Pubdate: Sat, 01 Jan 2005 Source: Trinidad Express (Trinidad) Copyright: 2004 Trinidad Express Contact: http://www.trinidadexpress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1093 Author: Darryl Heeralal Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) CRIMESTOPPERS TAKES COMMUNITY AWARD Express Individual of the Year The power to stop crime is at your fingertip. Or so the new chairman of the Crime Stoppers programme, Darren Carmichael, would have us believe. "Empowerment to make a difference. That is the real value of the programme," Carmichael said yesterday. Crime Stoppers is an international non-profit, nongovernmental organisation which started in Albuquerque, New Mexico the United States in 1976 following the murder of a university student. A police officer, stumped in his investigations, came up with the idea of offering a cash reward for information and two men were later held. It is now a collaboration with the police, media and the public. Now 18 countries internationally, including South Africa, Jamaica, Bermuda, Canada and the US have crime stoppers programmes. Locally crime stoppers started on May 10, 1999 on the initiative of some businessmen and the Trinidad and Tobago Chamber of Industry and Commerce. It was based on the Crime Stoppers Toronto, Canada model. Crime Stoppers Trinidad and Tobago has won the Express Award of Merit to a Community Group or Organisation for 2004. "This award endorses the role that crime stoppers is trying to play," Carmichael said. "When you give this award you are giving all the businesses that have contributed, all the people that have served on the board, the police service and most of all the tipsters." Since its inception Crime Stoppers has received 13, 151 calls resulting in 6,880 tips, 2,358 investigations cleared and 1,326 offenses cleared. In all 513 people have been arrested, 56 firearms seized and 1,411 rounds of ammunition recovered. Tips have resulted in the seizure of $195,101,084 of narcotics and the recovery of $2,013,443 being recovered. Also 20,000 marijuana trees have been destroyed. Some of the more recent high profile crimes that the programme has helped to solve include the Sada Singh kidnapping, the seizure of $13 million worth of cocaine in Tobago, 198 kilos of marijuana and theft racket at the Port of Spain port. The concept of the programme is simply. Anyone with information on a crime can call the hotline at 800-4011 and give information anonymously and confidentially. They are given a security code and asked to call back within 21 days. That information is passed on to the police coordinator of the programme and he then gives the information to the relevant police unit. The results of the investigations is then passed on to the crime stoppers board and then given to the call takers. When the tipster calls back, if the information is solid that caller is informed that they can go to any branch of Scotia Bank, go to the manager with the code and collect the reward. Rewards vary from $1,000 to $10,000. The media plays its part by advertising and publishing the Crime Stopper numbers in news stories. Crime Stoppers is funded by corporate and private citizens through cash and kind and within the last two years the Government has pumped $7 million into the programme. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager