A release from the Police Public Relations Office said the
hijacked driver disclosed that he was hired by three men at
Cummings Lodge to make a pick up at Ogle. The driver said when
he got to Ogle a fourth man joined the vehicle. During the
journey, he was attacked by the four men who beat him and held
him down in the car. The driver observed that a second car,
which was later identified as Smith's, pulled up and the driver
of that car began beating him also.
The police release noted that the two cars - PGG 1327,
belonging to Smith and HA 7772 - were parked close to each
other.
While passing, the members of the mobile patrol enquired from
the men who were in HA 7772 whether they were okay and they said
yes. However, as the policemen were leaving they heard a strange
noise coming from the car and stopped to investigate. Five men
then exited the cars and ran. The ranks discharged a round and
later caught the teenager.
That night, police swooped on the men and rounded them up at
various points in Sophia.
Smith's reputed wife, Sonia Garriba told Stabroek News
yesterday that her husband would usually go out to work at 6 pm
and return in the morning. She said he went out around the same
time on Sunday and was working in the vicinity of Demico House.
The woman said from reports she received, the alleged killers -
all neatly-dressed young men - approached her husband and did
not appear to be criminals.
Garriba said from all indications Smith was stabbed several
times during the journey before being dumped at BV. She doesn't
think robbery was the motive. "These are young guys going
about doing things to blame it on other people. My husband had
no problem with anyone," Garriba declared.
She said they might have dumped him at BV to give the
impression that the deed was committed by persons on the East
Coast. Stabroek News was told that the said group of men might
have attacked another man at Agricola two weeks ago. That man
was not killed.
Smith's body was discovered by residents of the East Coast
village shortly after he had cried out for help. Residents of BV
told this newspaper that they did not witness the murder but
they heard Smith's cries.
According to reports, Smith's burgundy car pulled up on
Quamina Street, BV around 9 pm on Sunday. For about ten minutes,
no-one came out of the car, but shortly after someone began
screaming: "Thief! thief!", a resident recalled.
Residents peeped through their windows to see what was happening
and spotted Smith leaping from the car. He walked a short
distance before collapsing on the street, where he died. The car
then sped off in the direction of the city.
Smith, Garriba said, has been working as a taxi driver for
over seven years. She told this newspaper that the car he was
driving on Sunday evening belongs to a woman in Kitty and he had
only begun driving it three months ago.
The man also leaves to mourn his three children, four sisters
and his mother Rosie Persaud.