Anna-Lisa Paul
Senior Reporter
Two months after being rescued by police officers when she was swept into the East Dry River in Port-of-Spain during a heavy downpour, Abigail Joseph smiled broadly yesterday as those very officers returned to deliver her an early Christmas gift.
Running out of her Ward Lane, Belmont home to greet the officers barefoot, the eight-year-old could hardly contain her excitement and enthusiasm as she hugged PCs Denwayne Neptune and Quincy Taylor of the Inter Agency Task Force (IATF).
Teasing her as they proudly handed over the Samsung Galaxy Tablet, along with a hamper to her mother, Christiane Hyde-Joseph, the officers, who are attached to the Duncan Street Police Post, quietly confirmed they had been “keeping a watchful eye on the family since.”
Joseph shot into the limelight on October 6, after she toppled into a storm drain in Belmont and ended up being swept into the East Dry River.
She was eventually rescued by the officers and Harpe Place resident Dillon Ramsey near the Besson Street Police Station.
When asked what she had asked Santa Claus for, Joseph shyly admitted she was “good” and “happy” to have received the tablet—and that she had fully recovered from her traumatic ordeal.
Prompted by her mum to address the officers, she continued smiling and said, “Thank you very much.”
Hugging her daughter, Hyde-Joseph said although the incident forced her to quit her job after the Children’s Authority stepped in, she still has a lot to be grateful for as this year comes to an end.
“Everything is really good so far, even though I had was to stop work and so on, but everything is falling into place. Again, I want to say thank God and thank you to the officers and them, and thanks for the contributions and the gifting for her as well. I just want to say thank you,” she said.
Hyde-Joseph is looking forward to the positivity of this year continuing into 2026.
Asked what prompted the officers to visit the family, PC Taylor told Guardian Media, “It’s God’s blessings, nothing else. That is the reason why we came here today. To ensure she has a blessed and Merry Christmas...is all we could give to her.”
Taylor, who had been the one to jump into the river to secure Joseph, acknowledged, “It felt so good to see her smile! She thought we wasn’t coming, but here we are.”
PC Neptune echoed similar sentiments, saying, “We are thankful this day has materialised, and we were able to present this young lady with our appreciation, for the fact that God would have empowered us that day to do what we did to preserve her life.”
The two officers admitted to being humbled at the opportunity to take money out of their own pockets to purchase the tablet, along with a cash donation—which they said had brought untold joy to the deserving family.