By
Stabroek
staff | March 7, 2009
Bandits broke into the office of the Head
Mistress (HM) of the Tucville Secondary
School around 3 am yesterday and made off
with one computer, a printer, a television,
a stabilizer, ink and padlocks among other
items.
The
grilled window from which the frame was
removed by the bandits to gain entry into
the office.
When Stabroek News visited the premises,
repairs were being conducted on the window
through which the bandits gained entry. The
school which is provided with security by
the On-Guard Security Service had two
security guards on duty at the time of the
incident.

Winston Harding, supervisor at On-Guard
told this newspaper that he was called out
of his bed and told what had happened about
15 minutes after the incident occurred. He
said that because the guards had not been
given “proper protection to execute their
duties, they were told to always stick
together in the event of if anything serious
were to occur.” The guards at the school
had batons as their only form of protection.
One
of the holes at the back of the school’s
compound through which the bandits could
have gained entry.
The guards were in front of the
school’s compound when the bandits made
their way in from the back through some huge
holes which were made in the chain link
fence. According to Harding, he was told
that the female guard on duty was feeling
unwell when she heard noises coming from the
back. The male guard decided to investigate
and was confronted by the bandits who,
according to what Harding was told by the
male guard, “were fully armed with
guns.”
No one could ascertain how many bandits
there were and reports are that they wore
masks.
According to Harding, “the bandits
gained entry into the HMs office by removing
the louvre panes and detaching an entire
window frame carrying a grill”, which,
according to him, “came out easily because
of faulty work done by whoever the
contractor was that installed the window in
the first place.”
According to Harding, repeated calls were
made to the East La Penitence Police Station
but the only response was that no patrol was
available at the time. The supervisor went
on to say that it was not until later in the
day that the police visited the school and
commenced their investigations.
No arrests have been made as yet.