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High Court to resentence 9 who killed Thackoor Boodram - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

NINE men convicted of the brutal beheading of pig farmer Thackoor Boodram, brother of drug kingpin Dole Chadee, in 2017, will be resentenced by the High Court.

This week, the Privy Council allowed their appeals against their life sentences and quashed them.

While they were initially sentenced to death by hanging, the sentence was later commuted to life in prison.

The nine – Michael “Rat” Maharaj, Samuel Maharaj, Damien “Tommy” Ramiah, Bobby Ramiah, Seenath “Farmer” Ramiah, Daniel “Fella” Gopaul, Richard Huggins, Leslie Huggins, and Mark “Bico” Jaikaran – will now return to the High Court for a judge to consider what sentence they should receive in place of a life sentence.

Lords Briggs, Leggatt, Burrows, Stephens and Lloyd-Jones further ordered that their resentencing take place “expeditiously,” and advised the High Court to consider the case of each man individually, taking into account the full range of sentences available.

In October 2021, the Privy Council dismissed the men’s appeal of their conviction when they petitioned the Court of Appeal to reopen their case because of “new evidence” that had emerged after they were found guilty of Boodram’s murder.

That evidence was based on an alleged admission by the State’s star witness, Junior Grandison, who swore in a statutory declaration in 2011 that he had fabricated evidence against the group.

Grandison's evidence did not implicate a tenth man, Junior "Heads" Phillips, who was also convicted on the basis of evidence of another witness. The London-based court agreed that Justices of Appeal Alice Yorke-Soo Hon, Rajendra Narine (retired) and Prakash Moosai carried out a proper and robust analysis of the appeal before dismissing it in 2018.

While their appeal was against both conviction and sentence, the latter part was adjourned, since it would be dependent on the findings of a death-penalty case involving another of Chadee’s brothers, Naresh Boodram.

That appeal to the Privy Council was taken there by the Attorney General in a constitutional claim which asked the Law Lords if a court could substitute a sentence other than life when the death sentence is commuted.

In May 2022, the Privy Council confirmed that prisoners in Trinidad and Tobago who can no longer be executed because of long delays on death row are not limited to sentences of life imprisonment.

Boodram was convicted of murder on November 27, 1996, and sentenced to death for murdering Anthony "Tooks" Greenidge and Stephen “Bulls” Sandy in 1992.

In 2007, he filed to have his death sentence quashed and to be re-sentenced by the High Court. His sentence was commuted to life on the basis that the court did not have the discretion to re-sentence him. Boodram appealed and the Court of Appeal held that the High Court was not constrained to impose a sentence of life imprisonment and can re-sentence with clearly defined prison terms. It sent the case back to the High Court to consider an appropriate sentence.

The C

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