RADHICA DE SILVA
Senior Multimedia Reporter
Police are investigating a third attempt on the life of Aaron Grappie—one of the men once charged in the 2005 kidnapping and murder of businesswoman Samdaye Rampersad—after he was shot in New Grant, Princes Town, on Friday.
The latest attack marks the third time in under two years that Grappie has been targeted by gunmen, raising concerns among investigators about a possible pattern linked to one of Trinidad and Tobago’s most notorious kidnapping cases. His condition has not yet been officially disclosed.
Grappie, of Farmers Trace, first came to national attention as one of several men accused in the 2005 abduction and killing of Rampersad, a San Juan businesswoman who was kidnapped outside her store by masked gunmen.
According to court evidence, Rampersad was held by her captors and later taken to Claxton Bay, where she was beaten, fatally assaulted and buried alive in a shallow grave.
Her decomposed body was discovered 41 days after her abduction in January 2006, in a cashew field in Carolina Village.
Prosecutors alleged the kidnapping stemmed from a financial dispute, with the victim mistakenly believed to be linked to a man who owed money.
Grappie was among a group that included Phillip “The Boss” Boodram, Roger Mootoo, Ricky Singh and Kervin Williams, who were all implicated in the planning and execution of the crime.
The legal proceedings spanned years, with multiple trials, hung juries and appeals. Some accused were convicted of manslaughter and sentenced to lengthy prison terms, while others—including Grappie—were retried several times before eventually being freed after extended incarceration.
Since their release in 2022, several men linked to the case have been killed or attacked. Boodram was later shot dead by police, while Williams and Mootoo were gunned down in separate incidents in Claxton Bay.
Grappie himself has been repeatedly targeted. On 29 June 2024, he was shot at his home in Farmers Trace, New Grant after a masked gunman opened fire, leaving him critically injured. In January 2026, he was again wounded when a gunman exited a vehicle and opened fire while he was visiting a friend in St Mary’s Village, Moruga.
Friday’s shooting now adds to that pattern as investigators try to determine whether the attacks are linked to his past or to other ongoing disputes.
Police have not confirmed a motive.
The investigation is ongoing.