Senior Reporter
anna-lisa.paul@guardian.co.tt
The T&T Police Service (TTPS) has come under heavy fire from relatives demanding justice for last week’s killing of Joshua Samaroo, and what they have claimed was the attempted execution of his common-law wife and US citizen Kaia Sealy.
Dismissing statements by Police Commissioner Allister Guevarro hours after the couple had been involved in an alleged shoot-out with officers, Samaroo’s father, Christopher Samaroo, has vowed not to let the matter rest until justice is served.
Yesterday, a recording captured by a security camera appeared to show Samaroo with his hands up and surrendering to the police, before officers opened fire, went viral on social media.
Officers originally claimed Samaroo opened fire, prompting their response.
Around noon on January 20, officers of the North Eastern Division (NED) responded to information that a high-speed chase, which reportedly began in Maloney, was in progress and that the occupants were allegedly armed.
Officers on patrol joined the operation and allegedly confronted Samaroo and Sealy in St Augustine, which led to the shooting.
Samaroo was pronounced dead on arrival at the hospital, while Sealy, who was shot in the back, underwent surgery and is now paralysed from the waist down.
Hours after the release of the video yesterday, Deputy Commissioner of Police, Operations, Suzette Martin issued a statement assuring the couple’s relatives that the TTPS was treating the matter with “utmost seriousness.”
Samaroo, 31, was a courier with Food Drop and lived with Sealy, 28, a hairdresser, at Bamboo Number 1, Valsayn.
He was father to a ten-year-old boy from a previous relationship, while the couple had a five-year-old girl.
Relatives said Samaroo’s twin brother, Caleb, who is visually impaired, has not been eating or sleeping since the incident.
Fighting back tears as he spoke with Sunday Guardian at the family’s home in Maraval yesterday, Samaroo’s father declared, “It is murder to the highest point, and these police officers have to be brought to justice for this. There is no if, and, maybe, but, whatever. They got to be brought to justice because you don’t fire upon somebody like that with their hands up in the air.” Samaroo said his son and daughter-in-law should have been given the chance to exit the car, especially after they had extended their hands upwards in a sign of surrender.
He described his son as “an intelligent young man.”
“A family man who was always for his children, his wife, always working hard, always want to do good, always wanting to make ends meet.”
Confirming his son had grown up in the church where both his parents were pastors, Samaroo said, “My son never smoked. He never drank. He didn’t even eat meat.”
Standing with her father, Samaroo’s sister, Christine, added, “He was a great person, always full of life, always making jokes.”
“He was an amazing person and did not deserve to die like this.”
At a loss as to how the family will continue following Samaroo’s death, she said, “His two hands were up. That’s enough reason for you to lower your firearm. And I am calling on the authorities, the Commissioner of Police, Prime Minister Kamla Persad Bissessar...please just intervene and give us some kind of justice because our brother was no criminal.”
“He was nobody involved in gang war, nothing like that. He was a normal person, working hard for his family, for his two children. He would check on his dad, he would check on me, he would check on his twin brother, and this is really just a devastating time for us, and I just want justice.”
Christine also appealed to Commissioner Guevarro to suspend the officers involved in the shooting while the investigation is underway.
Relatives claimed the same police officers who had been involved in the shooting were the same ones guarding Sealy at the hospital. They expressed concern over her safety and said, “If anything happens to her, they are the ones who did it.”
Indicating they intended to seek legal advice on how to proceed, as no police officials had visited them since the incident, a relative said, “When we went to the police station the next day, they run us like dog.”
“Who will tell us what to do? How to proceed? We don’t even know where his body is. It’s been four days since the shooting, and we are yet to see a police officer.”
The family said the Police Complaints Authority (PCA) had been the only agency to have contacted the family between Tuesday and yesterday.
TTPS assures thorough probe
A statement on the TTPS’s Facebook page read, “The Trinidad and Tobago Police Service is aware of the footage now circulating and understands the public concern it has generated. Any loss of life during a police operation is a matter we treat with the utmost seriousness. At this time, the circumstances surrounding the incident are the subject of an active investigation by the police and the Police Complaints Authority...The TTPS recognises the importance of maintaining public confidence and assures the public that any findings arising from the investigative process will be treated with the seriousness they deserve, and appropriate action taken where necessary.”
And the Police Complaints Authority (PCA), through its Director David West, said, “The Authority has begun an investigation into the matter. As with all matters of this nature, the investigation will be conducted independently and in accordance with the provisions of the Police Complaints Authority Act.”
The PCA again stressed that such incidents in the case of Samaroo and Sealy underscore the importance of the use of body-worn cameras by police officers.
