A fresh controversy is unfolding within the Belize Police Department, as anonymous insider sources have raised serious allegations of widespread procedural violations in a recent round of senior officer promotions. According to details obtained by local media outlet News Five, multiple officers have been elevated to higher ranks through channels that bypass the institution’s long-standing formal recruitment and advancement rules.
One of the most high-profile cases at the center of the scandal involves the son of a currently serving high-ranking police official. Sources confirm that this officer previously resigned from the force, only to be rehired shortly afterward, and was fast-tracked to the rank of corporal in the recent promotion cycle without completing the full required evaluation process.
A second troubling case cited by insiders involves an officer promoted directly to the rank of sergeant, who sources say completed skipped the mandatory written examination and formal interview that are required for all advancement candidates. Compounding these allegations, this same officer was already advanced through the same promotion process in 2022, making them ineligible for a second accelerated advancement under existing department rules. The unnamed officer has also previously been linked to the high-profile Joseph Budna kidnapping investigation, though no formal criminal charges have ever been filed against them in connection to the case.
When approached by reporters for direct comment on the claims that dozens of promotions were approved for candidates who never took the mandatory promotional exam, Belize’s Police Commissioner Dr. Richard Rosado struck a dismissive tone. “Sometimes you have to stop listen to stupidity,” Rosado told reporters, pushing back against the allegations outright.
Rosado went on to reaffirm that all police promotions in the department are strictly governed by the formal Police Act, outlining a multi-step, transparent process that requires candidate applications, thorough background vetting, shortlisting of eligible candidates, formal written examinations, and a final selection vote by an independent promotional board.
Another controversial appointment that has drawn public outcry is the promotion of Wilbert Cob to the rank of sergeant. Cob gained infamy last year after surveillance footage surfaced showing him physically assaulting a woman in Benque Viejo, in an incident that sparked widespread public anger over police misconduct.
When pressed specifically to address why Cob was approved for promotion despite his documented assault case, Commissioner Rosado defended the department’s decision, saying all formal protocols were followed. “In this case, as I was briefed, the victim asked us to respect her decision, that she would seek family counselling instead of pursuing prosecution. Hence, there was no legal impediment preventing Cob from being promoted,” Rosado explained.
The promotion has renewed public scrutiny, however, as it directly contradicts Rosado’s previously stated public commitment to a policy of zero tolerance for domestic violence perpetrated by serving police officers.
