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Friday, August 29, 2025

Children, grandparents left traumatised as armed bandits break into their home

by

Kevon Felmine
870 days ago
20230412
Patiram Samaroo shows the area where armed bandits gained entry into his son’s home yesterday morning in Debe.

Patiram Samaroo shows the area where armed bandits gained entry into his son’s home yesterday morning in Debe.

KRISTIAN DE SILVA

KEVON FELMINE

kevon.felmine@guardian.co.tt

It was an in­tense ten min­utes of pan­ic as a 13-year-old girl and her 11-year-old broth­er hid in their grand­par­ents’ bed­room as armed ban­dits loot­ed their home and busi­ness in the wee hours of yes­ter­day.

Debe busi­ness­man Ken Sama­roo, own­er of Toiz with Noiz, and his wife spent the East­er week­end in To­ba­go to at­tend an au­to show. But af­ter 13 years in the au­to busi­ness, ban­dits struck his home, leav­ing his par­ents and chil­dren trau­ma­tised. Sama­roo re­turned home with­in hours of learn­ing of the break-in, hug­ging his fam­i­ly as he stressed over the at­tack.

Sama­roo’s fa­ther, Pati­ram, told Guardian Me­dia that the girl heard the ban­dits break­ing in­to the house around 3 am and quick­ly grabbed her broth­er and ran down­stairs to his room, where he and his wife slept.

“Gram­pa. Gram­pa. Ban­dits. Thief,” she whis­pered.

With the in­con­spic­u­ous room be­tween the busi­ness and home, Pati­ram left the lights off as he watched five masked ban­dits de­scend a stair­case and en­ter the store. They took sev­er­al speak­ers and re­turned up­stairs but left one in a bed­room. He said they al­so took out bot­tles of al­co­hol but left them.

While afraid, Pati­ram held a cut­lass, pre­pared to fight for his fam­i­ly if the ban­dits en­tered the room. He said he called the Emer­gency 999 hot­line, but no one an­swered. He called Sama­roo in To­ba­go, whose wife con­tact­ed the po­lice. How­ev­er, San Fer­nan­do and Bar­rack­pore of­fi­cers ar­rived at least 25 min­utes af­ter the ban­dits left.

CCTV cam­era footage showed that the ban­dits parked a wag­on in front of the garage at the back of the busi­ness. They climbed on­to a ve­ran­dah on the up­per storey and used a pig­foot to prise open a bed­room door. They ran­sacked the rooms, steal­ing a safe con­tain­ing cash and jew­ellery, the chil­dren’s jew­ellery and his grand­son’s Play Sta­tion 5. When they left, they dam­aged the low­er lev­el ceil­ing.

Even as Pati­ram laud­ed his grand­chil­dren’s alert­ness and in­tel­li­gence in re­spond­ing to the home in­va­sion, he said the or­deal left them with no ap­petite. It left him wor­ried, un­able to eat and un­sure whether he would sleep last night.

Pati­ram said it was the first time since Sama­roo opened his busi­ness 13 years ago that there was a rob­bery. There is bur­glar proof at the store and cam­eras around the build­ing, but this did not de­ter the ban­dits. He be­lieves it was a sign of grow­ing crime.

“You can­not feel safe any­where in this coun­try. If you are walk­ing on the road, you are not safe now, much less in your house,” Pati­ram said.

Pati­ram be­lieves the ban­dits scout­ed the busi­ness and home be­fore pulling off the bur­glary. 

“There was a strange ve­hi­cle. The neigh­bours told me there was some car around this week. I re­al­ly saw one come and turn around at the cor­ner there, dri­ving slow­ly go­ing back out.”

Pati­ram said there was a need for more se­cu­ri­ty around the busi­ness ar­eas of Debe and be­lieves there should be a ded­i­cat­ed po­lice sta­tion. Debe had a po­lice post, but the TTPS con­vert­ed it in­to a base for the High­way Pa­trol Unit sev­er­al years ago. Po­lice sta­tions in San Fer­nan­do and Bar­rack­pore cov­er parts of Debe.

South­ern Di­vi­sion Snr Supt Richard Smith said there was no alarm­ing in­crease in rob­beries, bur­glar­ies and store break-ins over the last few months. Re­gard­ing the at­tack on the Sama­roo’s busi­ness and home, Smith said that in­ves­ti­ga­tors are work­ing on a few leads that will hope­ful­ly re­sult in ar­rests soon.

And while Debe does not have a ded­i­cat­ed po­lice post, Smith said the build­ing hous­es po­lice of­fi­cers who re­spond to any sit­u­a­tion. He said from the footage: he saw that the ban­dits stayed in the house for eight min­utes.

“By the time peo­ple run and call the po­lice and get through to 999, it may take some time be­fore San Fer­nan­do or Bar­rack­pore po­lice get to their homes,” Smith said.

How­ev­er, he ad­vised peo­ple to call the po­lice sta­tions if they do not get on­to the E-999 hot­line or con­tact the di­vi­sion’s Op­er­a­tions Cen­tre, where of­fi­cers can re­lay in­for­ma­tion to pa­trols na­tion­wide.

Smith said this sys­tem works, point­ing out that through the cen­tre, the di­vi­sion co­or­di­nat­ed a swift ex­er­cise to ap­pre­hend crim­i­nals who as­sault­ed an es­tate con­sta­ble at a bar in Bar­rack­pore and stole his gun.

Break-inhouse breaking


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