Local News

Man acquitted in 2003 dangerous driving case

08 March 2026
This content originally appeared on Trinidad Guardian.
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A man from South Oropouche has been ac­quit­ted of caus­ing the death of a teenag­er by dan­ger­ous dri­ving over two decades ago.

High Court Judge Trevor Jones found 64-year-old Gary Davis not guilty of the charge at the end of his judge-alone tri­al last month.

The charge against Davis re­lat­ed to an ac­ci­dent which oc­curred along the M2 Ring Road in Debe around 11.30 pm on Au­gust 25, 2003.

The vic­tim, 16-year-old Jeff Ramkissoon, was walk­ing along the road while hunt­ing with friends when a rel­a­tive who was dri­ving by turned around to stop to talk to him.

Dipc­hand Samuel, who was the dri­ver of the car with Ramkissoon’s rel­a­tive, pulled to the side of the road fac­ing on­com­ing traf­fic and left his head­lights on.

Davis, who was rep­re­sent­ed by John Heath and Shane Mungals­ingh, swerved to avoid the ve­hi­cle and crashed in­to Ramkissoon and one of his friends.

Ramkissoon died on the scene, while his friend sur­vived.

Davis went on tri­al in 2017, but it end­ed with a hung ju­ry and a re­tri­al be­ing or­dered.

In de­cid­ing the case, Jus­tice Jones had to con­sid­er whether Ramkissoon’s death was caused by Davis’ dri­ving falling be­low the re­quired le­gal stan­dard un­der the Mo­tor Ve­hi­cle and Road Traf­fic Act or whether Samuel’s park­ing ini­ti­at­ed the ac­ci­dent as con­tend­ed by Davis.

Jus­tice Jones said: “The Court finds that the ac­cused, when con­front­ed with lights em­a­nat­ing from a sta­tion­ary ve­hi­cle at night, on a dark and un­marked road­way, re­spond­ed in a man­ner that did not fall be­low the stan­dard ex­pect­ed of a com­pe­tent and care­ful dri­ver.”

“In­deed, the ac­cused’s at­tempt to steer away from the per­ceived haz­ard may be viewed as an in­stinc­tive ef­fort to avoid col­li­sion,” he added.

Jus­tice Jones raised con­cerns over the ini­tial re­fusal of pros­e­cu­tors to take a po­si­tion on whether Samuel’s park­ing was it­self un­law­ful and dan­ger­ous.

He not­ed that they even­tu­al­ly agreed that Samuel was in breach of a le­gal or­di­nance re­lat­ed to park­ing on dual car­riage­ways, but re­fused to ac­cept that such con­duct was in­her­ent­ly dan­ger­ous.

He al­so ques­tioned why the po­lice did not con­sid­er Samuel’s role in the ac­ci­dent be­fore charg­ing Davis.

Jus­tice Jones not­ed that the prac­tice of park­ing ve­hi­cles fac­ing on­com­ing traf­fic, as done by Samuel, con­tin­ues to be preva­lent in Trinidad and To­ba­go.

“More than 23 years lat­er, af­ter this in­ci­dent, this un­law­ful prac­tice not on­ly per­sists un­abat­ed but has, re­gret­tably, as­sumed the char­ac­ter of near-en­trenched norm on the na­tion’s road­ways,” he said.

The case was pros­e­cut­ed by Solange De­venish and Tam­my Cato.