HomeNewsLocal newsFormer Sen. Payne Sentencing Delayed

Former Sen. Payne Sentencing Delayed

A 2016 campaign photo for Steven Payne Sr., expelled by the Senate in 2023 and found guilty of sexual battery of a girl between 12 and 18 in October. His sentencing is scheduled for January 21. (Source file photo)

Former Virgin Islands lawmaker Steven Payne Sr. will have to wait until January to learn his punishment after being found guilty of sexual battery in Florida, according to court records.

A jury found the former senator at large from St. Johnย guilty Oct. 22ย of attacking a girl between the ages of 12 and 18. He faces the possibility ofย life in prisonย on Jan. 21.

Payne was initially scheduled for sentencing Nov. 5. It was then moved to Nov. 13 when Payne, 59, filed a motion for a new trial. The date was pushed back again, to Dec. 10, after the motion was amended and eventually denied.

Court records did not specify why the sentencing was postponed again.

The Orlando Police Department arrested Payne โ€” a former chair of the USVI Senateโ€™s Homeland Security, Justice and Public Safety Committee โ€” in September 2023 on a Duval County warrant as he arrived on a flight from St. Thomas. The warrant was for assaulting a girl between the ages of 12 and 18 sometime between Aug. 1, 2018, and Feb. 27, 2019, while Payne was โ€œin a position of familial or custodial authorityโ€ of the child, according to publicly available documents on the Duval County Circuit Court docket. Previous reports revealed that he had become the girlโ€™s guardian after a living situation with previous caregivers deteriorated.

The victim told officials of two other incidents involving Payne. One was in the U.S. Virgin Islands, when he called her into a bedroom where he was lying naked on a bed. The child said she left the room and closed the door, according to court documents.

In the fall of 2017 in Florida, where the girl had relocated after Hurricane Irma, Payne reportedly took her to a theme park in Osceola County, where they stayed in a hotel room together. Once in the room, he complained of leg cramps, undressed and asked for a massage, then forced the girl into the bathroom, made her take her clothes off, pulled her into the shower, bathed her and forced her to bathe him, according to the document.

Payne is a former Virgin Islands police officer, music teacher at Gomez Elementary, andย School Resource Officerย for the Virgin Islands Police Department.

The 2023 arrest followed Payneโ€™sย expulsion from the V.I. Legislature in July 2022 after his fellow senators voted to eject him for multiple violations of the Legislatureโ€™s rules. He faced serious accusations of sexual misconduct by three different women โ€” including a staff member. Payne denied the accusations. He filed a civil suit in V.I. Superior Court in response, which was subsequently transferred to the V.I. Supreme Court and ultimatelyย dismissed with prejudice.

The prosecution also introduced evidence of two other incidents, including the legislative staff memberโ€™s allegations that Payne behaved inappropriately while on Senate business on St. Croix in 2022, and another by a woman who said Payne tried to force her to touch him and ripped off her underwear before she could escape a St. John beach in 2005. Payne was there to supposedly help her train for the police academy.

Payne trained as a police officer in Tampa Bay, Florida, gaining a Law Enforcement Certificate in 1998.

As a write-in candidate in 2016, Payne said he loved working with young, vulnerable people.

โ€œAs a police officer with the Virgin Islands Police Department, Steve Payne founded the Juvenile Delinquency Prevention Program; where he could have more access to the youths regardless of their age or grade level,โ€ he wrote. โ€œHis campaign for change and empowerment of the youths started at Gomez Elementary School, where he served as the Music Teacher. However, Payne realized that there was a special need for reaching and impacting the lives of the male students; therefore, he opened his band room to them outside of his normal classroom hours. This created a safe and positive outlet for them.โ€

Payne also credited himself with founding the Gomez Golden Stars, the Addelita Cancryn Marching Iguanas, the JDPP Marching Kings, the JDPP Jammerz, the Marching Cougars, and the Marching Gulls and the VI Avengerz.

Keeping our community informed is our top priority.
If you have a news tip to share, please call or text us at 340-244-6631.

Support local + independent journalism in the U.S. Virgin Islands

Unlike many news organizations, we haven't put up a paywall โ€“ we want to keep our journalism as accessible as we can. Our independent journalism costs time, money and hard work to keep you informed, but we do it because we believe that it matters. We know that informed communities are empowered ones. If you appreciate our reporting and want to help make our future more secure, please consider donating.

Jobs - Click Here