Senior Reporter
elizabeth.gonza[email protected]
Gospel artiste Jovon Les-Pierre, known as Jovi Ton, claims he is innocent and was “set up” after taking what he described as a routine hire taxi job to Woodbrook.
Les-Pierre, who is now wanted by police, contacted Guardian Media to give his account after police linked him to the armed robbery at Spill Restaurant in Woodbrook around 2.40 am on February 24.
Guardian Media does not know and, at the time of the interview, was not aware of Les-Pierre’s location and had only received his account remotely.
He said he only realised something was wrong when three Venezuelan men returned to the car after entering the business, pointed a gun at his head and ordered him to drive.
He said he crashed the rented vehicle while he panicked with the gun to his head, as he tried to flee.
Les-Pierre said he did not surrender after the crash because he feared police would kill him.
He said he is badly injured and is now deciding his next move while trying to secure a lawyer. He added that officers are “out for blood” and he feared he could end up like Joshua Samaroo, who was shot dead by police earlier this year while his common-law wife Kaia Sealy was seriously injured in the same incident.
Les-Pierre said he sells perfume and cologne and often rents vehicles while moving around for business.
He said three Spanish-speaking men approached him for transportation that night and asked to be taken to Woodbrook.
“The Spanish was looking so normal when they said they wanted a taxi for hire. I do take my hire work in between because I’m driving. I hustling my perfume and thing so in between, so if I get a hire work from anyone or somebody might want to reach somewhere, I would take a hire work,” he explained.
Investigators said three armed men entered the restaurant as staff were closing. Two employees were assaulted and robbed of their phones — an iPhone 13 and a Samsung A15. One worker was struck on the head with a gun.
Police said the suspects also took the restaurant’s cash register. A shot was fired into the ceiling before they fled.
Officers said the men escaped in a black Honda City.
Hours later, the vehicle was found crashed near the Queen’s Park Savannah. Police said the occupants fled the scene.
Investigators later traced the car to a rental company. Records showed it had been rented to Les-Pierre.
But Les-Pierre said he had no knowledge that a robbery would take place.
“It is common sense. The car rented in my name. They have my IDs, the number plate on the car, everything. I would have to be dotish to go on a robbery when everything going to lead back to me,” he said.
“When they come back, they run in the car and start to tell me ‘drive.’”
He said one of the men pointed a gun at his head.
“The man pull the gun and tell me ‘drive boy, drive boy… policia, policia,’” he said.
“I started to think. ‘These men are going to shoot me in my head,’ because I stopped the car to jump out of the car. And he pulled the gun. He told me, ‘drive, boy, drive, drive, drive’ and the car just come and crash.”
Les-Pierre said two vehicles were behind them.
“I thought it was police,” he said.
“After when the car crash and I run outside I see the two cars across the road and realise it wasn’t police.”
Les-Pierre said he was seriously injured in the crash and ran into nearby bushes near Lady Young Road and Circular Road.
“My knee come out of place. My shoulder dislocate. My arm mash up.”
He said he remained there for hours.
“I lie down in a bush for about four hours bleeding out,” he said.
Les-Pierre said he feared surrendering.
“Let’s be real. If I had come and play I was to surrender because I know I’m not a part of that, the police is going to kill me. They killed that boy and tried to kill his wife just weeks ago. Who is me when my situation different. They were lucky cameras picked it up. But I was in the bush scared to trust them, even I know there is proof I am innocent and was set up.
“The police is going to kill me, Ms Gonzales,” Les-Pierre repeatedly told Guardian Media.
He said the shooting of Samaroo influenced his decision.
Les-Pierre said he is recovering and trying to get legal representation.
“People saying I running. I not running. I healing right now and trying to organise money for a lawyer so I could face this properly,” he said.
Investigations into the robbery are continuing, and officers are still searching for the suspects.
Les-Pierre was a Trinibad artiste who turned to Christianity in 2023.