Hayde gets at least 60 years in prison after two slayings

In an unprecedented judicial ruling that establishes a new precedent for sentencing multiple murder offenders in Barbados, convicted killer Gabriel Shando Hayde faces effectively six decades of imprisonment before becoming eligible for parole consideration. Justice Carlisle Greaves delivered this landmark decision at the No. 3 Supreme Court on Friday, structuring consecutive sentencing that pushes potential release to 2086.

The 40-year tariff imposed for the August 2020 murder of carpenter Roger Moore will commence only after Hayde serves half of his existing 43-year minimum sentence for the February 2020 killing of Kerwin Howell. This creates a combined 60-year incarceration period that Justice Greaves described as necessary to reflect the severity of Hayde’s crimes and to send a clear deterrent message to firearm offenders.

Court proceedings revealed disturbing details of the Moore homicide. The victim was executing carpentry work at a shop in Bath Land, St John when two masked assailants emerged from a reversing vehicle and discharged multiple rounds. Moore succumbed to his injuries at the scene while still grasping his drilling equipment. Forensic evidence connected Hayde to the crime through weapon matching and digital content recovered from his mobile device, including WhatsApp messages and videos showcasing firearms similar to those employed in the shooting.

Justice Greaves emphasized several aggravating factors during sentencing: the calculated modification of firearms with bump stops to enable automatic firing capability, the deliberate concealment of identity during the offense, and Hayde’s prior history of shootings including a previously discontinued case involving the same victim. The judge noted the particular brutality of executing final shots to the head while the victim lay incapacitated.

While acknowledging this was Barbados’ first sentencing scenario involving a murderer already serving life imprisonment for another homicide, Justice Greaves declined to impose a whole-life tariff citing Hayde’s absence of prior convictions before these closely-spaced murders. The consecutive sentencing approach aligns with newly amended Firearms Act provisions that mandate cumulative penalties for firearm-enabled homicides.

Hayde displayed minimal reaction to the verdict, offering only a brief gesture to family members observing from the gallery as prison officers escorted him from the dock. The prosecution team led by Acting Deputy Director of Public Prosecutions Krystal Delaney and defense attorneys Safiya Moore and Michael Rivera all received judicial recognition for their comprehensive legal arguments in this groundbreaking case.