A 10-year veteran of Trinidad and Tobago’s municipal police force and a devoted mother of three has been lost to a fatal on-duty shooting that has shaken the southern city of San Fernando and sparked urgent calls for political accountability over rising violent crime.
Forty-two-year-old Anuska Eversley, an acting corporal based at the San Fernando Municipal Police Station, died early Sunday after being shot in the neck while on duty. A resident of Edinburgh 500, she leaves behind three children aged 18, 15 and 7. The shooting was also followed by the theft of multiple firearms and rounds of ammunition from the station’s secure strong room.
Eversley’s death carries an extra layer of tragedy: it came exactly three years after her brother was gunned down in a separate violent attack. On the same date in 2021, Daniel Eversley, known by the nickname “Ghost”, was killed in a shooting at a car wash in Forres Park, Claxton Bay.
San Fernando Mayor Robert Parris, who has known Eversley professionally for years, shared intimate memories that painted a portrait of a woman fully committed to both her career and her family. Two years ago, Parris said, Eversley reached out to him to calm her daughter’s pre-exam anxiety ahead of the national Secondary Entrance Assessment (SEA). That small interaction forged a parental bond between them.
“After that incident, whenever we met, we talked as parents, about our children,” Parris recalled in an interview with the Express. “That’s how I knew she was such a dedicated mother.”
Across his 16 years working with the San Fernando City Corporation, Parris added, Eversley earned a reputation as an exceptionally efficient, reliable member of the municipal police force. In an official statement of condolence released Monday, Parris framed her death as an incalculable loss for the entire community.
“This is a devastating loss for our city. I have known acting Corporal Eversley for many years, and I remember her as a dedicated and committed officer who served with quiet strength, professionalism, and pride. Her passing has left a profound void within the Municipal Police and the wider San Fernando community,” the statement read.
Parris has called on Minister of Homeland Security Roger Alexander and Commissioner of Police Allister Guevarro to launch a prompt, full investigation into what he described as a “tragic and disturbing event.” Senior law enforcement colleagues echoed Parris’ praise, with one senior officer noting Eversley consistently performed her duties to the best of her ability and was widely respected across the force.
Wendell Eversley, the victim’s uncle and a prominent local activist who survived being held hostage during the 1990 coup attempt in Port of Spain, has publicly called for the immediate dismissal of both the Minister of Homeland Security and the Minister of Defence over the killing. He called the attack on a police station “an indictment on the State,” noting it is the most severe incident targeting a police facility in the country since the 1990 coup bombing of the Port of Spain Police Headquarters.
Pointing to the stolen cache of guns and ammunition removed from the station’s strong room after the attack, Wendell Eversley raised alarming questions about national security. “Are we going to see another 1990? Look around and see. Are we all safe in this country?” he asked. He also questioned the government’s repeated promises to curb violent crime, noting that criminals appear to be gaining ground amid the current wave of violence.
With the ruling United National Congress approaching its first anniversary in power, Wendell Eversley questioned what the party could possibly celebrate after a sustained period of rising murder rates. “Inviting the public to come out. To come out and celebrate what? Celebrate blood flowing on the streets? Celebrating murders upon murders?” he said. In a social media video posted Monday, he added that the nation could no longer accept a daily reality of bloodshed. “It is time for the minister of Homeland Security and the minister of Defence to be fired. It is a sad day for Trinidad and Tobago, and mainly the State,” he said.
The Trinidad and Tobago Municipal Police Service (TTMPS) also released an official statement confirming Eversley first enlisted in the municipal police force on July 1, 2008, and had been assigned to the San Fernando unit in her most recent posting.
“The TTMPS and its partner agencies extend sincere condolences to her relatives, friends and colleagues,” the release said.
