Gunmen
beat,
rob
magistrate
By
Dale
Andrews
Magistrate
Geeta
Chandan-Edmond
was
literally
left
battered
and
bruised
when
four
masked
gunmen
held
her
up
on
a
lonely
stretch
of
road
in
Mahaicony
and
relieved
her
of
cash
jewellery
and
other
valuables
in
what
was
described
as
a
well-planned
attack.
But
the
Magistrate
is
convinced
that
the
attack
was
not
merely
just
a
robbery.
She
has
since
expressed
fear
for
her
life
and
those
of
her
family.
The
attack
occurred
about
15:30
hours
yesterday
while
the
Magistrate
was
heading
home
from
work
in
the
city
with
her
baby
daughter
and
her
babysitter,
Surita.
The
magistrate
resides
at
Number
Six
Village,
West
Coast
Berbice.
According
to
reports,
the
men
who
were
in
a
dark-coloured
Toyota
212
motorcar
were
coming
in
the
opposite
direction
when
they
spotted
the
Magistrate’s
vehicle.
They
turned
back
and
trailed
the
Magistrate’s
vehicle
from
Novar,
Mahaicony,
and
then
launched
their
attack
when
the
road
was
devoid
of
vehicular
traffic.
“This
vehicle
had
two
number
plates.
One
read
HB
3317
in
front
and
a
PKK
number
plate
at
the
back…I
started
to
get
suspicious
and
tried
calling
my
husband
to
let
him
know
what
was
happening,”
Magistrate
Chandan-Edmond
told
this
newspaper
at
the
Fort
Wellington
Hospital
shortly
after
receiving
treatment
for
a
swollen
forehead
and
a
split
lower
lip.
Her
calls
to
her
husband
were
initially
unsuccessful.
By
that
time
the
vehicle
that
was
following
her
overtook
her
vehicle.
The
Magistrate
became
more
concerned
and
attempted
on
several
occasions
to
overtake
the
car
but
was
prevented
from
doing
so
as
the
car
kept
blocking
her
path.
As
they
approached
the
Letter
T
area,
the
car
made
a
sudden
stop
forcing
her
to
stop
also.
“I
tried
to
reverse
but
by
that
time
four
men
jumped
out
(from
the
car).
They
were
all
in
masks
and
they
were
pointing
their
guns,”
the
Magistrate
related.
The
men
motioned
to
her
to
wind
down
her
vehicle
windows
which
she
did.
“They
said,
‘We’ve
been
looking
for
you
a
long
time’.
They
said,
‘Pass
up
all
the
jewellery,
pass
up
all
the
money
you
have’.
They
took
my
wedding
band,
my
engagement
ring,
my
watch.
I
had
on
two
bangles
and
a
chain,”
she
recalled.
The
Magistrate
was
also
relieved
of
$15,000
in
cash
while
her
babysitter
had
her
few
pieces
of
jewellery
taken
away.
“They
start
asking,
‘Where
is
the
f*@#ing
camera?’
They
were
using
real
filthy
language
and
I
said
‘I
don’t
know
what
you’re
talking
about’
and
they
started
to
ransack
the
vehicle
and
they
found
the
camera.
They
took
it,
my
cell
phone
and
my
laptop,”
Magistrate
Chandan-Edmond
said.
Although
she
said
that
she
had
a
lot
of
footage
on
the
camera,
she
declined
to
disclose
what
they
were
about.
“I
wouldn’t
want
to
comment
on
that
at
this
point.
But,
yes,
they
were
after
the
camera.
I
think
to
take
the
money
and
the
jewellery
was
just
a
sham
because
they
were
just
hounding
me
for
the
camera
all
the
time,”
the
Magistrate
stated.
During
the
attack,
one
of
the
men
dealt
the
magistrate
several
cuffs
to
her
face
and
even
struck
her
on
her
head
with
a
gun.
She
however
managed
to
snatch
off
the
mask
from
the
face
of
one
of
the
gunmen
while
her
babysitter
grabbed
the
sunglasses
of
another.
Both
items
were
later
handed
over
to
the
police.
Magistrate
Chandan-Edmond,
who
is
at
present
in
a
court
battle
with
the
Judicial
Service
Commission
following
a
spat
with
Acting
Chancellor
Carl
Singh,
travels
from
Number
Six
Village
to
the
city
every
work
day
after
being
transferred
from
Berbice.
Her
husband
Joel
Persid-Edmond,
who
is
also
an
attorney
at
law,
eventually
got
word
of
the
attack
and
left
for
the
scene.
He
eventually
met
up
with
her
near
the
Abary
Bridge.
By
then
the
bandits
had
disappeared.
“She
was
calling
me
since
she
became
suspicious
but
I
did
not
get
the
calls,”
the
Magistrate’s
husband
said.
The
Magistrate
and
her
husband
are
not
too
happy
with
the
initial
police
response.
They
claimed
that
they
first
went
to
the
Weldaad
Police
Station
to
report
the
matter
but
were
sent
back
to
Mahaicony,
where
the
report
was
eventually
taken.
“I
am
a
lawyer
and
this
leaves
me
to
wonder
what
happens
at
the
police
stations
when
we
are
sent
back
and
forth.
What
is
really
happening
to
the
civilians?”
Joel
Persid-Edmond
lamented.
Magistrate
Chandan-Edmond
is
the
second
Magistrate
to
suffer
from
a
bandit
attack.
Earlier
this
year,
Magistrate
Nigel
Hawke
and
his
wife
were
attacked
by
a
gunman
in
their
Non
Pareil
East
Coast
Demerara
home.
That
attack
prompted
the
police
to
mount
special
security
details
for
some
Magistrates
at
their
homes.
Magistrate
Chandan-Edmond
said
that
she
would
definitely
be
seeking
the
protection
of
the
police
in
the
form
of
an
escort
following
yesterday’s
incident.
“I
could
have
lost
my
life
today,”
she
said.
Even
her
babysitter
is
contemplating
quitting
the
job
as
a
result
of
the
ordeal.
The
magistrate
and
her
husband
are
to
make
a
decision
on
who
should
make
the
adjustments
to
their
respective
careers
in
order
to
facilitate
each
other.
While
Magistrate
Chandan-Edmond
did
not
point
fingers
at
anyone
for
yesterday’s
attack,
she
said
that
she
has
her
own
opinion
of
who
might
have
been
responsible.
Senior
police
detectives
on
the
East
Coast
of
Demerara
are
all
involved
in
investigating
the
matter.