Stabroek News

CCJ judge: High crime acquittal rate in T&T

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Trinidad and Tobago has a crime detection rate of 20 per cent and of that 20 per cent who are charged, 70 per cent are acquitted.

In a properly functionin­g system, the acquittal rate should be around ten per cent.

So said Caribbean Court of Justice member, Justice Jacob Wit, as he called for a “firm and robust overhaul” of and a “merciless look” at the criminal justice system.

Speaking on day two of the Regional Symposium: Violence as a Public Health Issue–The Caricom Challenge at the Hyatt Regency hotel in Port of Spain on Tuesday, Justice Wit said the right to a fair trial not only applies to the defendant, but included the

victims, witnesses and the society as a whole.

Citing the Belize Constituti­on, he said: “If any person is charged with a crime, then the case shall be afforded a fair hearing; the case, not the accused.

Of course the accused must also be afforded a fair trial but he is not the only one, it also includes witnesses and victims.” He said this was the case with every other constituti­on in the region, except Trinidad and Tobago.

“And there are many stories, ...a 16-year-old is raped and it take 16 or 14 years before that case is tried. What kind of justice is that? By then she is 30 she may be married, she may have children, she may have never told her husband what happened to her when she was 16 and now she has to appear before the court and tell it all over again,” he said. “No wonder witnesses are not very happy to do that. But that means that evidence evaporates and therefore a guilty person

might be free,” he added. He said witnesses come before the Magistrate­s Court and wait for hours and they are sent back repeatedly as a result of adjournmen­ts. “That is not fair to witnesses...and there must be fairness to the society,” Justice Wit said.

Poor detection rates

Justice Wit said even more important was the issue of detection rates. He said Trinidad and Tobago had a detection rate 20 per cent and of that 20 per cent, there was an acquittal rate of more than 70 per cent. “This is not a way to run a criminal justice system. It is true that a criminal justice system must be fair and must be seen to be fair, but above all it must be effective, protecting the rights of all,” he stated.

He said in Trinidad and Tobago people are on remand awaiting trial for more than ten years which “cannot be justice at all”. He suggested that greater use should be made of plea bargaining and there should be an expansion and improvemen­t of judge-alone trials.

“We recognise that the system as it is now functionin­g, or actually dysfunctio­ning, needs a thorough overhaul. Small piecemeal changes cannot do the work,” he said, adding that there has to be a profound look at the criminal justice system.

Responding to St Vincent and the Grenadines Prime Minister Ralph Gonsalves’ statement on Monday that some of the judges seemed to be living on Mars, Justice Wit said he wanted to reassure Gonsalves that all the judges lived here (in the Caribbean) except the judges of the final court of appeal- the Privy Council- who didn’t live on Mars, but in the United Kingdom.

Gonsalves: Lawyers controllin­g criminal justice system

 ?? ?? ‘Need for firm and robust overhaul’: Justice Jacob Wit.
‘Need for firm and robust overhaul’: Justice Jacob Wit.

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