Pubdate: Thu, 29 Nov 2007 Source: Trinidad Express (Trinidad) Copyright: 2007 Trinidad Express Contact: http://www.trinidadexpress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1093 A CHANCE FOR POLICE REDEMPTION As a former head of the Firearms and Interdiction Unit and with his experience as a detective with the Organised Crime and Narcotics Unit, Supt Chandrabhan Maharaj is better placed than most to be informed about the involvement of fellow officers in both the illegal gun and drug trades, the more so because the two are demonstrably connected. Accusations of police corruption in general and involvement in both gun and drug rackets in particular are not new but the superintendent's allegations clearly deserve the greatest weight since he is in a position to have extensive insider information that, properly handled, will blow the proverbial whistle on at least some of his crooked comrades. It must have taken considerable courage for Supt Maharaj to have decided to beard the wolves in their dens by not simply going up the line to his superiors but to put it, or have it put, in the public domain where it was bound to excite not only comment but a show of action by said superiors who almost immediately announced the start of an investigation. If his decision to do both is a reflection of a certain lack of confidence in his superiors that is only to be expected given the way corruption has befouled Trinidad and Tobago's Police Service over the years in the full knowledge and, indeed, under the noses of men high in the chain of command. We know that the fillip to Supt Maharaj's move was the promotion which he was offered and which he refused, but we still do not quite know what led him to break his silence, what was the straw that broke the camel's back in the context of his having ridden along, although reluctantly, for some time. Whatever his underlying reasons we believe that the law-abiding majority in Trinidad and Tobago is prepared to give him their unstinting support the more so if, by this single action, he is able to trigger the beginning of an upheaval that will succeed in helping to make the Police Service cleaner and the public, that it is sworn to serve, safer. And while the service is notoriously slow when it comes to investigating its own officers Police Commissioner Trevor Paul will have to ensure that this case is conducted with due dispatch or else there are going to be renewed and concerted calls for an independent body to investigate this and other accusations that serve to erode the public's trust in their own police. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek