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cnc3 wrote:
New twist in Penal triple killing
The two children found in the home of three corpses on Thursday were blood-soaked and starving, according to their grandfather Dipraj Ragoonanan.
Ragoonanan's comment contradicted that of the police first responders who claimed the children appeared to be well-fed and clean when they were rescued.
Speaking with Guardian Media at the Forensic Science Centre on Friday, Dipraj, 72 said he cried uncontrollably when he saw the children.
He said the two children, an eight-year-old boy and a three-year-old girl, were starving and dehydrated.
"They were given IV fluids at the San Fernando General Hospital...we left there late last night because they were seeing about them."
"The little girl does call me Nana and she told me Nana, Nana I trying to wake up mummy for tea but she not waking up...my heart broke...I start to cry. If you see them state...the clothes mess up with blood and stuff...their hands and faces, " Dipraj said.
Dipraj, who is still waiting for the autopsies to be done on the bodies of his daughter Shelly-Ann Ragoonanan, 43, and her husband, Wazir Mohammed, 57, and Mohammed's brother, Nazim, 52, said police told him their throats were slit. Police said on Thursday he victims were shot sometime on Sunday.
The decomposing bodies were discovered on Thursday at about 3 pm at their home at Clarke Road in Penal.
The autopsies were done on Friday at the Forensic Science Centre (FSC).
The horrific discovery was made by their older son Vishard Mohammed, 21.
Dipraj said he did not have much to do with Ragoonanan's husband and his family but described her as a kind-hearted person.
"She was really a good person...very quiet...they just would drop her off by me and come back for her. She never worked too as she had no cause too...her husband came from a money family."
Dipraj said Vishard and him went to the house after Vishard complained to him that he failed on numerous times to contact both his parents.
"When we went the gate was locked and the boy jumped the wall and went in the house...the door was open and that's when he saw the bodies rotting and the children among the bodies... My heart broke...I started to cry to see the children in the state they were in," Dipraj said.
While no motive was established for the Penal murders, investigators are probing whether Mohammed’s job as a scrap-iron and used truck parts dealer had anything to do with it. However, they said it did not appear that there was a robbery.
Reporter: Rhondor Dowlat
shake d livin wake d dead wrote:Maxi driver and passengers robbed on the PBR
CAUGHT ON CAMERA
GOOD BOYS CONDUCTING A ROBBERY
Rion and Ryan, both from St James.
pugboy wrote:their staff are the biggest thieves though
if you ever watch, you hardly ever get a receipt when you buy there esp at busy times.......
antlind wrote:pugboy wrote:their staff are the biggest thieves though
if you ever watch, you hardly ever get a receipt when you buy there esp at busy times.......
I can’t comment on that, but I will say that the staff at this location are some of the most polite individuals I have come across. They are always well spoken and not sour like many other places. Imagine you not even safe in an ice cream store. What is this country coming to?
Jevon cedeno from Santa flora. Bennett village
matix wrote:Why isn’t pest eradication standard
shake d livin wake d dead wrote:matix wrote:Why isn’t pest eradication standard
in trinidad, when police lick down the pests everybody sees and the police wicked and they want jostiss.....BUT... when a pest kill another pest nobody knows nothing
Rowley: Crime like an exotic disease
Jelani Beckles
THE Prime Minister yesterday said he plans to invite an expert to TT to help address the crime facing the country.
Dr Rowley made the statement at a press conference in Barbados when he was fielding questions from the media on crime in TT.
Standing alongside Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley, Rowley said, “Last week I was talking to our National Security Minister (Stuart Young) and we are inviting an expert into Trinidad to open a conversation on this issue which is crime and violence as a public health issue.”
Rowley said TT is trying to face the crime challenge. “It is like an exotic disease that comes into an environment for plants and animals. Once it is in the environment you have to face up to it and that is what we are facing up to now.”
A reporter asked Rowley what advice he will give Barbados on their rise in crime.
He said, “The only thing I will say though is that the level of violence in society is a feature in the modern world.”
The Prime Minister was in Barbados for the signing of a memorandum of understanding on energy cooperation.
As of August 13, Barbados had recorded 34 murders compared to the 28 in the whole of 2018.
Rowley said he is concerned that the next generation of people in TT are involved in crime. “That is the frightening thing, it is the next generation, the young population that seems to not have the value system even on the value of life.
“We are also penetrated by the problems of our larger neighbours with the drug and firearms trade.”
Rovin wrote:POLICEMAN ROBBED, BEATEN IN MALABAR
A bandit beat a police inspector and robbed him of his Toyota Corolla car, earlier this morning in Malabar.
Police said the officer was walking towards his car, which was parked along Roland Cleveland Road, Malabar, at around 3.35 am when a man attacked him from behind.
The man hit him once at the side of his face then got into the car and drove off.
The officer went to the Malabar Police Station where he made a report.
He then went to the Arima Hospital and was treated.
NEWSDAY REPORT
Ben_spanna wrote:Bring back the DEATH penalty and actually start bussin necks.
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