SSA sends 10 more employees on leave
Lead Editor Investigations
asha.javeed@guardian.co.tt
The State’s spy agency, the Strategic Services Agency (SSA), sent a further ten employees on administrative leave last week. The employees were attached to the Operations Security “Opset” Unit. The unit was established under former SSA director Major Roger Best and was in charge of installing CCTV cameras and providing cover for agents when on field assignments.
It worked in conjunction with another unit established by Best, the Tactical Response Team (TRT), and was assembled between April and May 2023. In an interview in the Newsday published on August 4, Best said units were formed to protect members of the agency and its assets, including a $28 million mobile command unit nicknamed Mamba and technicians employed to install CCTV cameras in key locations around the country.
He had said that two members of the tactical unit were retained, including the unit’s supervisor and an operator, and that the team was formed after a request from staff for SSA personnel to be the first responders.
However, the Sunday Guardian learnt that the remaining members were included in the employees set on leave. All ten members of the TRT team were fired from the SSA on March 23 following a shake-up at the agency. They received one month’s salary and a prorated gratuity payment.
“They treated us so badly. It has left a bitter taste. We have been treated like enemies of the State,” one officer had told Guardian Media.
The former officers have been seeking legal counsel over their termination and were gearing up to sue the State since. Despite allegations made, none of them have been charged with wrongdoing or misbehaviour in office.
Last month, Guardian Media exclusively reported that the SSA held mediation talks with the fired members of the now-disbanded TRT, where they were told that while the team was no longer necessary by the organisation, the members of the team had the opportunity to come back to work in a different capacity where a vacancy exists that is a best fit with experience, qualifications, and the requirements of the position.
However, National Security Minister Fitzgerald Hinds issued a statement that “no terminated former employee has been rehired by the SSA.”
He added, “The reason for the establishment of the unapproved TRT and its operations during its existence are the subject of immediate and active police investigation.”
In his July 3 statement to Parliament, Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley said that “28 employees of the SSA were terminated, either for violations of the SSA Act and Regulations or for anomalous recruitment or faulty promotion processes and practices.”
Among those employees are former director Best, Pastor Ian Brown, the self-declared spy for the SSA, and his son, who was also employed at the agency, former deputy director of administration Joanne Daniel.
Both Brown and Best are elders of Brown’s church, the Jerusalem Bride Church.
Investigations continuing
Dr Rowley had confirmed that several police investigations were taking place with regard to the SSA, including murder. Intelligence sources have linked the death of Andy Daniel’s death, a closed-circuit television (CCTV) contractor, to the shake-up that took place at the SSA. Daniel’s wife, Joanne Daniel, was deputy director of administration at the SSA. Daniel was murdered on the highway on November 11, 2023. It was his murder that alerted the Government that there was some exposure to the organisation.
For months before Daniel’s death, intelligence officials tried to raise concerns to Government officials they could access, to talk about challenges by the SSA under director Best—the hiring practices that allegedly bypassed a proper vetting mandatory for the organisation, the confluence of church members at the top of the agency who were being heavily influenced by Pastor Ian Brown, the challenges being faced with Best given his religious proclivities (he is an elder at Brown’s church), and operations taking place that were beyond the remit of the SSA.
In his parliamentary statement, Dr Rowley read into Hansard a statement of an audit conducted on the SSA by retired brigadier general Anthony Phillips-Spencer. The audit revealed that the agency under Best amassed military-grade weapons and ammunition and operated a highly trained and militarised so-called “Tactical Response Unit.”
There were disturbing practices of nepotism and opportunism leading to a concentration of members of one church being hired by the SSA, instances of dishonesty and deep deception, and the SSA was increasingly incapable of securing public trust. “Such persons belonged to a cult that was arming itself while preaching a doctrine for trained military and paramilitary personnel with a religious calling to be the most suitable persons to replace the country’s political leadership. They were exerting high levels of influence on the affairs of the agency to the detriment of national security,” Dr Rowley said.
So far, the State has only been able to lay one set of charges against former SSA employees—Brown, Sgt Sherwin Waldron, and Susan Portell-Griffith—who were charged with the “transferring” of four “prohibited firearms” from the Trinidad and Tobago Police Service (TTPS) to the SSA.
While Best was detained and questioned, he was subsequently released as there was no evidence to charge him with misbehaviour in public office.
Best, who has been silent since he was suspended from the agency on March 2 and subsequently fired on May 18, in his first statement told Guardian Media that “the mention of me leading a coup or any form of destabilisation is not only preposterous but ludicrous.”