Gunmen beat, rob magistrate
By Dale Andrews
Magistrate Geeta Chandan-Edmond was literally left battered and
bruised when four masked gunmen held her up on a lonely stretch of
road in Mahaicony and relieved her of cash jewellery and other
valuables in what was described as a well-planned attack.
But the Magistrate is convinced that the attack was not merely just a
robbery.
She has since expressed fear for her life and those of her family.
The attack occurred about 15:30 hours yesterday while the Magistrate
was heading home from work in the city with her baby daughter and her
babysitter, Surita.
The magistrate resides at Number Six Village, West Coast Berbice.
According to reports, the men who were in a dark-coloured Toyota 212
motorcar were coming in the opposite direction when they spotted the
Magistrate’s vehicle.
They turned back and trailed the Magistrate’s vehicle from Novar,
Mahaicony, and then launched their attack when the road was devoid of
vehicular traffic.
“This vehicle had two number plates. One read HB 3317 in front and a
PKK number plate at the back…I started to get suspicious and tried
calling my husband to let him know what was happening,” Magistrate
Chandan-Edmond told this newspaper at the Fort Wellington Hospital
shortly after receiving treatment for a swollen forehead and a split
lower lip.
Her calls to her husband were initially unsuccessful. By that time the
vehicle that was following her overtook her vehicle.
The Magistrate became more concerned and attempted on several
occasions to overtake the car but was prevented from doing so as the
car kept blocking her path.
As they approached the Letter T area, the car made a sudden stop
forcing her to stop also.
“I tried to reverse but by that time four men jumped out (from the
car). They were all in masks and they were pointing their guns,” the
Magistrate related.
The men motioned to her to wind down her vehicle windows which she
did.
“They said, ‘We’ve been looking for you a long time’. They
said, ‘Pass up all the jewellery, pass up all the money you have’.
They took my wedding band, my engagement ring, my watch. I had on two
bangles and a chain,” she recalled.
The Magistrate was also relieved of $15,000 in cash while her
babysitter had her few pieces of jewellery taken away.
“They start asking, ‘Where is the f*@#ing camera?’ They were
using real filthy language and I said ‘I don’t know what you’re
talking about’ and they started to ransack the vehicle and they
found the camera. They took it, my cell phone and my laptop,”
Magistrate Chandan-Edmond said.
Although she said that she had a lot of footage on the camera, she
declined to disclose what they were about.
“I wouldn’t want to comment on that at this point. But, yes, they
were after the camera. I think to take the money and the jewellery was
just a sham because they were just hounding me for the camera all the
time,” the Magistrate stated.
During the attack, one of the men dealt the magistrate several cuffs
to her face and even struck her on her head with a gun.
She however managed to snatch off the mask from the face of one of the
gunmen while her babysitter grabbed the sunglasses of another.
Both items were later handed over to the police.
Magistrate Chandan-Edmond, who is at present in a court battle with
the Judicial Service Commission following a spat with Acting
Chancellor Carl Singh, travels from Number Six Village to the city
every work day after being transferred from Berbice.
Her husband Joel Persid-Edmond, who is also an attorney at law,
eventually got word of the attack and left for the scene.
He eventually met up with her near the Abary Bridge. By then the
bandits had disappeared.
“She was calling me since she became suspicious but I did not get
the calls,” the Magistrate’s husband said.
The Magistrate and her husband are not too happy with the initial
police response.
They claimed that they first went to the Weldaad Police Station to
report the matter but were sent back to Mahaicony, where the report
was eventually taken.
“I am a lawyer and this leaves me to wonder what happens at the
police stations when we are sent back and forth. What is really
happening to the civilians?” Joel Persid-Edmond lamented.
Magistrate Chandan-Edmond is the second Magistrate to suffer from a
bandit attack.
Earlier this year, Magistrate Nigel Hawke and his wife were attacked
by a gunman in their Non Pareil East Coast Demerara home.
That attack prompted the police to mount special security details for
some Magistrates at their homes.
Magistrate Chandan-Edmond said that she would definitely be seeking
the protection of the police in the form of an escort following
yesterday’s incident.
“I could have lost my life today,” she said.
Even her babysitter is contemplating quitting the job as a result of
the ordeal.
The magistrate and her husband are to make a decision on who should
make the adjustments to their respective careers in order to
facilitate each other.
While Magistrate Chandan-Edmond did not point fingers at anyone for
yesterday’s attack, she said that she has her own opinion of who
might have been responsible.
Senior police detectives on the East Coast of Demerara are all
involved in investigating the matter.