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UNC: Put ankle bracelets on all lawbreakers to reduce crime - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

ATTORNEY Jagdeo Singh is advocating for the placing of electronic bracelets on every lawbreaker, as an effective tool to crime reduction in the country.

A panelist at the UNC Town Hall meeting on Justice Reform at the Barataria Community Centre on November 25, Singh made the case for “placing an electronic bracelet on every person charged with an offence and on bail, and to modify the terms of bail to prevent the accused from consulting with known criminals."

“Statistics shows that most serious and violent crimes are committed by repeat offenders and this would result in an overnight reduction in crime.

By being able to monitor the offenders, he said, crime could be a deterrent to committal of crimes.

Also on the panel were attorneys Devesh Maharaj and San Juan/Barataria MP Saddam Hosein who all spoke out on the critical state of crime and called for a number of measures, including better equipping of the police and for reform of both the prison and court system.

The panellists discussed shortcomings of the justice system, ways government can deal with gender-based violence, a backlog of 40,000 cases in the courts, the lack of acceptable DNA testing facilities, the absence of halfway houses to reintegrate ex-prisoners into society, and the absence of support for thousand victims of serious crime.

They also spoke of 4,444 complaints of physical and sexual abuse of children; the 575 murders in 2024 to date; the low murder detection rate of eight per cent which they said allowed murderers to walk freely in society; and the long times it takes for relatively simple matters such as traffic tickets, land judgements, child maintenance, or small commercial disputes to be determined or even heard by the courts.

The group also suggested increasing the number of criminal courts, which currently stands under 15, to deal with more than 600 pending murder indictments; changing legislation for automatic good behaviour of prisoners; passing a time limit-law, such as exists in the UK, where a judge has a specific time to deliver a judgement upon hearing a case; as well as re starting mediation and alternative dispute resolution mechanism for matters to be settled without reaching the courts.

Opposition Leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar, who presided over the town hall, speaking on the slow pace of the court system in TT, said "justice delayed is justice denied." She said it was a fundamental problem for democracy and rule of law which a UNC government would fix .

Noting the adverse effect of marijuana use on a person's mental health, Persad-Bissessar proposed raising the legal age for gambling and marijuana use to 25 and over.

The recommendations are among proposals contained in the UNC's 2025 general election manifesto, as well as the modernisation of prisons, and using intelligence services for crime fighting, “and not for spying on political opponents.”

On the issue of salary increases proposed in the 120th Report of the Salaries and Review Commission, Persad-Bissessar said she wanted none of that.

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