A Missouri state representative paid a heartbreaking tribute to his daughter and son-in-law after they were brutally murdered and set on fire by gangs in Haiti.
Davy Lloyd III, 22, and his wife Natalie, 21, were killed along with a Haitian man when they were shot by criminal gang members in Port-au-Prince after leaving a youth group activity at a local church.
The attack took place Thursday evening in the community of Lizon in northern Port-au-Prince, Lionel Lazarre, head of a Haitian police union, told The Associated Press on Friday.
Ben Baker, Natalie’s father, remembered the couple in a Facebook post.
“My heart is broken into a thousand pieces,” Baker wrote. ‘I’ve never felt this kind of pain before. Most of you know that my daughter and son-in-law, Davy and Natalie Lloyd, are full-time missionaries in Haiti. They were attacked by mobs tonight and were both killed. They went to heaven together.”
Davy Lloyd III, 22, and his wife Natalie, 21, were killed along with a Haitian man when they were shot by criminal gang members in Port-au-Prince after leaving a youth group activity at a local church.
The couple will celebrate their two-year anniversary in June and his birthday in early July.
“Please pray for my family, we are in dire need of strength,” Baker added. “And please pray for the Lloyd family as well. I have no other words for now.’
The third victim was Jude Montis, the local director of Missions in Haiti Inc.
Former President Donald Trump shared a post on his Truth Social page about the couple, saying, “God bless Davy and Natalie. What a tragedy. Haiti is completely out of control. Find the killers NOW!!!’
The killings came as the capital crumbled under the brutal onslaught of violent gangs who control 80 percent of Port-au-Prince, while authorities await the arrival of a police force from Kenya as part of a U.N.-backed deployment aimed at suppress gang violence in the region. troubled Caribbean country.
Hannah Cornett, Davy Lloyd’s sister, said her parents are full-time missionaries in Haiti, and she and her two brothers grew up there.
‘Davy spoke Creole before he spoke English. It was at home,” she said in a telephone interview. “Haiti was all we knew.”
Cornett, 22, says her parents run an orphanage, school and church in Haiti, and she and her brothers grew up with the orphans: “It was just one big, happy family there.”
Ben Baker, Natalie’s father in Missouri, remembered the couple in a Facebook post
Members of the Haitian Armed Forces patrol the streets of Port-au-Prince
Former President Donald Trump shared a post on his Truth Social page about the couple
She said her older brother was outgoing, had grown a garden and raised many animals. While he returned to the US for Bible college and then married, he returned to Haiti with Natalie Lloyd to do more humanitarian work.
“They just had a lot of love for Haiti and just wanted to help the people there,” Cornett said. “That’s their calling.”
Cornett noted that Montis worked for her parents for 20 years and left behind two children, ages 2 and 6.
She said that on the night of the attack, three vehicles carrying gang members stopped the Lloyds and Montis as they crossed the street, hitting her brother in the head with the barrel of a gun.
They forced him upstairs, stole their belongings and left him tied up. As people helped untie Davy Lloyd, another group of armed men appeared.
“Nobody knows what happened,” she said.
An unidentified person was shot and the gunmen opened fire as the Lloyds and Montis fled to the home where her parents live, Cornett said.
“They tried to take cover there but the gang set fire to the house,” she said, adding that they were killed and their bodies set on fire.
Hannah Cornett, Davy Lloyd’s sister, said her parents are full-time missionaries in Haiti, and she and her two brothers grew up there. ‘Davy spoke Creole before he spoke English. It was at home,” she said in a telephone interview
The killings came as the capital crumbled under the brutal onslaught of violent gangs that control 80 percent of Port-au-Prince.
Cornett said her mother flew back from Haiti about a month ago, and her father and younger brother left on Wednesday because the neighborhood was so quiet.
“Nobody expected this to happen,” she said through tears.
On Friday afternoon, Baker posted on Facebook that the bodies of Davy and Natalie Lloyd had been safely transported to the U.S. Embassy.
The couple worked for Missions in Haiti Inc. The Claremore, Oklahoma, organization was founded by David and Alicia Lloyd, Davy Lloyd’s parents.
Natalie Lloyd’s Facebook page stated that the couple married on June 18, 2022, and that she began working with the mission organization in August 2022. She regularly posted photos of Haitian children on her page.
A Facebook post on the Missions for Haiti page late Thursday read: “Around midnight: Davy, Natalie and Jude were shot dead by the gang around 9 o’clock tonight. We are all devastated.’
The US State Department said on Friday it was aware of the killings. ‘We offer the family our sincere condolences on their loss. We stand ready to provide all appropriate consular assistance.
Out of respect for the family during this difficult time, we have no further comment,” the agency said.
In a post on their social media, the organization said the two, seen here with Ben Baker, were ambushed by a gang of three truckloads of men after coming out of the church.
The couple allegedly used Starlink internet to call for help and barricaded themselves in a building
It was not immediately clear which gang or gangs were responsible for the fatal shootings.
However, a gang leader named Chyen Mechan, which means “mean dog” in Haitian Creole, controls the area where the shooting took place. His real name is Claudy Célestin and he is a dismissed official of the Haitian Ministry of the Interior.
The leader of another gang, known as General Jeff, also controls the area near the neighborhood where the couple was murdered. Both gangs are part of a coalition known as Viv Ansanm, which means ‘Living Together’.
The coalition is responsible for launching large-scale attacks on key government infrastructure starting February 29.
Gunmen have attacked police stations, opened fire on the main international airport, which remained closed for almost three months before opening earlier this week, and stormed Haiti’s two largest prisons, freeing more than 4,000 prisoners.
According to the United Nations, gangs are also blamed for killing or injuring more than 2,500 people in Haiti between January and March, a 50% increase compared to the same period last year.
Kidnappings are also common, with targets including American missionaries.
In October 2021, gang members kidnapped seventeen missionaries, most of them American citizens. Many in the group, including five children, were held captive for more than two months before escaping.
Police check motorcyclists near Port-au-Prince airport
A woman covers the street with water to prevent dirt from blowing up as police patrol near Port-au-Prince airport
Then in July 2023, gangs kidnapped an American nurse and her daughter from the campus of a Christian-run school near Port-au-Prince. They were released almost two weeks later.
The U.S. State Department has long had a “do not travel” advisory for Haiti and is urging all U.S. citizens in the country to leave as soon as possible.
On the Missions for Haiti website, the founders wrote that the organization was founded in 2000. They said it aimed to help with “the country’s greatest need: its children.”
A May 2023 newsletter on the mission website stated that Natalie “has helped with the children at the House of Compassion and assisted at our ACE school. Davy has worked on many much needed projects around our property including building a laundry room and repairing bathrooms.