Public anger grows over Custody Suites Sham as millions vanish in failed SLP project
CASTRIES, St Lucia – May 21, 2025 — In a stunning act of political repackaging, the Saint Lucia Labour Party (SLP) government has unveiled its latest “achievement”: a set of holding cells on the same ground once destined for a groundbreaking judicial complex. This embarrassing reversal, now branded as the reopening of Custody Suites, is being paraded as progress, even though it symbolizes a colossal step backward in St Lucia’s judicial modernization efforts.
Let’s call it what it is, a Custody Suites Sham, and a farcical victory lap for a mess the Philip J Pierre-led SLP government created.
Under the Allen Chastanet-led United Workers Party (UWP), Saint Lucia was on course to construct a Halls of Justice, a centralized, state-of-the-art complex designed to consolidate court operations, enhance judicial efficiency, and replace outdated facilities. Demolition of the old Royal Gaol and Custody Suites was complete. Site clearance and initial groundwork had begun. Approvals were in place.
Then, 2021 ushered in a new SLP government. And with it, a wave of politically motivated sabotage.
Rather than build on the groundwork already laid, the Philip J Pierre-led SLP government torpedoed the entire initiative, not out of practicality, but pride. A fully approved, shovel-ready development was tossed aside for one reason only: it bore the UWP’s signature.
What followed was political theatre: a glitzy, groundbreaking ceremony across from the Minor Basilica, complete with photo ops and empty promises. The Catholic Church issued stern warnings about the site’s inappropriateness. The SLP ignored them.
A Scandal of Soaring Costs and Shady Spending
As the controversy mounted, the SLP government quietly backtracked. Without a word of public explanation, they abandoned the cathedral site and purchased a parcel of land on William Peter Boulevard from the Adjodha family for an eyebrow-raising $13 million.
This sudden purchase triggered widespread concerns of government waste and backroom deals. Why spend that much on land when the original site was already cleared, prepped, and publicly funded?
Insiders allege that procurement processes were bypassed and that the transaction lacked proper parliamentary oversight. No tender, no transparency, just a massive land buy quietly pushed through under the radar.
Worse yet, cost overruns ballooned as the project spiraled into chaos. Initial budgets quietly doubled, with total expenditures now estimated to exceed $20 million, and yet, the end result is not a justice complex, but a glorified detention facility.
As detailed in Unitedpac St Lucia News’ prior coverage, the Custody Suites Sham has become a lightning rod for allegations of corruption, politically connected contractors, and murky financial dealings. No public inquiry has been launched, and the administration remains tight-lipped on how millions were spent without delivering the original promise.
From Vision to Vanity Project
Now, after wasting years and millions, the SLP has sheepishly returned to the original location, the very site Chastanet’s administration had prepared for the Halls of Justice, to unveil a set of holding cells.
No courthouse. No legal chambers. No comprehensive reform. Just concrete blocks and handcuffs.
They are cutting ribbons on jail cells and calling it a milestone. They are spinning a fraction of the original vision as progress. It is not only misleading, it’s insulting.
SLNT’s Hypocrisy and Strategic Silence
Adding insult to injury is the role of the Saint Lucia National Trust (SLNT). Once vocal about the preservation of the old Royal Gaol, SLNT fought the UWP’s Halls of Justice initiative tooth and nail, citing heritage and filing legal injunctions.
Today? Silence.
The same site is now home to SLP’s detention block, and not a single word has been uttered. No protests. No lawsuits. No press statements. SLNT’s credibility, like the transparency of this project, has vanished.
Justice Deferred, Democracy Betrayed
This was Saint Lucia’s chance to leap into the 21st century with a justice system worthy of its people. What the UWP began was a visionary, nationally unifying effort. What the SLP delivered is a monument to partisanship and fiscal irresponsibility.
Instead of integrated justice, we now have a $13 million Custody Suites Sham, and Saint Lucians are expected to cheer.
The damage is done. The justice system remains fractured. Taxpayers are poorer. And all we’re left with is political vanity dressed in concrete and steel.
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