JURY
selection for the inquest into the death
of Shaka Blair, who was shot dead by
Police when they went to arrest him at his Buxton
home, was stalled again yesterday because of
objections by the lawyers involved.
Of
the 15 potential jurors originally summoned, some were
previously disqualified and only eight were present
yesterday before Coroner Brassington Reynolds at
Sparendaam Court, also on East Coast Demerara.
However,
instead of allowing the required five to be selected,
attorney-at-law Mr. Raphael Trotman, who is looking
into the interest of widowed Simi
Ragnauth
and other relatives, contended that the jurors must be
from the same Magisterial District and County.
The
lawyer also said persons should be chosen randomly and
not hand-picked, and must be from the neighbourhood,
according to the law.
Mr.
Basil Williams, who is associated with Trotman,
suggested that about 15 people be summoned the next
time and their names put in a bag for the random
choice of five.
Coroner
Reynolds pointed out that the proceedings can start
with five persons and, if for any reason someone
becomes ill or dies, the inquiry can continue with
below the legal minimum, as the fifth person could be
excused permanently.
He
instructed that all the lawyers concerned with the
matter be served with copies of the Police and post
mortem reports.
Coroner
Reynolds said this particular inquest is important for
the public well-being and all parties with interest.
He
said, on Friday, not less than 10 persons would be
summoned and five would be chosen.
Senior
Counsel Bernard DeSantos, who is representing the
Police, said he has no objections to the persons being
summoned.
But
he argued that Section 22 of the Act has no definition
of neighbourhood and that has to be gleaned from a
dictionary.
Trotman
observed that 15 people have already been summoned for
whatever process is being used and the Coroner should
utilise that listing and instruct his clerk to send
summonses to them.
Blair,
33, was killed last April 6 when cops went to his
house to arrest him for questioning in connection with
a series of motor car hijackings and robberies.
Wednesday,
July 17, 2002
As
inquest starts…
Widow
of Shaka Blair tearfully recalls fatal shooting
WIDOWED
Simi Ragnauth on Friday last tearfully relived, for a
Coroner’s inquest, the sequence of events on the
morning her husband, Shaka Blair was fatally shot in
their Buxton home.
Testifying
before Coroner Brassington Reynolds and a three-member
jury as the proceedings finally got underway at
Sparendaam Court, the 25-year-old mother of two, now
living at Lot 43 Section ‘B’ Buxton said, at the
time of the shooting, they resided at Lot 42 Middle
Walk Road, Buxton, in a four-bedroom wooden cottage.
The
family, including her two children, Shakine Blair and
Jordan Ragnauth, occupied the first and last rooms in
one of three houses in the same yard.
Bryan
Blair and Morvin Sers, a brother and nephew of the
deceased, respectively, were occupants of the two
middle rooms.
The
witness said, about 12.30 am last April 6, she was
asleep in the front room with her husband and
two-year-old son, when a noise awakened her from the
front door which was secured by four safety bolts.
The
woman said she thought bandits were there and Shaka,
who was already awake, shouted: “Thief! Thief!”
He
picked up their cordless telephone and gave it to her
with the instruction to call Vigilance Police Station,
also on East Coast Demerara.
Ragnauth
said she got out of bed, looked for the number on a
wall and dialed 270-1022.
The
voice she recognised at the other end of the line
confirmed that it was Mr. Blackman’s and she said:
“This is Shaka girl” and gave Shaka the telephone.
She
said Blair told the man: “Send Police. Somebody
kicking down me door” and started screaming:
“Murder! Murder!”
The
witness said she heard persons entering the living
room and kicking at the door to the room in which they
were and a voice said: “Blow the door.”
Ragnauth
said the voice continued: “Open the f--- ing door”
and she saw a piece of wood pushed under the door by
someone attempting to open it from outside.
She
said, when the door was opened, she was sitting on the
bed holding onto her son and her husband was beside
them, still on the phone.
Ragnauth
said she looked through the door and saw policemen in
black clothes with blue bulletproof vests. Two of them
entered the room and one held on to her t-shirt,
exposing her breasts while the other took her son.
As
those two pulled her out of the room, two more entered
and held her husband.
The
woman said, as she was being dragged out of the room,
she saw officer Merai and said to him: “Steve!
Steve! My husband is innocent” but the cop did not
respond.
She
said the two cops walked her through the kitchen to
the back room where her elder son was crying aloud and
told her to make him open the door.
The
boy did so and they entered but, when she attempted to
sit on the bed, the shorter of the two policemen
pointed a gun at her and instructed that she lie on
the floor.
Ragnauth
said she requested to say something but one of the
lawmen threatened her: “Shut ya f---ing mouth before
I kill all ya’ll in here” and she remained lying
quietly with her children.
The
witness said she heard a shot and scream from Shaka
immediately before a voice said: “Hospital” and
the two officers who were standing guard over her
said: “Movements” prior to them all leaving the
room.
Ragnauth
said she heard two more shots and footsteps down the
stairs as her husband shouted: “Oh God! Oh God”.
Shaka’s
voice became distant and she got up with her children
and walked into the living room where she stepped on
something hard which she later learnt was a warhead.
She
saw dust on a freezer and, above, two holes in the
ceiling.
The
woman said she also saw an armless vest on the floor
with what appeared to be bloodstains and a hole at the
top right side of it.
The
garment was tendered yesterday and marked exhibit
‘A’.
Ragnauth
said she went outside her home, called for her
sister-in-law who lived next door and later, around 2
am, her brother-in-law accompanied her to Georgetown
Public Hospital where her dead husband was in the
mortuary.
Those
present during the proceedings yesterday included Mr.
Basil Williams and Mr. Raphael Trotman, who are
looking into the interest of the widow and other
relatives and Senior Counsel Bernard DeSantos,
representing the Police.
DeSantos
disclosed that Senior Superintendent Merai has been
granted leave to take a child out of the jurisdiction
for surgery but is scheduled to return on August 4.
The
inquiry, into the death of Blair, 33, continues on
July 29 when his widow will continue her
examination-in-chief.