Loading...
Loading...
Loading...

Charter boat crew returns home after BVI detention | THE DAILY HERALD

December 18, 2022

Charter boat crew returns  home after BVI detention | THE DAILY HERALD
Loading...

Celebrating the crew’s return (from left) are Jernel Bique, Maeva Bret-Dibat, Lily Alexandre (hostess), Charlie Vaughn Swinton (captain), Chantal te Koppele and Private Yacht Charter owner Pierre Altier. (Robert Luckock photo)

 

Loading...

PHILIPSBURG--The crew of charter catamaran Mojito was released by the British Virgin Islands (BVI) authorities on Saturday, arriving back at Bobby’s Marina around 1:00pm after a twelve-day ordeal in a Tortola detention centre. The catamaran had also been impounded.

  Their release, and the vessel’s, were secured through payment of a US $12,000 fine by Mojito owner Private Yacht Charter after days of negotiation between the Tortola lawyer acting on behalf Private Yacht Charter and BVI Customs and Immigration.  

  Captain Charlie Vaughn and hostess Lily Alexandre were held initially on suspicion of human trafficking and crossing borders illegally, but this was not pursued. However, Vaughn was charged with “landing in the territory without leave of an immigration officer” and “allowing persons to land without leave of an immigration officer”. The hostess was not charged with any offence, but was still held in custody.

  The crew had unsuspectingly taken on board a group of seven Romanian migrants who had booked and paid for a four-day charter in the BVI through an online booking platform. Arriving in Tortola at 1:00am on December 6, the group had pressured the captain to dock the vessel on the pretence that a member of the group, a pregnant woman, was very sick. The captain’s radio calls for medical assistance were unanswered.

  Once on land the group escaped, but were subsequently arrested in St. Thomas, the US Virgin Islands (USVI), the next day and charged with illegal entry into the USA through St. Thomas. One Romanian in the group was wanted for murder, according to a USVI news report.

  Vaughn said he was very grateful to be back in St. Maarten but had some criticism for the Ministry of Justice.

  “The fact that we didn’t have Dutch passports and the Ministry of Justice saying they could do nothing for us was not nice at all,” said Vaughn. “I think if you are a resident and living all your life in St. Maarten, something could have been done for us to speed things up. Lily was born and raised in St. Maarten. The Justice Ministry needs to look into these things and make some changes in the laws.”

  The pair were kept in a hotel converted into a makeshift detention centre. “It could have been worse. We could have been in jail cells,” Vaughn added.

  Alexandre said it was an experience she would never want to go through again.

  Private Yacht Charter owner Pierre Altier said he was “tremendously relieved” that the case is now closed and the crew are back in St. Maarten in time for Christmas.

https://www.thedailyherald.sx/islands/charter-boat-crew-returns-home-after-bvi-detention

Source: https://www.thedailyherald.sx/islands/charter-boat-crew-returns-home-after-bvi-detention

Loading...

Headlines

'We are headed to court', ACP-SXM  preparing legal action against GEBE | The Daily Herald

July 11, 2026

'We are headed to court', ACP-SXM preparing legal action against GEBE | The Daily Herald

PHILIPSBURG--The Association for Consumer Protection St Maarten (ACP-SXM) says it is moving forward with legal action against NV GEBE, with President Peggy -Ann Richardson announcing Friday that the consumer advocacy group is preparing to take the utility company to court. Spe...

July 10, 2026

Head-on collision between two vehicles claims life of one, and injures two others | The Daily Herald

The accident scene Thursday on the French side of the Cole Bay border monument. (Robert Luckock photo) MARIGOT--A 76-year-old man was pronounced dead following a head-on collision between two French-side registered vehicles on the Bellevue RN7, close to the Cole Bay border mon...

July 09, 2026

Court Rules Mullet Bay Beach is public, Sun Resorts owns land behind shoreline | The Peoples Tribune

GREAT BAY--The Court of First Instance has ruled that Mullet Bay Beach remains public and is not owned by Sun Resorts Limited, rejecting the company's claim that the beach itself passed into private ownership through historic land transfers dating back to 1852. The Court,...

Loading...
Loading...
Loading...