Police disclosed yesterday that they are treating the murder of Senior Environmental Officer Alicia Foster as an execution-style killing, after receiving reports that she was threatened some two months ago during an investigation of a city business.
Woman hacked to death Teen dragged , throat slashed
There are reports that the head of a business entity had
warned Foster, 26, that she would “see who was more
powerful”, while she was investigating an alleged
environmental violation, which eventually ended up in the
courts.
Questioned about these reports, Crime Chief Seelall
Persaud told Kaieteur News that detectives are making
background checks as it relates to all of Foster’s
relationships, as well as her work.
“We got information that it (the murder) has to do with
her work. And we are taking into consideration that it may
have been an execution.”
Foster, a former Bishop’s High School student and
university graduate, was gunned down at around 21:50 hrs
on Sunday night in the driveway of her Lot 78 David
Street, Kitty home.
The gunmen escaped with her car, after hauling the young
woman out and dumping her on the driveway.
Foster’s car, PHH 2263, with all its parts intact, was
recovered, at around 09:00 hrs yesterday, near the Holy
Spirit Catholic Church in Well Road, North Ruimveldt.
According to an eyewitness, the car came from an easterly
direction at around 22:30 hrs on Sunday night and stopped
opposite the church. Two men then emerged from the
vehicle.
According to the source, the driver was brown in
complexion, about five feet- five inches tall, and was
wearing a white jersey and three-quarter trousers.
His companion, the source said, was shorter, darker in
complexion and was also wearing three-quarter trousers.
Kaieteur News was told that the taller man then walked in
a westerly direction and then turned north into Well Road.
However, the eyewitness said that he has not spoken to the
police because he fears for his safety.
James Foster, the slain woman’s father, turned up at the
Brickdam Police Station after his daughter’s car was
taken there, but the distraught man could hardly bear to
look at the vehicle.
Foster also expressed the view that his daughter had been
executed, and confirmed that he had received reports that
she was threatened while conducting her duties as an
environmental officer.
The tearful father repeatedly sought to make sense of his
daughter’s brutal end.
“She was just about five feet tall…they could have
easily pulled her out of the car,” he said.
Foster said that his family, especially his wife and the
17-year-old daughter who witnessed Alicia’s murder, were
particularly traumatized.
Alicia, accompanied by a 17-year-old sister, Marissa, had
attended a wake in Bent Street, and had just arrived home
when the brutal attack occurred.
Some reports state that the killers had trailed the
sisters in a vehicle, while other reports state that the
gunmen were on foot.
One report stated that the younger sister was about to
open the gate when the men emerged from their vehicle,
came over to the sisters, and ordered Alicia to exit the
car.
A source said that when Alicia refused to comply, the men
tried to drag her from the vehicle. When she protested,
one of the men shot her in the face.
The gunmen then dragged the mortally injured woman out of
her vehicle and drove away.
At the slain woman’s workplace, a black flag fluttered
from the building housing the EPA, where Foster had been
employed for close to three years.
Foster’s colleagues also wore black ribbons, while
photographs of their slain colleague were displayed on a
wall.
“To us, she is still here, but on a vacation, a
workshop, or a seminar…not in office today,” one
poster read.
“She was our friend, she will be remembered.”
And a statement released by the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) described Alicia Foster as “a model
employee, colleague, and friend,” and “a highly
disciplined, dedicated, committed and personable
individual.”
The release stated that Foster was the Agency’s
representative on the Board of the Guyana Geology and
Mines Commission and the National Water Council.
She had also successfully coordinated activities on the
monitoring and closure of Omai Gold Mines Limited, and had
also done a considerable amount of work in the forestry
and mining sectors.
The release stated that Foster joined the EPA as an
environmental officer on April 11, 2005.
“Ms. Foster was assigned to the Environmental Management
Division (EMD) in the mining, forestry and tourism unit,
where her commendable performance earned her a promotion
in July 2007 to Environmental Officer II.
“In April this year she was again promoted, this time to
the position of Senior Environmental Officer (acting), and
assigned to the Complaints and Response Unit of the
Environmental Management Division.”
It added that Ms. Foster had a particular interest in
environmental issues, particularly in the areas of waste
management, national resources management, pollution
prevention, and ecosystem and environmental assessment.