Thu | Jun 13, 2024

Arrests of US tourists in Turks and Caicos for carrying ammunition prompt plea from three governors

Published:Thursday | May 16, 2024 | 9:07 PM
Oklahoma Governor Kevin Stitt gives his inaugural speech during ceremonies in Oklahoma City, Monday, Jan. 14, 2019. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki, file)

The arrests of five Americans in the Turks and Caicos Islands on charges they illegally carried ammunition during recent trips have prompted pleas for mercy from the governors of Oklahoma, Pennsylvania and Virginia.

The Americans are facing prison sentences of up to 12 years.

In a letter Tuesday to the islands' governor, the American governors said three of the men charged from their states maintained they inadvertently took ammunition with them on vacation. They did not have firearms.

"The punishment here is just absurd," Oklahoma Governor Kevin Stitt told NewsNation's "Morning in America" during an appearance on May 7. He suggested the US consider banning travel to the islands.

One of the men who is charged, Ryan Tyler Watson, of Oklahoma, went to the Turks and Caicos with his wife and other couples to celebrate several people's 40th birthdays, his sister, Jessica Byrd, said on a GoFundMe page she set up to raise money for his legal defence.

As Watson and his wife were heading home in April, airport security found four rounds of ammunition that had been unknowingly left in a duffel bag from a deer hunting trip, according to the page. Watson's wife, Valerie, was released and returned home. He made bail, but remains on the islands, with a hearing scheduled for June.

The Turks and Caicos government has identified the three other men as Michael Lee Evans, 72, of Texas; Bryan Hagerich, of Pennsylvania; and Tyler Scott Wenrich, 31, of Virginia.

Evans had a court hearing in April and has pleaded guilty to possessing seven rounds of ammunition, and Hagerich pleaded guilty to possessing 20 rounds of rifle ammunition, according to an April 26 news release from the Communications Directorate. The release said Evans and Hagerich were also on bail.

The fifth American, Sharitta Shanise Grier, 45, of Orlando, Florida, was arrested Monday during a routine search at the airport, the Royal Turks and Caicos Island Police said in a news release posted to X on Thursday. She was charged with one count of possession of ammunition and was due back in court in July, the release said.

The British territory significantly tightened its gun laws in 2022 following a jump in gun violence and weapons trafficking. The strict penalties were meant to protect the community by deterring gun crimes, the government has said.

In gun and ammunition cases, courts have sentencing discretion for "exceptional circumstances," but they cannot limit punishment to a fine with no prison term, the country's Court of Appeal ruled in February. That means the Americans may not get 12 years in prison, but they also likely won't be able to pay a fine and return home.

The US. State Department has urged travellers to the Turks and Caicos to exercise increased caution because of crime, including avoiding walking alone at night. It has also warned them to be vigilant about guns and ammunition in their luggage.

In bulletins issued in September 2023 and April, it alerted travellers of the potential 12-year sentence and told them to carefully check their bags for stray ammunition or forgotten weapons.

"If you bring a firearm or ammunition into TCI, we will not be able to secure your release from custody," the September alert said.

In their letter on Tuesday, the governors of Oklahoma, Pennsylvania and Virginia called on Turks and Caicos to reconsider the charges against Hagerich, Wenrich and Watson and expedite their release.

Doing so will "create the necessary recognition of your laws that will impact the future actions of travellers and continue our mutual interest in justice and goodwill between our jurisdictions," the letter said.

US Senator Rick Scott of Florida questioned why Americans would travel to the islands now in a post Wednesday on X that included a news story about Grier's arrest. The post urged the State Department to demand the release of the Americans.

-AP

Follow The Gleaner on X and Instagram @JamaicaGleaner and on Facebook @GleanerJamaica. Send us a message on WhatsApp at 1-876-499-0169 or email us at onlinefeedback@gleanerjm.com or editors@gleanerjm.com.