Stabroek News

Allicock jailed 60 years for Hill St murder

-

Thirty-five-year-old Steve Allicock was yesterday afternoon sentenced to 60 years in jail after a jury unanimousl­y found him guilty of the murder of Wendell Tappin.

Trial judge, Justice Navindra Singh, imposed the sentence, noting that the court had found no mitigating circumstan­ces to consider.

The judge ordered that time served on remand, be deducted.

In his address to the court, prior to sentence, defence attorney Maxwell McKay said that his client has been a model prisoner and had no previous brushes with the law.

For her part, Prosecutor Tuanna Hardy asked the judge to impose a sentence which would reflect the gravity of the convict’s act.

She said that at only 23 years old, Tappin lost his life at the hands of the convict, who pierced his heart with a knife.

Meanwhile, when given a chance to speak, the visibly shocked Allicock continued to maintain his innocence.

The father of seven stressed that he was nowhere around at the time of the killing.

According to him, the testimony of Tappin’s father against him, was fabricated.

Allicock’s children and other relatives cried uncontroll­ably after the verdict was announced.

One of the man’s visibly distraught daughters, immediatel­y rushed out behind him, and had to be restrained by police officers, as he was being escorted from the courtroom.

The 12-member mixed jury returned its verdict after about three hours of deliberati­ons.

The convict’s father, Leonard Allicock, who was acquitted of the said charge back in 2014, loudly remonstrat­ed as he left the court complex, voicing his discontent with the verdict.

Leonard, along with his brother, Randolph Allicock, were jointly charged with Tappin’s murder, but both had been subsequent­ly cleared of the indictment.

The capital indictment against Steve Allicock, stated that on December 31, 2009, at Hill Street, Albouystow­n, Georgetown, he murdered Tappin, called ‘Keyco.’

Mc Kay had argued that his client was in Suriname at the time of the killing, the state, however, contended that Steve Allicock fled to Suriname, only after committing the offence.

In his testimony, father of the deceased, Dan Tappin, refuted the claims advanced by the defence.

He had told the court that he was on the scene when the accused, who he has known for more than 20 years, stabbed his son.

Before his arraignmen­t, Steve Allicock had eluded capture for over five years.

He was represente­d by McKay and attorney Debra Kumar.

The state’s case, meanwhile, was presented by Hardy, in associatio­n with prosecutor­s Tamieka Clarke and Seeta Bishundial.

The trial was heard at the High Court in Georgetown.

Tappin, 23, and a father of two, was fatally chopped about his body while on his way to collect a cell phone in Hill Street, Albouystow­n.

Pathologis­t Dr Vivekanand Brijmohan, had given the cause of death as shock and haemorrhag­e, and a stab wound to the heart.

Accounts are that two men confronted Tappin, with one holding him down while the other chopped him. Tappin was rushed to the Georgetown Hospital, where he was later pronounced dead.

 ??  ?? Steve Allicock
Steve Allicock
 ??  ?? Steve Allicock
Steve Allicock
 ??  ?? Wendell Tappin
Wendell Tappin

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana