Senior Reporter
shane.superville@guardian.co.tt
While he understood the demands and risks of having his son join the Police Service, Bobby Harrinarine says he did not expect him to meet his demise so soon.
Harrinarine’s son, Ravindra Harrinarine, a constable, was gunned down outside a friend’s home at Bassie Street, Spring Village, Valsayn, on Wednesday night.
Investigators say Harrinarine, 30, who was assigned to the Traffic and Highway Patrol Branch of the Prime Minister’s escort, was speaking with a woman when a car drove up to them.
Three masked gunmen got out of the car and confronted Harrinarine. The woman ran away. She returned shortly after to see Harrinarine bleeding from gunshot wounds.
He died at the scene.
Police said Harrinarine’s licensed pistol was missing.
Investigators found 15 spent 9 mm shells at the scene.
Speaking briefly with Guardian Media at the family’s Santa Cruz home on Thursday, the elder Harrinarine said his son always wanted to be a police officer. He noted that crime had become so prevalent, it was difficult to say what could be done to quell the violence.
“It doesn’t make sense talking about crime because it seems as though nobody can do anything about it or they don’t want to do anything about it. I can’t say give everybody a gun because it would be worse. I don’t know what to say.”
Harrinarine said his son joined the TTPS in 2012 and was passionate about his job. He added that he found out about the murder when his wife received a call from a relative who saw it being reported on a popular talk show.
The elder Harrinarine said his last interaction with his son was when he left for work on Wednesday and promised to return home on Thursday.
One resident recalled the sound of gunfire, but was too afraid to look outside as he thought of businesswoman Lana Sahadeo, who was killed by a stray bullet in the neighbourhood in December, as gunmen chased after their targets from an attack that started on the Churchill Roosevelt Highway. Also killed in that attack were cousins Damien Criss, Levi Criss and Jerry Hollingsworth, who were part of an entourage for Trinibad artiste Kashif “K Man Sixx” Sankar.
The resident said,“I just went to take a shower. I heard explosions but I didn’t come outside at all because I knew it was gunshots. I said ‘No way I am not coming out.’”
The man said residents were still uneasy after Sahadeo’s murder, noting the latest killing only heightened fears.
“This area is very bad. Every week you have a shooting in the village. It’s very bad,” he added.
Another resident said Harrinarine’s murder was a disturbing reminder of how anyone, including police, could be victims of crime.
On the wall of a property at the bottom of Bassie Street, the number ‘6’ was spray-painted, possibly to signal the territory of the Sixx gang.
Contacted yesterday, North-Central Division head, Senior Supt Richard Smith, said there were increased patrols and visibility in the area in the aftermath of the quadruple murder last month. He said he also saw the graffiti and assured the police were following up on this.
“I had my Gang Unit paying particular attention to that area, I even saw the Sixx sign there, which suggests there might be some members of the Sixx gang inside there. I beefed up patrols and assigned two motorcycle police officers to the area,” he said.
Police Commissioner Erla Harewood-Christopher, in a media release, offered condolences to Harrinarine’s family and colleagues. She noted that while a clear motive had not been established, there was no information to suggest he was targeted because he was a policeman and assured homicide investigators were working to find those responsible. She said the seriousness of recent murders and public outcry in response were not lost on her, as analyses showed the murders were gang or drug related. She said the police have been focusing gangs but need the public’s support.
“We have been actively targeting gang leaders and their members frontally, and I give the assurance that we will continue to do so until we achieve an end to these senseless killings,” she said.
During yesterday’s post-Cabinet media briefing at the Diplomatic Centre, St Ann’s, Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley offered condolences to Harrinarine’s family, saying he knew him from his security unit.
Rowley said amidst crime challenges, the risks of law enforcement in tackling criminals should not be overlooked. He also lamented the violence of criminals and questioned the type of homes that bred such people.
“He went to Spring Village for some reason and was wantonly killed because in our society, there are people for whom that is a job. They call it ‘put dong a wuk’ ... I cannot stop asking where did these people come from? They didn’t just suddenly arrive - born and nurtured here; except for the few South Americans who might come in now and then, these are homegrown people and that says a lot about a lot of homes in this country,” Rowley said.