The police investigation into the discovery of a cache of missing firearms and ammunition from the San Fernando Municipal Police Station, on the night police corporal Anuska Eversley was also murdered, has now widened to include the discovery of yet another set of missing guns – this time, from the San Fernando City Corporation compound.
The second discovery of missing weapons came three days after Eversley was found murdered on April 19 inside the police station at King’s Wharf.
A source close to the investigation yesterday told Guardian Media that the disappearance of the latest set of weapons was discovered during an overall audit of the weapons and ammunition under the San Fernando Municipal Police Station’s care.
Guardian Media learned that the acting ASP assigned to replace the superintendent who was suspended in the wake of Eversley’s murder, followed protocol by accepting the handover of weapons and ammunition from the police post at the San Fernando City Corporation on April 22. The officer then proceeded to check the inventory in the safe where the weapons were stored against what had been listed in the post’s diary.
It was reported that upon checking the safe, the ASP found eight defective revolvers (all bearing serial numbers), along with two sealed boxes of .22 ammunition, nine rounds of 9 mm ammunition and one round of .38 special ammunition.
However, during the check, the ASP detected a hole at the back of the safe.
The acting ASP then checked completed station diaries and was able to confirm that there ought to have been 12 revolvers in the safe.
Efforts to get a response from senior police officials were unsuccessful yesterday, while an official of the T&T Municipal Police Service (TTMPS) declined to answer, as he said the investigations were being led by the T&T Police Service (TTPS) and it would not be right to comment.
The body of Eversley, a 42-year-old mother of three, was discovered by colleagues around 4.40 am on April 19, while the safe inside the station that contained the guns and ammunition was found empty.
The T&T Police Service (TTPS) is yet to confirm the quantity of guns and ammunition stolen during the incident and an audit is currently underway.
However, when Eversley’s colleague Jivon “Biggs” Cooper, 28, appeared in court on Monday, charged with her murder, alongside Kwame Arnold, 20, and Nicholas “Nico” Ramdass, 24, the court file read that they had also been charged with the theft of 114 pistols, one revolver, six shotguns, two MPX submachine guns and 173 firearm magazines. A status hearing has been fixed for October 15, while a sufficiency hearing is scheduled for December 10.
A superintendent and four officers who were on duty on the night Eversley was killed and the guns and ammunition stolen, were subsequently suspended as the probe continues. Former TTMPS head ACP Surrendra Sagramsingh has also been sent on leave and has since been replaced by Wayne Mystar.
Editor’s note: In an earlier version of this story, we inaccurately reported that the guns were found missing from the San Fernando Mayor’s Office. The guns, in fact, went missing from the police post on the San Fernando City Corporation compound, which also houses the Office of the Mayor. We apologise for the error.
