Senior Reporter
sascha.wilson@guardian.co.tt
Fifteen years after Michael “Boy Boy” Mader was gunned down, a High Court judge has sentenced a man to death by hanging for his murder.
Justice Lisa Ramsumair-Hinds handed down the sentence on Shirvan Toussaint, also known as “Buddies” and “Tallman”, on November 11 following a judge-alone trial in the Port-of-Spain Supreme Court.
Toussaint, of Charford Court, Port-of-Spain, was also found guilty of possession of a firearm and ammunition but not guilty of attempting to murder Sparkle Williams and shooting her with intent to cause grievous bodily harm.
The charges stemmed from an incident on September 28, 2009. Toussaint opted for a judge-alone trial on June 30, 2022, and was arraigned and pleaded not guilty to the five charges on September 23 this year. State attorneys Charmaine Samuel and Gilliana Guy led evidence from 21 prosecution witnesses.
The State’s case was that shortly after midday on September 28, 2009, Mader had just left the Port-of-Spain General Hospital with Williams after visiting her sister and her newborn baby.
Mader and Williams’ sister had been in a relationship since she was 15 years old. Williams met Mader at the hospital. On the way there, Williams stated that she saw two men, one of whom was the accused, sitting on a table at Oxford Street.
She knew him from Harpe Place/Charford Court area, but she did not know his name. He looked at her, raised up and sat back down. After leaving the hospital with Mader, they headed to Harpe Place using the same route she had taken to go to the hospital.
From Oxford Street, they entered the alley between the panyard and the river, but halfway along the alley someone called out saying, “Boy Boy, allyuh kill Ron.” They both turned around and Williams saw the accused. Mader responded to the man saying, “Buddies, wha you talkin’ ‘bout?”
Both men began walking towards each other, and the accused suddenly “dipped” and Mader ran up to him. The accused had a gun in his upraised hand, which Mader grabbed and they began to scuffle on the pavement.
Williams approached, intending to help by kicking the accused, but he bent the hand that was holding the gun and a shot rang out. Mader dropped to the ground on his back and the accused pointed the gun at Williams.
She stooped down and stayed low. She heard several more shots, but she did not get injured.
Williams saw the accused standing over Mader, shooting him. She ran to Harpe Place where Mader’s mother lived, and alerted relatives that Mader was killed. An autopsy revealed that he died as a result of two close-range wounds to the head.
Acting on information, police went to the Piarco International Airport on October 3, 2009, where they arrested Toussaint who was waiting to board a Caribbean Airlines flight to Ft Lauderdale, Miami.
He was with his mother, who was also heading to Miami. He asked to hug her before being taken away.
Toussaint did not give evidence or call any witnesses.
The defence’s case put forward by Toussaint’s attorneys, Mario Merritt, Danielle Rampersad and Randall Raphael, was that Williams did not see the shooter and the killing was gang-related. The judge, however, rejected the assertions that Williams had an interest to serve or an improper motive. Justice Ramsumair-Hinds formed the view that Williams was an honest and credible witness.
The judge’s sentence on the fireman and ammunition charges was eight years each, but Toussaint’s time spent in custody (15 years and 22 days), exceeded that sentence.