EVEN as he is prepared to step aside to allow an investigation into allegation of corruption into the granting of firearm user's licences and a probe of Christian Chandler - to avoid any inference of impropriety and interference - Gary Griffith wants the Police Service Commission (PSC) also to "level the playing field" by removing four other CoP candidates who have direct oversight of the two investigations, on the same premise: to avoid the possibility of bias.
In a letter sent to Bliss Seepersad, the chair of the PSC, on Friday, Griffith said the PSC should use the same rationale to ask DCP Erla Christopher, ACPs Wendell Williams, Yusuff Gaffar and Andre Norton to go on leave pending the hearing and determination of the two investigations.
Newsday understands that the letter was first sent on Thursday to retired judge Stanley John, who was retained by the PSC to investigate the two matters.
The four officers named by Griffith are also on the PSC’s shortlist of seven candidates on its Order of Merit List completed since August 12. Griffith and Lt Col Sheldon Ramnanan, a former chief legal officer of the Defence Force, are also among the candidates.
While Griffith said he had no reason to believe the four officers would act improperly, just as there was concern raised about his remaining in office, he asked why there were no similar concerns about the other four candidates and why they were not similarly sent on leave.
"I humbly request a level playing field and in the same manner that I have decided to do the honourable thing to recuse myself, then I strongly advise that these four other candidates do likewise."
The latest development comes as the Attorney General admits that he piloted bad law in July to change the process for the PSC to appoint a contract officer as CoP without the approval of Parliament.
The government is now drafting an amendment to Legal Order 183 and intends to convene Parliament shortly to fix the error.
The Prime Minister also admitted to the error during a post-Cabinet press briefing on Thursday and said the government will rely on the legal opinion of retired Caribbean Court of Justice judge Rolston Nelson on the issue.
Correspondence obtained by Newsday showed Griffith's letter to Seepersad agreed with the recommendation to recuse himself pending the outcome of the two investigations, to ensure no claim can be made that he influenced or interfered with the probes in any way.
"Hence, in the same manner, to ensure that me, being someone not deemed as being investigated but solely as a candidate and having some possibility of having access to interfere in the investigation, hence me deciding to proceed voluntarily on leave, then there are four other serving officers who are also shortlisted for the post of CoP, but actually have more direct operational and influential involvement in the two investigations that you are conducting than myself," the letter said.
He said it was “alarming” that one candidate