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Thursday, April 10, 2025

‘Redo’ found guilty of murdering Sugar Aloes’ son

by

2506 days ago
20180601

Al­most 12 years af­ter Imo Os­una, the son of vet­er­an ca­lyp­son­ian Michael “Sug­ar Aloes” Os­una, was mur­dered, his fam­i­ly is still mourn­ing his death.

Even as 31-year-old Arnold “Re­do” Isaac was con­vict­ed of the crime on Tues­day, the Os­una fam­i­ly is still ques­tion­ing whether they would re­ceive jus­tice for his bru­tal mur­der.

Speak­ing with the T&T Guardian in a brief tele­phone in­ter­view yes­ter­day, the el­der Os­una ques­tioned whether the death sen­tence passed on Isaac would ever be car­ried out.

“The on­ly thing about it is they not hang­ing any­body here. He will stay in prison for peo­ple to mind him. It does not mat­ter be­cause he will stay there and my tax mon­ey will have to mind him still and is my child he kill,” Os­una said.

The last time a con­vict­ed mur­der­er was hanged was in 1999. While the manda­to­ry death sen­tence for mur­der has been hand­ed down fre­quent­ly since then, in al­most all in­stances the sen­tences had to even­tu­al­ly be com­mut­ed to life im­pris­on­ment, due to the time lim­it for ex­e­cu­tions, set in the fa­mous Ja­maican case of Pratt and Mor­gan, and de­lays in the ap­peal process.

Asked how his son’s three chil­dren, who were young at the time, coped with their fa­ther’s death, Os­una said they still rued his ab­sence from their lives.

“They hang­ing in there. Al­though they were young they were aware of the in­put of it in their lives,” Os­una said as he ad­mit­ted that he, their grand­moth­er and oth­er rel­a­tives were forced to step in to fill the void.

It took a 12-mem­ber ju­ry be­fore Jus­tice Nor­ton Jack in the Port-of-Spain High Court al­most four hours to re­turn with a unan­i­mous guilty ver­dict for Isaac at the end of his re­tri­al, on Tues­day.

His first tri­al in Jan­u­ary 2015 end­ed in a hung ju­ry as ju­rors could not ar­rive at a unan­i­mous ver­dict at the time.

Ac­cord­ing to the ev­i­dence in the case, 26-year-old Os­una was at­tend­ing a chris­ten­ing near his home at Pi­o­neer Dri­ve, Sea Lots, when he was am­bushed by a group of gun­men, who shot him sev­er­al times.

The at­tack was al­leged­ly in re­tal­i­a­tion for an in­ci­dent, days ear­li­er, in which Os­una re­mon­strat­ed with a group of men, for rob­bing a pa­tron at his (Os­una) char­i­ty event.

Isaac has spent most of his adult life on re­mand for the crime as he was ar­rest­ed and charged when he was 19.

Dur­ing his first tri­al, sev­er­al dis­crep­an­cies with the ev­i­dence against Isaac were raised. The lead in­ves­ti­ga­tor had ad­mit­ted that sev­er­al pieces of ev­i­dence col­lect­ed at the crime scene had gone miss­ing af­ter the Homi­cide Bu­reau’s Port-of-Spain of­fice moved three times. He al­so ad­mit­ted to re­ceiv­ing vary­ing de­scrip­tions of Os­una’s at­tack­ers and that the State’s two main wit­ness­es on­ly de­cid­ed to tes­ti­fy a year af­ter the mur­der.


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