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Saturday, July 12, 2025

Father: I did everything to protect my stubborn son

by

2730 days ago
20180120

The griev­ing fa­ther of a a teenaged mur­der vic­tim said yes­ter­day that he re­lo­cat­ed his fam­i­ly from Laven­tille in an at­tempt top spare them from the gun and gang vi­o­lence in the com­mu­ni­ty.

But he said the stub­born­ness of his 19-year-old son, Luke Adams, led to his death.

Adams who was seat­ed in the front pas­sen­ger seat of a blue Mit­subishi Lancer was shot re­peat­ed­ly around 11.30 am by a gun­man who ran af­ter the ve­hi­cle which was stuck in traf­fic on the busy Duke Street close to mid­day. An­oth­er oc­cu­pant in the car was in­jured in the shoot­ing and the killer es­caped.

Speak­ing with the me­dia at the Foren­sic Sci­ence Cen­tre, St James yes­ter­day, Bertram Adams said his third of sev­en chil­dren failed ad­here to his warn­ings not to ven­ture in­to Port-of-Spain and paid with his life for his stub­born­ness.

He said he had re­lo­cat­ed the fam­i­ly to Pleas­antville, in San Fer­nan­do two years ago to pro­tect them.

But his son moved back to the city af­ter he be­came an adult.

“I do more than warn him, I ac­tu­al­ly went my­self in these ar­eas to try and get him out. Men pull gun for me and ask me who is me. When I say Luke fa­ther they say well you don’t come in here just so. That was the ul­ti­mate. That was a cou­ple months ago. I talk to him every time I see him. Every­one talk to him, his aunt, the grand­moth­er, boy every­one talk to him. Every­one liked him, but he just want­ed to do what he want and what he felt was right. And that was a ma­jor prob­lem.”

The Adams fam­i­ly moved from their Des­per­lie Cres­cent, Laven­tille home to Pleas­antville two years ago.

Since then, Luke would leave his south­ern home, which he found to be “too slow and dead” and spend days with friends in Nel­son Street and then more re­cent­ly at Man­go Rose, off Pic­cadil­ly Street.

The two ar­eas, sep­a­rat­ed by the East Dry Riv­er and Dun­can Street, are at war with each oth­er.

Po­lice sus­pect that Adams was killed for be­ing deemed a trai­tor af­ter leav­ing one area to stay in an­oth­er. His fa­ther said his girl­friend lived at Man­go Rose and he too be­lieved his son’s switch in res­i­dence led to his death.

“I speak to him more than 1,000 times, I do all kind of thing, I pull the dev­il by the tail and all to try to get him to set­tle down at home, and stay away from Man­go Rose. And he’s not a stu­pid guy. I be­lieved that he un­der­stood the na­ture of life. Be­cause he grow up in Des­per­lie Cres­cent where you hear the gun­shots every day,” Adams said.

He said he taught his son and his sib­lings from young to lay on the floor when they heard gun­shots and not move un­til the bul­lets stopped.

Adams is the sec­ond son of his moth­er to be mur­dered. On Oc­to­ber 27, 2016, at a house at En­ter­prise, Ch­agua­nas, Keron “Pan­ther” James was gunned down.


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