Family ‘devastated’ after businessman found dead in St Andrew
KINGSTON, Jamaica – When 38 year-old entrepreneur Kamar Barrett failed to turn up at his daughter’s school on Wednesday to pick her up, his family grew concerned. Their concerns were justified because a day later, his body was discovered. He had been murdered.
“When his wife realised that he hadn’t come home by a certain time, she called the school and realised that her daughter was still at school, and the child wasn’t accustomed to being at school that late. She got concerned, that was not like Kamar, so she had to go pick her up. Right now, we are devastated,” Kamar’s mother told OBSERVER ONLINE on Friday.
The Campion College and University of Technology graduate was found dead with a wound to the back of the head on Tamarind Avenue in Kingston 10. His car had been abandoned at a different location.
“He was a kind loving son, father, brother and friend. Disciplined, hard-working, very organised. It is really hard on all of us. It is very hard, very hard because of the kind of person he was. We discovered that he was missing when he didn’t pick up his daughter from school, I don’t know when the police found his car, I can’t say much because it is a police matter,” his mother said.
She appealed to the public to come forward with any information that can help the police to find Kamar’s killer(s). Barrett was last seen off Hagley Park Road (Bloomsbury Road) on Wednesday between 9 to 11 am. He was driving a black Honda CRV. Anyone with information can contact the Half Way Tree police station.
“He was very hard working, very kind, very humble. Anything to take care of his child, if it is to get up and make a sandwich from 4 every morning, every day, he would do it to take care of his family, he would do it. He knew the Lord, he was brought up in the church,” she said.
He studied computer engineering at the University of Technology but had an entrepreneurial venture in catering, his mother said.
“I am a caterer, he catered too. He would teach baking class, he was a private chef for an ambassador at one point in his life so he was a provider, he was willing to do anything honest to take care of his family, nothing was too small or too great for him to do for his family,” his mother, who is a popular caterer, told OBSERVER ONLINE.
“He was a real family man, his wife knew where he was at all times. When she got home and realised he wasn’t there, she knew something was wrong. That is unusual for Kamar. He baked, he did his own drinks to cut down on sugar, that’s the kind of person he was,” she said.
Barrett’s death set off a whirlwind of activity on social media as many users wrote about his shocking death, and posted RIP messages and several heart emojis.
One of Mr Barret’s friends, Dimitri Lyon wrote Thursday on Twitter:
“He was a great and sincere soul. He didn’t deserve this. I pray that our leaders can build a safer Jamaica for all of us.”