Autopsy: Mercedez died from blunt force trauma

The brutal murder of 12-year-old primary school student Mercedez Layne has thrown a Trinidad and Tobago community into mourning, after an official autopsy this week confirmed the young girl died from severe blunt force trauma to the head. Her father, Ronald Cabrera, broke down in tears while speaking to reporters from his home in Erin, describing unfathomable pain that no legal punishment could ever ease. In the wake of his daughter’s senseless killing, Cabrera is now publicly calling for authorities to reinstate capital punishment, arguing that it is the only meaningful deterrent for violent offenders who target innocent children.

The tragedy unfolded late last week, when Mercedez, a student at Erin RC Primary School, was reported missing Saturday afternoon after failing to return home from what should have been a short five-minute trip. Cabrera recalled that when his older daughter called to report Mercedez had not arrived, he immediately feared the worst. “From the time I heard it was more than half an hour and she didn’t reach home, especially a girl, I knew it was a cause for concern,” he said. His worst fears were confirmed Sunday morning, when Mercedez’s partially clothed body was discovered in a grassy area near an oil well along Erin’s Carapal Road. Investigators cataloged a range of strange items left near the body: a pack of Lucky Strike cigarettes, one right slipper, a black plastic bag holding four packs of Top Notch Ramen Noodles, a pair of short blue denim pants, a scrap of cloth, a round wooden disk, a broken beer bottle, and an undergarment.

The autopsy, conducted at the Forensic Science Centre in Federation Park, backed Cabrera’s initial suspicion that his daughter had been violently beaten. He told reporters he had already connected the bleeding from Mercedez’s ears to severe head injury, even before official results were released. “I stood long enough to realise that they beat her in a very violent manner in her head. I am not a doctor, but I say that because why would she be bleeding through the ears?” he asked. As of Thursday, a 26-year-old man from nearby Palo Seco remains in police custody, with detectives continuing their probe into the killing.

Cabrera, who shared Mercedez with her mother Annarese Layne as one of five children, remembered his daughter as a quiet, loving child who was excitedly looking forward to a school field trip to Mt St Benedict scheduled for the day after autopsy results were released. “She was shy, so shy that if she don’t know you, she recoils immediately,” he said, adding that even though he was no longer in a relationship with Mercedez’s mother, the two remained close, and he last spoke to her just a week before her death. “She tell me she was supposed to go on a field trip to Mt St Benedict with school. She was looking forward to it. She was so elated,” he recalled.

In raw, emotional comments to local outlet Express, Cabrera questioned why taxpayers should shoulder the cost of incarcerating violent child killers, and argued that the current criminal justice system is failing to protect the nation’s children and deter repeat offenders. “Could anything bring back my daughter? You could get a million years. Could you bring back my daughter? And if I get a million years and I put my hands on him, would that bring back my daughter? Why taxpayers have to be paying for people who do certain crimes?” he asked. He has long supported reinstating hangings, a position he holds not only because of his daughter’s murder, but because of repeated failures in the system that allow violent offenders to return to the streets to reoffend. “Is years these people doing things and nothing really happening. Most of them going in jail, spending a few years and they back out on the street. How could I get justice? What justice it have for me? So how could I say I will be getting justice? They should bring back hangings. That will deter others. These guys are coming back out in society. A lot of them are repeat offenders for the same crime as they come out, so why not implement public hanging? I’ve been saying this for years, not just because it is my daughter,” he said. “The system is failing. A lot of kids are dying and nothing is coming out of it. Let we be real. Nothing is coming out of it.” He added that the nation’s older generations and leadership have failed in their core duty to keep children safe across the country.