CHIEF MAGISTRATE Ann McLennan will today (January 31) make her ruling on whether a prima facie case has been made out against two men charged with the murders of Theresa and Feresa Rozario and their father Hilrod Thomas. Ganga Krishna, 72, a businessman of Lot 11 North Road, Bourda, Georgetown and his employee, Avishkar Kissoon, 24, of Lot 1, Sheriff Street, Campbellville, Georgetown, are currently on remand for the capital offence.
The preliminary inquiry (PI) is being presided over by the Chief Magistrate where the matter is being done by paper committal.
The two are being represented by Attorneys Nigel Hughes and Glenn Hanoman, in association with Mursaline Bacchus.

In November, 2014, Theresa Rozario, 15, and her 12-year-old sister, Feresa Rozario, were burnt to death after an early-morning fire destroyed a Robb Street, Georgetown building they were occupying with their father.
The two sisters, who were reportedly asleep, were trapped in the early-morning inferno.
Hilrod Randolph Thomas, 63, managed to jump through a window to escape the flames but he sustained second and third-degree burns and later succumbed at the Georgetown Public Hospital Corporation (GPHC).
Investigations in this matter took the police two years after a drug addict reportedly confessed that he was offered money to set fire to the disputed building. Police believe that the building was torched to drive out individuals, who were also claiming ownership of the property by prescriptive rights.