WCB teens’ murder

President of the Argentine Team of Forensic Anthropology (Equipo Argentino de Antropologia Forensica-EAAF), Dr Luis Fondebrider recently visited Guyana and met with Home Affairs Minister Robeson Benn along with senior investigators of the Guyana Police Force where he sought access to a series of documents to determine whether his Team would be in a position to offer assistance in the investigation of the murders of the West Coast Berbice (WCB) teens.
On Monday, Benn told reporters that Police are diligently working on the case and when the time is “appropriate and opportune, action would be taken.”
He added that no consideration was given to send the documents to Dr Fondebrider since they would have indicated the level of information sharing at the previous interaction.
“There was a discussion where he was advised that he can see the autopsy which was indeed attended by Mr Nigel Hughes and he can have an opportunity either virtually or face to face with the government forensic pathologist,” Minister Benn informed.
On September 6, 2020, the badly mutilated bodies of cousins Isaiah and Joel Henry were found in the backlands at West Coast Berbice after they had left their Number Three Village home to pick coconuts but did not return home. And then, on September 9, 2020, 17-year-old Haresh Singh was found murdered at the Number Three Village backlands in what was dubbed as a retaliatory killing.
Dr Fondebrider arrived in Guyana on December 12 and met with the Singh and Henry families where he explained the scope of his Organisation and how they may or may not be able to assist. He also visited the crime scenes where he gathered preliminary information.
On December 15, the forensic expert held a discussion at the Cathedral of Immaculate Conception on Brickdam in Georgetown where he appraised persons of the work of the EAAF and the role they play as one of the foremost forensic teams in the world.









