Local News

Traumatised residents recount terror after Couva double murder

14 February 2026
This content originally appeared on Trinidad Guardian.

Se­nior Re­porter

sascha.wil­[email protected]

One day af­ter a brazen day­light shoot­ing at a Cou­va com­mu­nal play­park left a cou­ple dead, res­i­dents re­main trau­ma­tised and afraid to leave their homes. Blood­stains were still vis­i­ble on the grass and road at the play­park, and an eerie si­lence blan­ket­ed the com­mu­ni­ty at Jade Court when Guardian Me­dia vis­it­ed yes­ter­day. A foot­ball and a lol­lipop on the play­ground were stark re­minders of the ter­ror that un­fold­ed on Fri­day, when De­vaughn Tou­s­saint, 38, and his girl­friend, Amelia Her­nan­dez, 34, were killed.

The cou­ple share a three year old child.

The ruth­less killings, cap­tured on CCTV, have trig­gered na­tion­wide out­rage.

Her­nan­dez had just ar­rived home and parked along­side the park near Tou­s­saint’s home. He came out to help her of­fload items from the trunk. Just af­ter 2 pm, a gun­man ex­it­ed a grey Corol­la, ap­proached the cou­ple, and opened fire.

The cou­ple ran in dif­fer­ent di­rec­tions as the shoot­er pur­sued Tou­s­saint, shoot­ing him sev­er­al times. Her­nan­dez grabbed her daugh­ter and ran through the play­ground as oth­er chil­dren screamed and fled. She stum­bled, and as her daugh­ter watched, the gun­man shot her dead. Scream­ing and cry­ing, the child stood frozen for a few sec­onds be­fore run­ning away. The killer fled.

Res­i­dent Bish­op Ezekiel Clarke, pres­i­dent of the Cou­va Po­lice Sta­tion Com­mu­ni­ty Coun­cil, said the at­tack had shak­en the area. “For a man to run up on oth­er peo­ple and fire shots and, in the end, mur­der two peo­ple in front of sev­er­al lit­tle chil­dren, that is atro­cious. This is un­ac­cept­able.”

He said the in­ci­dent should con­cern not on­ly res­i­dents but the en­tire na­tion, and called for in­tro­spec­tion “be­cause we are go­ing down a point of de­struc­tion.”

Clarke, who preach­es at the School of St Fran­cis Spir­i­tu­al Bap­tist Church in Mon Re­pos, Mor­vant, de­scribed Tou­s­saint as qui­et and easy­go­ing.

Still reel­ing from the in­ci­dent, Kathy, a 42-year-old moth­er of three, said her ten-year-old son was one of the chil­dren run­ning dur­ing the shoot­ing.

De­scrib­ing how she felt up­on see­ing the video, she said, “Heart­bro­ken, be­cause next thing it was my child ly­ing on the ground if a bul­let had passed. The man was shoot­ing wild­ly; it could have been my child. It was very heart­break­ing, and my son is trau­ma­tised along with the oth­er chil­dren in the area here be­cause they don’t even want to come back out­side to play.”

De­scrib­ing her com­mu­ni­ty as close-knit and peace­ful, she added, “The chil­dren are al­ways out­side play­ing. Some­times, all af­ter nine par­ents sit out­side on the bench. The chil­dren run in the park be­cause it is a se­cure, safe, com­fort­able area.”

An­oth­er res­i­dent said his two nephews, aged six and eight, were al­so play­ing in the park when the gun­man start­ed shoot­ing. One of his nephews had his hands over his ears as he ran for his life.

Mean­while, Op­po­si­tion Leader Pen­ne­lope Beck­les said the in­ci­dent al­so left her heart­bro­ken. In a Face­book post, Beck­les stat­ed, “Hav­ing wit­nessed this hor­rif­ic video of such a heinous shoot­ing, my heart breaks for these chil­dren. I pray they re­ceive the psy­cho­log­i­cal and so­cial sup­port they need, es­pe­cial­ly the daugh­ter of the de­ceased. Sweet Trinidad and To­ba­go, we are bet­ter than this bru­tal­i­ty.”

Psy­chi­a­trist Dr Var­ma Deyals­ingh ex­pressed con­cern over the in­ci­dent and warned about the psy­cho­log­i­cal toll of vi­o­lence in com­mu­nal spaces.

“When vi­o­lence pen­e­trates res­i­den­tial com­mu­ni­ties, it cre­ates col­lec­tive in­se­cu­ri­ty. So­cial spaces shrink. Fam­i­lies with­draw. Pub­lic life con­tracts. A so­ci­ety can­not thrive when its cit­i­zens are psy­cho­log­i­cal­ly bar­ri­cad­ed. The re­sult can be height­ened pub­lic anx­i­ety and re­duced so­cial trust. Re­peat­ed ex­po­sure to such vi­o­lence cre­ates chron­ic, trau­mat­ic stress at a so­ci­etal lev­el.”