Second food delivery driver attacked by robbers

| 12/02/2025 | 11 Comments

(CNS): Police are urging delivery drivers to exercise caution after another food delivery man was assaulted and robbed on Saturday night in Windsor Park, George Town, around 9pm. As the driver was dropping off food at a residence, he was approached by two men with dogs. He was assaulted and attacked by the dogs but managed to escape and call for help. The robbers made off on foot in an unknown direction.

The Department of Agriculture was called, and DoA officers found and retrieved one of the dogs involved.

This incident follows a similar one that happened last month, where a driver was injured and robbed in the Marina Drive area of Red Bay. The police are urging delivery drivers to take precautions for their own safety, including being aware of their surroundings and carrying a light in dark areas, and if a location doesn’t appear safe, they should call the customer and let them know that they are there.

The police also advised delivery drivers not to carry a lot of cash and to encourage cashless services from customers. Drivers should ensure their phones are always charged and programmed to call 911 while locked.

This latest robbery and the one on 29 January are being investigated by the Criminal Investigations Department. Anyone with information is asked to call the George Town Police Station at 949-4222. Anonymous tips can be provided to the RCIPS Confidential Tip Line at 949-7777 or the website. Tips can also be submitted anonymously via the Cayman Crime Stoppers website.


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Category: Crime, Police

Comments (11)

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  1. Anonymous says:

    free solution:
    do not deliver to riff raff areas.

  2. Anonymous says:

    F-ing thugs ruining EVERYTHING for us!
    ACT NOW RCIPS!

  3. Anonymous says:

    Until further notice businesses should stop delivering to that area.

    • Anonymous says:

      should put armed RCIPS officers in the delivery cars for a few weeks. That is not entrapment. If a sleezeball tries to rob them, they can act.

  4. Anonymous says:

    This needs to be addressed right away. This is not how we are supposed to be, and we can’t keep letting these little thugs get away with these crimes and feel its dismissible!

    13
    • Enough says:

      The cops need to roll up on these fools in the areas where this nonsense is happening weekly.

      Bet they know who the criminals are in every district.

      Increase the enforcement, be aggressive and send these criminals to Northward or deport them.

  5. Anonymous says:

    Riff Raff robberies

    16
  6. Anonymous says:

    Aside from a large can of insect spray..

    Materials Needed
    Dried Scotch Bonnet Peppers (dried peppers have a higher capsaicin concentration per gram than fresh ones)
    Ethanol or another solvent
    Glass jar with lid
    Blender or coffee grinder
    Strainer or cheesecloth
    Evaporation dish (glass or ceramic)
    Gloves & eye protection

    Steps
    Grind the Peppers

    Crush dried Scotch Bonnet peppers into a fine powder using a blender, coffee grinder, or mortar and pestle.
    The finer the powder, the better the extraction.
    Soak in Ethanol (Maceration Process)

    Place the powdered peppers in a glass jar.
    Cover completely with ethanol (2:1 solvent-to-pepper ratio).
    Seal the jar and shake well.
    Let it sit for 24 to 48 hours, shaking occasionally.
    Filter the Mixture

    Use a cheesecloth, coffee filter, or fine mesh to strain out the solid pepper bits.
    The liquid extract now contains dissolved capsaicin.
    Evaporate the Solvent (Concentration Step)

    Pour the liquid into a wide evaporation dish.
    Allow the ethanol to evaporate naturally at room temperature in a well-ventilated area (or use low heat, below 120°F / 50°C, to speed up evaporation).
    You should be left with a thick orange/reddish resin—this is mostly capsaicin extract.
    Dissolve in a Carrier Liquid

    Mix the concentrated extract into a light, fast-drying carrier liquid such as:
    Ethanol + Water (Recommended)
    Propylene Glycol + Water
    Avoid thick oils like vegetable oil, as they don’t spray well.

    13
  7. Anonymous says:

    Clean your crap up Caymaniankind!

    Many years later and still no improvment in education and law enforcement.

    18
    6
    • Anonymous says:

      I live in a community on the other side of the fence of Windsor. I wouldn’t go in that neighborhood for any amount of money even in the daytime. It’s so sad when lower income hard-working delivery people are set upon by animals (human)

    • Anonymous says:

      I challenge you to go down to GT station and take a good look at the officers that you are “greeted” with. I’m not trying to cause bias or telling you what to see or think. Genuinely go there and look for yourself.

      Then think to yourself for a minute or two about who has full control over the RCIPS. Then I hope you’ll reconsider using phrases like “Caymaniankind” (whatever that is) disparagingly.

      I’d go one step further, if you’d humour me: I bet you that if you ever get pulled over (or in an accident) in the next 5 years or so, that you will not deal with a Caymanian police officer.

      12

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