seetahal also knew she was going to get killed,” Sturge said. “They listened, and they listened, and they listened, and now she’s not here.”
Responding to those remarks, Griffith explained he was not questioning the Defence Minister’s statement but could only address the period when he served as minister of national security under the administration of Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar.
“What I can confirm is that at no time during my tenure as minister of national security were any reports given to us about Dana Seetahal being a target,” Griffith stated.
He stressed that during that period, the government never ignored requests for protection or declined to provide security measures.
“At no time did we ignore requests for her protection, and at no time did we refuse to provide security measures to protect her as requested,” Griffith stated.
He further outlined how the Interception of Communications Act operates, explaining that only three officials are authorised to request intercepts.
“In fact, after the Interception of Communications Act was passed, only three persons had authorisation to request intercept—the Commissioner of Police, the Director of the Strategic Services Agency, and the Chief of Defence Staff,” Griffith stated.
He added that it would have been improper for those officials to inform politicians about individuals whose communications were being intercepted.
Opposition MP for Port of Spain North/St Ann’s West Stuart Young also objected during the parliamentary debate, cautioning against suggestions that ministers would have had access to intercepted communications.
Seetahal, a senior counsel and former independent senator, was ambushed and shot shortly after midnight on May 4, 2014, along Hamilton Holder Street in Woodbrook while driving home to her apartment at One Woodbrook Place after leaving the Ma Pau Casino on Ariapita Avenue.
An autopsy revealed she had been shot five times.
On July 25, 2015, several men were charged with the murder, including Rajaee Ali, Ishmael Ali, Hamid Ali, Devaughn Cummings, Ricardo Stewart, Earl Richards, Stephan Cummings, Kevin Parkinson, Leston Gonzales, Roget Boucher, and Gareth Wiseman. (See more on Page 11)