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2 Arima men plead guilty to killing ex-ACP in 2011 - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

TWO men have pleaded guilty to the murder of retired ACP Cecil Carrington at his Manzanilla hotel in 2011.

On February 28, Justice Lisa Ramsumair-Hinds sentenced Ricardo Dalipsingh, also known as Danraj, and Berhane Redhead, also known as Darway Congo.

They each have a little over three years left to serve on their sentences. Dalipsingh will serve the remaining three years, seven months and six days at hard labour and Redhead will serve three years, seven months and 17 days, also at hard labour.

They both received credit for their guilty pleas and the time they had already spent incarcerated.

On February 27, both men pleaded guilty to felony murder after entering a plea deal earlier in February with the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions.

The judge, who also heard testimonials from the men and statements from Carrington’s wife and son, accepted their pleas.

Carrington was shot twice in the lobby of his hotel, Carrie’s on the Bay, on January 19, 2011.

Dalipsingh and Redhead were part of a group that planned to rob the hotel of $160,000 in cash and two firearms.

An acquaintance heard of the plan while at a basketball court in Arima, and days after the shooting, saw one of the men with a .38 revolver.

After he was arrested, Dalipsingh told the police the plan was for him to pretend to rent a room at the hotel and rob it. He did so and Carrington gave him a book to enter his name and address. His prints were left on the book.

He said immediately after, two others ran inside the hotel and announced a robbery. Dalipsingh “raffed” Carrington and when he saw him dipping into his pants pocket for his gun, he held down his hands.

He said he asked Carrington if he had a gun and although he said he did not, he saw the weapon’s imprint.

“I told him, ‘I holding it,'” he related to the police. Dalipsingh said Carrington was “kinda strong” and while they were struggling, he told him, “You can’t be on that. All we want is the money.”

Dalipsingh said all he heard was “boom, boom,” but did not know who had been shot. He saw his accomplices running and he took Carrington’s gun and keys.

Redhead was interviewed in prison, as by that time, in October 2011, months after the killing, he had begun serving a nine-month sentence for firearm possession. He denied killing anybody but also talked about the robbery plan.

Acknowledging that the killing was brutal, the judge said it was not the worst of the worst, so she accepted the starting-point sentence suggestion of 26 years for both men. From that, she reduced it by two years for their efforts at rehabilitation in prison and expressions of remorse.

However, she made it clear sentencing was “fact-specific” and did not want her sentence in this case to be considered a precedent, but explained it was done in the context of the terms of the plea agreement.

Ramsumair-Hinds also had a message for the business community.

“It is difficult for someone to be released from custody, with a conviction or otherwise, to gain lawful employment. We expect that

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