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Ex-treasurer loses appeal against Trinidad and Tobago Cricket Board - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

KISWAH Chaitoo lost his appeal against the Trinidad and Tobago Cricket Board's (TTCB) January 10 motion of no confidence moved against him, which resulted in his February 28 removal as treasurer.

In a 50-page judgment issued by the seven-member Supreme Appellate Committee (SAC) on December 9, they found Chaitoo in 'flagrant breach' of Article 27 of TTCB's constitution, which states, 'The proceedings of all documents and all meetings of the executive and of the board shall be confidential and not be disclosed to unauthorised persons.'

Ultimately, Chaitoo's decision to share internal information with the police before the TTCB completed its internal investigations, partnered with him 'breaching his duty of confidentiality' by providing information from an executive meeting to this newspaper on January 14, were the central reasons given by SAC deemed 'sufficient to ground a motion of no confidence.'

The SAC said the TTCB could not be faulted for pursuing the vote of no confidence since they were 'entitled to handle its own disciplinary regime, acted fairly in all the circumstances in formulating and passing the motion of no confidence in Chaitoo.'

The SAC comprised Justice Prakash Moosai (chairman), Samuel Saunders (deputy chairman) and members Rennie Gosine, Kent Ghisawan, Norris Ferguson, Patsy Joseph and Ammar Samaroo.

Chaitoo was elected TTCB treasurer along with other members of the executive on October 30, 2021.

His removal followed Chaitoo discovering 'an unreconciled amount of some $51,000' in TTCB's books in August 2022. For the next year, he was unsuccessful in having the issue addressed by a TTCB employee, particularly for the period/quarter August 2022 to October 2022.

From August 2022 to August 2023, Chaitoo did his own fact-finding mission and used external auditors to get a clearer understanding of TTCB's financials for that period. It resulted in an employee resigning in October 2023 and reportedly admitting guilt of 'using cheques assigned for TTCB use for my personal expenses.'

She said her actions spanned across five years at an approximate cost between $200,000 to $300,000, and that she would pay it back 'over a period of time agreed to.'

Chaitoo reported the missing money to the TTCB's accountants' ethics committee but also said because he was a licensed accountant, he had a responsibility to report the matter to the police. However, before doing so, he would report back to the executive.

In November 2023, at an executive retreat in Tobago, Chaitoo 'was in possession of 153 cheques totaling some $548,000 which he informed police was the approximate sum misappropriated by an employee.'

At the board's December 2023 AGM, Chaitoo informed the general membership that he had reported the matter to police (Fraud Squad), 'of larceny by an employee,' without the executive having prior knowledge of the report.

TTCB president Azim Bassarath, in an e-mail to Chaitoo in December, deemed his decision to report the matter to police instead of letting the board's internal inves

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