ALLAN WARNER, founder of the Warner Group of Companies and a close friend of Prime Minister Dr Rowley, has been charged with the criminal offence of processing aggregate without a licence after two days in police custody.
Warner, 74, of Tower 2, Tragarete Road, Woodbrook, turned himself in at the St Joseph Police Station to officers of the Multi-Agency Task Force in the company of his attorneys, Pamela Elder, SC, and Russell Warner (no relation) on July 2.
[caption id="attachment_1094317" align="alignnone" width="1024"] Allan Warner, founder of the Warner Group of Companies, as he left the St Joseph Police Station on July 4, after being released on $100,000 bail on a charge of processing aggregate without a licence. - Photo by Roger Jacob[/caption]
However, he had to be taken for medical treatment at the nearby St Augustine Private Hospital after complaining of feeling unwell that same day where he spent the night under police guard.
On July 4, Warner was identified as the owner of an aggregate mining plant at Moonan Road, Wallerfield, before he was formally charged with the summary offence in contravention of Section 45 (1) (a) of the Minerals Act. The offence carries a penalty of $500,000 fine and five years in prison.
He was released on $100,000 bail with surety by Justice of the Peace (JP) Abrahim Ali shortly before 5.30 pm. Warner's relative, Veronique Logan, stood as the bailor. Warner is scheduled to appear before the Arima Magistrates Court on July 19, to join his son, Aloko Ato Warner and seven others who were charged in early May for a similar offence by officers of the Multi-Agency Task Force (MATF) led by ASP Leon Haynes.
In response for a comment to a WhatsApp question sent by Newsday which informed Rowley of the development, as well as his previous public stance against illegal quarrying, he stated, "Sorry to hear that."
[caption id="attachment_1094320" align="alignnone" width="1024"] An overloader at an aggregate processing plant at Moonan Road, Wallerfield which was shut down by police on May 2. -[/caption]
There was no response to a follow up question as to whether the PM intended to speak to Warner to get his side of the matter.
The Opposition UNC had in the past accused Rowley and his wife, Sharon, of benefiting from favourable treatment from Warner, a principal of Inez Investment, during the purchase of a townhouse at Inez Gate, Shirvan Road, Tobago in 2019.
The townhouse which was being sold for $1.7 million was bought by the Rowleys for the discounted price of $1.2 million which the PM said was as a basis of negotiations. One of the PM's daughters also owns a townhouse at the same development.
In May, police claimed they shut down a multi-million-dollar illegal aggregate processing plant with some of the latest modernised machinery, including two multi-million-dollar excavators at a wash plant owned by Warner. Police have been stationed at the wash plant since the operation.
One of the excavators which had been seized had been rented from Massy and has since been rele