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Thursday, May 15, 2025

Sitting ducks in killing fields

by

Ira Mathur
753 days ago
20230423
IRA MATHUR

IRA MATHUR

“Can you be­lieve that judge? He ruled a man was ‘pro­voked’ to kill a woman af­ter an ar­gu­ment over the phone, pro­nounc­ing that any ‘rea­son­able man’ would have done the same. Men in this coun­try are steeped in misog­y­ny, use women for sex and cash, and blame and kill them when they don’t get their way. I didn’t even see her face. But my heart hurts for her, her chil­dren and all those she loved.”

That text came from my girl­friend “Ali­cia” from South, who has an in­junc­tion out from a man who drank and beat her sense­less. She es­caped and texted from a safe space.

We fol­lowed this case of the ‘pro­voked’ killing close­ly.

On Sep­tem­ber 8, 2006, a San Juan Handy­man (Clint Syl­van) drink­ing in a bar in To­ba­go took a call from his girl­friend, Janet Davis, whose house he was liv­ing in rent-free.

Two days be­fore he mur­dered Janet (a 44-year-old moth­er of four), co-work­ers heard him com­plain he had tak­en a loan to buy Janet a fridge and mi­crowave, and de­spite that, she put him out for drink­ing and quar­relling with one of her daugh­ters.

That ‘gift’ of a fridge and mi­crowave in re­turn for stay­ing free by Janet ap­par­ent­ly gave him the right to drink and fight in her home.

On the day he punched and stabbed Janet to death 18 times, he tes­ti­fied Janet called him from work (he was in a bar) and ‘de­mand­ed mon­ey’ ($3,000)–note he was liv­ing by her for free–in his own words, “that woman used to be al­ways there for me.” In­stead of pay­ing his dues, he told Janet he was leav­ing for Trinidad.

Then like any rea­son­able hu­man who was be­ing used and dumped, Janet re­port­ed­ly used ob­scene lan­guage, chastis­ing Clint for drink­ing (he ad­mit­ted to con­sum­ing up to 13 beers that day.)

Janet’s be­hav­iour was ‘rea­son­able’ giv­en the man sponged off her, os­ten­si­bly owed her mon­ey and was about to skip off to Trinidad. She didn’t threat­en him. She just got an­gry about be­ing used by Clint, for whom, by his ad­mis­sion, she did every­thing.

Clint de­cid­ed to meet her in the vil­la where she was work­ing and asked to ‘talk’ to her by the pool be­fore he gave her the mon­ey. In­stead, he met her mak­ing the beds (work­ing for mon­ey that would mind him) with a threat, “What it is you say on the phone dey?” by punch­ing her in the face, tak­ing the knife (hand­i­ly placed) from his pants pock­et and stab­bing her to death (18 times).

Af­ter he gave him­self up and be­fore he claimed ‘self-de­fence’ (!) and ‘provo­ca­tion’, he said sim­ply of the killing that the “ar­gu­ment got re­al­ly out of hand.”

The ‘ar­gu­ment’ didn’t get out of hand. He got out of hand, and killed Janet, draw­ing a knife from the waist of his pants (If that knife doesn’t scream in­tent to mur­der, what does?)

“I re­al­ly loved Janet. That woman used to al­ways be there for me. We get in­to an in­ci­dent that could have been avoid­ed. I sor­ry,” Syl­van re­port­ed­ly told the po­lice.

Clint, who ‘re­al­ly loved’ Janet, vol­un­tar­i­ly drove to her work­place with a knife in his pock­et and punched and killed her with “plen­ty stabs,” called the killing an “ac­ci­dent could have been avoid­ed.”

Yes, it could have been avoid­ed if he hadn’t stabbed her. Or could it have been avoid­ed if she had put up with his drink­ing-scroung­ing ways? Be­ing held to ac­count ‘pro­voked’ him suf­fi­cient­ly to kill her.

In his rul­ing based on ev­i­dence from 14 wit­ness­es and the post-mortem re­port on Janet Davis, which re­vealed ‘14 stabs and four in­cised wounds’ from a knife to Janet, Clint’s words, “What it is you say on the phone dey?” got him off the hook.

Jus­tice Ge­of­frey Hen­der­son said in a judge-alone tri­al, “Some­thing was said which sud­den­ly and tem­porar­i­ly made him lose his self-con­trol.” (The judge didn’t know what.) The ev­i­dence from his co-work­ers is that this was the ‘first time’ they saw Clint be­have this way. And be­cause no one had seen him stab­bing or killing Janet be­fore, it made his be­hav­iour ‘rea­son­able’ and ex­cused him from mur­der, down­grad­ing him to ac­ci­den­tal “manslaugh­ter’.

Sev­en­teen years lat­er, Janet’s chil­dren had to hear that it was their moth­er’s fault that she was killed. Jus­tice Hen­der­son ruled that a “rea­son­able man of the same age and back­ground as Syl­van would have re­act­ed sim­i­lar­ly.”

With this mind­set by the Ju­di­cia­ry–defin­ing a vi­cious killing as ‘rea­son­able and pro­voked’–women in T&T are sit­ting ducks in killing fields with no jus­tice. Fifty-sev­en women were mur­dered in 2022.

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