Jensen LaVende
Senior Reporter
jensen.lavende@guardian.co.tt
Valsayn wife and mother Jankie Karim remained in the hands of her kidnappers last night, as police continued to investigate her abduction.
Karim, 44, of Anpoo Street, Spring Village, was forcibly taken around 9.50 pm on Sunday. She was dragged from her family’s white Toyota Hilux by three masked gunmen, who intercepted the vehicle with a blue car just minutes from her home along Bassie Street.
The assailants made off with Karim, the pickup, her husband’s mobile phone, and $500. The vehicle was recovered Monday around 7 am in Arouca.
As of Monday evening, police confirmed that no ransom demand had been made. Authorities are typically reserved about such matters, cautioning that publicising ransom requests could inspire copycat crimes.
This latest kidnapping marks the third abduction in one week—two of which ended tragically.
On July 10, the body of Scott Timala Rambaran was discovered, two days after he was reported missing. Kerry Von Adams was found dead on July 7, one day after a $15,000 ransom was paid for his release.
While relatives of Karim declined to speak to reporters, citing police advice, law enforcement sources confirmed investigations are active. Deputy Commissioner of Police Suzette Martin stated that, as of 7 pm on Monday, no ransom demand had surfaced. She declined further comment.
The case echoes last year’s controversy surrounding the kidnapping of doubles vendor Anisha Hosein. Then, ACP Wayne Mystar claimed a ransom was demanded—a statement her husband publicly denied.
Martin later distanced the police service from Mystar’s comment, saying it was under internal review. Mystar did not address the issue further.
According to TTPS data, there were six reported cases of kidnapping for ransom in 2023, up from three the previous year. Overall kidnappings rose to 124 in 2023 from 109 in 2022. No updated statistics for 2024 are currently available.
Records from the TTPS website span from 2013 to 2024—two years after the disbandment of the Special Anti-Crime Unit of Trinidad and Tobago (SAUTT), which operated from 2003 and had been credited with curbing kidnappings. SAUTT was eventually dissolved after being declared illegally constituted.
During the period covered on the website, kidnapping-for-ransom cases ranged from one to six annually, except for 2018, which saw a spike to 20. Total annual kidnapping figures consistently exceeded 50, with the lowest recorded in 2020 (65) and the highest in 2023 (124).
