(Trinidad Guardian) Prisoners in local jails are communicating on the Internet using 4G and LTE technology, prompting the Government to amend the Interception of Communication law soon to deal with this.
That’s according to Attorney General Faris Al-Rawi
Al-Rawi revealed this in yesterday’s Senate debate on a Miscellaneous provision bill concerning measures to protect security sector workers – from police, prisons and immigration to Customs officials – as well as halt activities by, and weed out corrupt officers.
Bill provisions include criminalising “tip-offs” which Al-Rawi said was giving an advantage to criminal empires.
He said prisoners’ use of high-level technology was presenting “significant difficulties” in jails. He said he’ll also be bringing law to introduce a unique ID number and a bio-metric system like the United States Social Services system. He said this would eliminate fraud.
Al-Rawi said he’d consulted the Director of Public Prosecutions on possible law to prevent police from framing people.
Al-Rawi said during Bail bill debate – when “frameup” concerns arose – the Prime Minister instructed him to examine such law. But he said the DPP urged him against having a statutory offence of framing and advised reliance on common law: misbehaviour in public office, perverting the course of justice and wasteful employment of police time.