Bandits rob woman but returns ID, bank cards

In a startling incident that blends criminal violence with unexpected civility, Port of Spain police are hunting three assailants who robbed an Angostura employee shortly after she departed her workplace on November 27th. The 25-year-old victim was targeted while awaiting transportation on the Priority Bus Route opposite the Vehicle Maintenance Corporation of Trinidad and Tobago (VMCOTT) around 7:15 PM.

The confrontation began when the trio approached the woman, with one attacker seizing her from behind and pressing a curved blade against her throat. Under direct threat to her life, she surrendered her possessions including a black handbag containing a premium Samsung S23 Ultra smartphone valued at $5,000, her company-issued mobile device, and $700 in cash.

What followed however demonstrated paradoxical behavior from the criminals. As two accomplices fled into nearby vegetation, the remaining assailant—stationed on a distinctive black-and-white bicycle—accommodated the victim’s plea to retrieve her identification and banking cards from a red pouch within the stolen bag. The man complied with her request, calmly returning the critical documents before escaping through the Fernandes compound vicinity.

In a separate but related development, law enforcement is simultaneously pursuing two additional suspects following an attempted hardware store heist earlier that same day. At approximately 10:10 AM, armed robbers invaded a business along El Socorro Main Road, assaulting the proprietor and stealing a gold chain before employees disrupted the crime through vocal alarms. The startled perpetrators abandoned their plunder and fled in a black Nissan Note vehicle without securing any monetary gain from the establishment.

Police Constable Cyril of Besson Street Police Station is leading the investigation into the Angostura employee robbery, while PC Ball continues inquiries regarding the foiled hardware store incident. Both cases highlight concerning patterns of violent crime affecting Trinidadian citizens and businesses.