The brother of a police officer who was among five people killed in a mass shooting on Saturday is begging other victims’ loved ones not to carry out reprisal killings.
Sgt Larry Christopher Phillip, 52, was liming with a group of people near a bench, under a tree at Harpe Place, Observatory Street, Port of Spain, when a white Nissan Tiida drove in.
The car’s occupants rolled down the windows, pointed guns at the limers and began shooting at them.
The Tiida reversed, sped out of the compound and the gunmen escaped. When the smoke cleared, eight people had been shot, including a teenager and a woman.
Five of the victims died and three had gunshot wounds to their legs. Phillip was the father of two and the youngest of five siblings.
Phillip’s two brothers, speaking with the media at the Forensic Science Centre in St James, sent condolences to the families of the four other victims who died in the shooting.
They begged them not to take matters into their own hands and hurt other innocent people in the process.
One said: “Reprisals cannot bring back loved ones. When somebody gets shot or killed there’s always reprisals, because they say, ‘Boy, I lost my brother, I lost my sister, I lost my nephew,’ and it’s all about, ‘People have to pay for this, boy.’
“But they don’t care whoever pay for it, so it’ll be a shooting spree. So, just my humble opinion, reprisal doesn’t bring back your loved ones.”
Phillip’s brothers said it was “a normal thing” for Phillip to lime at Harpe Place, as he lived just a stone’s throw away on Observatory Street.
He was an outgoing man whose life revolved around his love for music.
“He likes people. He spent most of his working life in the TT Police Service with the police band. He loves music and he liked to make people happy. He was a relatively fun guy to be around.
“He was involved with Renegades steelband and he was also a member of Calypso Revue. He used to play instruments there too. In his younger years he did some work with Sparrow. He used to play with Ed Watson in his younger years.”
They said Phillip’s proudest moments were when he was either in uniform or representing his country on the international stage.
“I think one of the highlights of his career was when he went to Germany with the police band. He always talked highly about that.
“He loved his job and he took his job very seriously.” They said his specialty was reed instruments and he had already begun making plans for after he retired. “
He always planned to go back home when he retired, because he wanted to build and add on to our mom’s house in Morvant.
“After his retirement, he was just planning on continuing music and teaching music to the younger folks. He really wanted to continue with music and any teaching aspect of it.”
The voice of one brother was tinged with sadness as he remembered Phillip, saying he regretted they had not remained close over the years, but had grown apart slightly as they aged.
“We had some really good time together as brothers…When we all moved out, we ki