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Derek Peter Gittens

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The family of Derek Peter Gittens sadly announces his passing on June 28,2025. Born on Dec. 13, 1961. Derekโ€™s warm spirit and gentle presence brought comfort to everyone around him, and his memory will forever remain a blessing to those who knew him.

Derek Peter Gittens

Derek is survived by his loving siblings; Linus C. Gittens, Cecelia (Joan) Bleau, Mary Edwards, Magdalene D. Gittens, and Bernadette King. He also leaves behind cherished nieces and nephews; Ann Marie Bleau, Jenneale Gittens-Grear, Anthonia K. Morris, Denise Carty, Magdalene Allick, Katisha King, Otisha J. King, Katelyn Scott, Eric Bleau, Rennie L. Gittens Sr., Devaughn Gittens, Kelvain Gittens, and Amos J. King.

Family and friends are invited to the Divine Funeral Home Chapel for the intimate gathering at 10 a.m. on Dec. 10.

Bernard Felix Georges Dies

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We regret to announce the passing of Bernard Felix Georges, who departed this life with the love of his family surrounding him on Nov. 24, 2025.

Bernard Felix Georges

Bernard was preceded in death by his beloved sister, Yvonne Georges Dublin.

He leaves to cherish his memory his devoted wife of 22 years, Cynthia Georges; his son, Kevin Georges, and his daughter-in-law, Brenique Georges; his daughters, Deja Georges, Downett Quetel, and Dr. Krystel Newton, and his sons-in-law, Anthony Quetel and Dr. John Giang; and his grandson, Elias Quetel.

He is also survived by his parents, Phyllis and Harry Georges; his brothers, Dr. Cletus Georges and Lennox Ravalier, and his sisters-in-law, Lori-Ann Ravalier, Elizabeth Haines, and Kathleen Ambrose; his sisters, Sherril Bridgeforth and Veronica Parker, and his brothers-in-law, Chevell Parker, Alvin Ross, and Kylon Boyd.

He is further survived by his mother-in-law, Monica Duncan; his father-in-law, Timotheus Ross; and his step-mother-in-law, Sarah Ross, along with a host of nieces, nephews, cousins, and dear friends who will forever remember his kindness and gentle spirit.

He will be deeply missed by the Georges family, the Nicholas family, the Ravalier family, the Espirit family, the Donovan Family, the Bennett family, the Ivanna Eudora Kean Class of 1978, and the Philadelphia Seventh-day Adventist Church family.

Funeral services will be held on Sunday, Dec. 21, 2025, at Philadelphia Seventh-day Adventist Church. A viewing will begin at 9 a.m., followed by the service at 10 a.m. Interment will take place at Smith Bay Eastern Cemetery.

Funeral arrangements are entrusted to Turnbullโ€™s Funeral Home.

Alvin Joseph Dies at 69

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It is withย heavy hearts that weย share the passing of our beloved Alvin “Snarday” Joseph. On Thursday Nov. 13, 2025, he passed peacefully surrounded by family. He was 69 years old.ย 

Alvin Joseph

He is survivedย by his loving wife Patricia Joseph. Daughters, Natasha Harrigan and Nateisha Harrigan.ย  Brothers Alphonso “Pencil” Joseph and Leroy “Spada” Joseph.ย  Aunt,ย Murialย Jackson.ย  Ten grandchildren, Teneisha James, Orville James III,ย Shanequaย James,ย Teneiquaย James, Shanice James, Shakeem King, Kimberley King, Brianna King,Clement King III (deceased). Great grandchildren, K’Maliย Carter, SuNiyah Abiff,ย Ki’yamahย Abiff,ย Jah’Kaiย Lettsome,ย Jah’Koiย Lettsome, Kaiden Lestrade, Elijah James, Orian James, Elvin Stout, Amiyah Gumbs, Amori Christopher, Kalen Gumbs, A’Nayha King and Amiyah Harrigan. Nieces, Tamara Joseph, Jasmine Joseph, Tenesia Joseph, Tiffany Joseph, Litisha Joseph, Alicia Josephย Eldrige, Zakiya Joseph Hill, Bilqis Josep, Shennice Joseph, Antoinette Joseph, Lakisha Joseph-Thomas, Karima and Keisha Brown.

Nephews, Leroy Joseph Jr., Abasi Joseph, Deshawn Joseph, Hasani Joseph, Khalid Joseph, Hashim Joseph, Fahim Joseph. Godchildren, Cyrique Andrews and Terrell Bell and Taj.ย  Special Friends, Lewis “Specta” Williams, Alaric “Ala” Joseph, Lauritz David, Luis Robles, Romeo Hodge, Juel T.R. Molloy, Henry Leonard, George Warner, Cyril Andrews Sr., Hermon Bell Jr.ย  Mr. Alvin Joseph is also survived by a host of loving family and friends too numerous to mention.ย ย 

Funeral Arrangements: First viewing, Thursday Dec. 11, at Turnbull’s Funeral Home from 4 p.m.-6 p.m. Second viewing Friday Dec. 12, Lutheran Church of the Reformation inย Annasย Retreat at 10 a.m.ย 

Funeral Service will follow at 11 a.m.ย  Interment at Eastern Cemetery.

Weekly Weather Forecast With Jesse Daley

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Check out our weekly weather forecast with Jesse Daley, covering Sunday, Dec. 7, through Saturday, Dec. 13. Our YouTube playlist is updated every week, AND check out Jesseโ€™s daily weather updates here.

Timely Topics Discussed at Lt. Governors Associationโ€™s Winter Meeting

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Friday morning session of the National Lt. Governors Association. (Source photo by Judi Shimel)

A three-day conference taking place on St. Thomas brought together top state officials from across the United States to discuss policy, commerce, and economic development.ย  On the opening day of the National Lieutenant Governors Association Winter Meeting, Dec. 5, participants gained a perspective on how the V.I. government views its strengths and challenges.

Association Chair Pamela Evette offered greetings as the Friday morning session came to order.

After delivering welcoming remarks, Evette led a panel discussion featuring Assistant Tourism Commissioner Alani Henneman and V.I. Economic Development Authority Managing Director Margarita Benjamin. The EDA served as one of the eventโ€™s sponsors.

Acting Governor Tregenza Roach — the territoryโ€™s lieutenant governor — served as host for the winter meeting. He sent welcoming remarks that were read by the association chair and promised to join in person later in the day.

Benjamin led the group through an overview of her agencyโ€™s Vision 2040 economic development plan. She explained how the authority, along with the Economic Development Commission and the Economic Development Bank, works to attract visitors to establish themselves in the territory.

โ€œVision 2040 is a long-term strategy to transform the territory into a vibrant place to live, work, invest, and innovate while ensuring that there are opportunities for our future generations,โ€ the director said.

Henneman spoke about how the Department of Tourism works to attract the traveling public.

โ€œThis year, in 2026, will turn out to be — as long as we have no major incidents — will turn out to be the best year on record for the U.S. Virgin Islands, which trumps our record-breaking year in 2024 because of the increased airlift โ€ฆ and because of the increased cruise visits we have to the territory as well,โ€ Henneman said.

Participants also heard from the dayโ€™s keynote speaker on Friday. U.S. Army Lt. Gen. Jeth B. Rey serves as chief information officer for planning, strategy, and network architecture. He warmed up his audience with a personal story of how he left his home on St. Thomas for Virginia at age 13 and began his military career by signing up with the Reserve Officersโ€™ Training Corps while in school.

In his remarks, Rey advised visiting officials to take a close look at the cybersecurity structures in their government information systems.

โ€œCyber threats grow more sophisticated by the day,โ€ he said. โ€œI think the threat is that our critical infrastructure is at risk and we all need to pay attention to it.โ€

He also touched on the need for the United States to revamp its education system to make sure students learn about information systems from an early age.

Participants took advantage of the question-and-answer portions of each presentation to discuss matters they, as lieutenant governors, were facing in their home districts.

Officials from Colorado, Iowa, Louisiana, Missouri, North Carolina, South Carolina, Guam, Kentucky, Maryland, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Vermont, and the Northern Mariana Islands gathered at the Westin Beach Resort & Spa at Frenchmanโ€™s Reef to attend the winter meeting.

Local sponsors supporting the event include the EDA, Guardian Insurance, Theodore Tunick & Co., and Tully Law, PLLC.

USVI Baseball Team Competes at 2025 Caribbean Baseball Cup

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Team picture of the United States Virgin Islands Senior Baseball Team competing at the 7th Caribbean Baseball Cup. (Submitted photo)

Nassau, Bahamas, is the site for the 7th Caribbean Baseball Cup taking place Dec. 3 โ€“ 8, at the Andre Rodgers Stadium. The USVI team is very optimistic, returning 11 players from last year’s silver medal team. Head Coach Rafael Jackson and Assistant Coach Kwodwo Brannigan are also back to manage the club.

Head Coach Rafael Jackson holds the second-place trophy after the United States Virgin Islands won 2nd place at the 6th Caribbean Baseball Cup in 2024. (Submitted photo)

The USVI Senior Baseball Team made history at the 6th Caribbean Baseball Cup held in the Bahamas in 2024, finishing in second place. The Virgin Islands opened that event with a 3-1 loss to the host, but bounced back with impressive victories over two of the region’s baseball powerhouses: a 4-3 win over Curacao, followed by a 6-5 win over Cuba. The USVI reached the championship game of the competition, losing a heartbreaker to Curaรงao, 2-1.

USVIโ€™s Alex Jacobs, #13, bats in a game against Bahamas at the 7th Caribbean Baseball Cup held in Nassau, Bahamas. (Submitted photo).

Once again, the USVI’s first game of the event was against the home team on Wednesday, Dec. 3.ย  The Virgin Islands scored two runs in the second inning, but the Bahamas responded with two in the fifth.ย  The scheduled seven-inning game was tied at two, and the Bahamas got the winning run in the eighth inning, giving them a 3-2 victory. The Bahamasโ€™ Chavez Fernander was the winning pitcher, while Blake Johnson picked up the loss for the Virgin Islands. Johnson Ponder, Taj Bates, and Kidane Stephens all recorded hits for the USVI.

There was no time for sulking as the USVI was back on the diamond on Thursday evening, facing St. Martin. ย The USVI was flawless on defense but could not muster any offense, losing 1-0.ย  Martin Schoonderwoerd got the win, and Rafael Cocu registered the save for the winners.ย  Colton Anderson was saddled with the loss despite pitching six strong innings, striking out five, and walking just two. Zayd Brannigan led the USVI with two hits.

The Virgin Islands has a chance to regroup with the day off on Friday, Dec. 5. They play the early game on Saturday, Dec. 6, at 3 p.m., against the Dominican Republic, which has struggled so far in this tournament. The DR has given up 50 runs in two games at this event and has yet to score.ย  The USVI will need to win this game and their final round-robin game against Curacao on Sunday to play on the final day. The third and fourth-place teams will fight for the bronze medal, and the top two teams will battle for the gold on Monday, Dec. 8.

A Bahamas hat, ball, and glove on display at the 7th Caribbean Baseball Cup held in Nassau, Bahamas. (Submitted photo)

โ€˜Itโ€™s About Circling the Wagons Now.โ€™ Jury Hears Alleged Scheme, Cover-Up in Martinez, Oโ€™Neal Trial

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Former V.I. Police Commissioner Ray Martinez, right, and his attorney, Miguel Oppenheimer, enter the Ron De Lugo Federal Building Friday morning on the third day of a federal corruption trial in which Martinez and former Management and Budget Director Jenifer Oโ€™Neal are accused of wire fraud, bribery and money laundering. Martinez is further charged with obstructing justice. (Source photo by Kit MacAvoy)

Disclaimer: This story contains profanity.ย 

Ray Martinez likes steak.

Aย jury of Virgin Islandersย knows this about the former V.I. police commissioner, on trial this week facing charges of honest services wire fraud, bribery, money laundering and obstruction of justice, because federal prosecutors on Thursday and Friday presented them with a bevy ofย recorded phone calls and text conversationsย between Martinez and convicted felon-turned government contractor-turned cooperating witnessย David Whitakerย in which the two discussed:

  • Kitchen supplies Whitaker said he bought for Martinez

  • Tuition payments Whitaker said he wired to Martinezโ€™s wife, V.I. Police Lieutenant Diana Martinez, for their kidsโ€™ private school tuition

  • Alleged bribes in exchange for a lucrative $1.4 million federally-funded surveillance camera contract with the V.I. Police Department

  • Fraudulently inflated invoices for work performed under that contract by Whitakerโ€™s company, Mon Ethos Pro Support

  • Kickbacks prosecutors say Whitaker paid Martinez and former Management and Budget Director Jenifer O’Neal out of those inflated invoices โ€ฆ.

And steak. Martinez seasons and prepares his the day before cooking.

โ€œThat’s the magic of my steak, man,โ€ he said during a January 2024 phone call with Whitaker in which the two also discussed O’Neal’s aversion to cellphones (โ€œShe doesn’t trust those things โ€” and rightfully soโ€) and Diana Martinezย working overtimeย (โ€œfor a few bucks more to pay bills at the end of the monthโ€).

โ€œThat’s why it tastes the way it tastes,โ€ Martinez said.

Steak played an outsize role in Martinezโ€™s alleged criminality. Taking the stand Thursday, Whitaker told prosecutor Alex Dempsey, a trial attorney with the U.S. Justice Departmentโ€™s Public Integrity Section, that he began buying Martinez kitchen equipment while working for VIPD without a contract in 2023 โ€œso that he would stop working on his restaurant during work hours and pay my invoices.โ€ The purchases included a $4,295 Kamado Joe ceramic grill, which had to be delivered by courier because of its size and which lived at Martinezโ€™s house for at least a year before being moved to his St. Thomas restaurant,ย Don Felitoโ€™s Cookshop.

Whitaker and Martinez even racked up a $1,082 bill at the upscale Rare Steakhouse during one of three trips the pair took to Boston for Martinezโ€™s medical appointments. During those trips, Whitaker testified, the pair stayed in a lavish two-bedroom suite at the luxury resort Encore Boston Harbor and spent thousands of dollars gambling and attending sporting events.

โ€œMaybe I can get a consultation job at Rare,โ€ Martinez mused in a November 2023 text message to Whitaker, along with a picture of steaks.

โ€œThose look good!โ€ Whitaker replied. โ€œJenifer is going to wish she had one.โ€

Later, Whitaker texted Martinez to thank him for dinner.

โ€œMy pleasure,โ€ Martinez replied. โ€œWithout your help with the grill, those steaks wouldnโ€™t have been possible.โ€

Jurors heard less about steak as the testimony and evidence shifted Friday morning to Whitakerโ€™s relationship with Oโ€™Neal, who by January 2024 appeared focused on leaving her job at OMB to open a coffee shop in Yacht Haven Grande. Whitaker secretly recorded multiple phone calls and meetings with Oโ€™Neal in which they discussed business costs. During one April 2024 meeting between Whitaker, Martinez, and Oโ€™Neal, Martinez could be heard outlining kitchen equipment Oโ€™Neal needed, like โ€œespresso tampers, frothing pitchers, barista tools.โ€ Whitaker calculated that the renovation and construction would cost one hundred thousand dollars and that the furniture alone would take another thirty or fifty.

โ€œThirty is good,โ€ Oโ€™Neal replied.

Privately, Martinez and Whitaker joked about Oโ€™Nealโ€™s expensive preferences. In January 2024, Martinez said she had to take her โ€œchampagne taste and understand that sheโ€™s got a beer budgetโ€ after the two discussed her desire to furnish the coffee shop with pieces from Restoration Hardware, an upscale retailer. After Martinez noted that โ€œshe really enjoyed herselfโ€ when they met her for a day in Boston, Whitaker quipped: โ€œLetโ€™s not do that after we give her the money,โ€ an apparent reference to her shopping habits.

During the January 2024 call, jurors also heard Martinez tell Whitaker that Oโ€™Neal wanted to be out of the job by May to avoid testifying as part of the fiscal year 2025 budget cycle.

Martinez also described Oโ€™Nealโ€™s grievances with other members of Gov. Albert Bryan Jr.โ€™s financial team, who were in the midst of sparring with the 35th Legislature about the governmentโ€™s then-precarious financial state and mounting debts to vendors. Days later,ย lawmakers would be outragedย to learn that of the $25 million they appropriated to cover retroactive wages in September 2023, only $2.5 million had been paid out before the December deadline. In February 2024, Whitaker asked Oโ€™Neal if she was still on track to leave the government by May.

โ€œYes,โ€ she said. โ€œI need to get out.โ€

Later in that conversation, the two questioned why Martinez didnโ€™t let his wife, whom Whitaker said made more money, continue working at VIPD while Martinez focused on his restaurant.

โ€œEvery government employee have their own business โ€” sitting in their government office working on their own business,โ€ Oโ€™Neal said while outlining how Martinez could delegate his police work to his chiefs and deputies and saying that she didnโ€™t have anyone like that on her own staff. Oโ€™Neal went on to complain about the financial teamโ€™s recent handling of lawmakers, prompting Whitaker to ask what Bryan was doing about Sen. Franklin Johnson.

โ€œMan, fuck them,โ€ Oโ€™Neal replied. โ€œI donโ€™t have time. I donโ€™t have the energy.โ€

Of the defendants, Martinez alone faces two counts of obstructing justice.ย Jurors on Friday afternoon heard in detail how the alleged cover-up played out after federal investigators in June 2024ย seized the phonesย of Martinez, Oโ€™Neal, and former Sports, Parks, and Recreation Commissionerย Calvert White, whoย in July was convicted alongside businessman Benjamin Hendricks of committing wire fraud and bribery following their own dealings with Whitaker.

Martinez called Whitaker on June 13, 2024. Whitaker โ€” who had been recording his conversations with the three former cabinet members under FBI supervision since September 2023 โ€” questioned whether Oโ€™Neal would break ranks.

โ€œAnd everything was going so wellโ€ฆ.โ€ he said at one point during the call.

โ€œNo time to think about that, bro,โ€ Martinez replied. โ€œItโ€™s about circling the wagons now.โ€

Man Says Woman Hit Him With Bottle After Ride, VIPD Says

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A man told police he was assaulted with a Corona glass bottle by a woman he gave a ride to on St. Thomas, the V.I. Police Department reported.

Detectives were dispatched to Roy Lester Schneider Hospital on Nov. 27 after the victim reported that Janine Crispin struck him in the face during an argument inside his vehicle. He told officers Crispin ran from the scene on foot and that he later sought medical care because of his injuries, according to the police report.

Crispin, 42, went to the Domestic Violence Unit Thursday, where she was advised of her rights and gave a statement. She was booked, processed and turned over to the Bureau of Corrections pending her advise of rights hearing. She faces assault third dv, simple assault dv and disturbance of the peace dv, according to police.

The case remains under investigation. Anyone with information is asked to call 911, the Domestic Violence Unit at 340 715 5535, or the Office of the Police Chief.

BVIโ€™s Fahie Took Teen Daughter to DEA Sting, Court Transcripts Show

Court transcripts reveal a trove of new information about Andrew Fahie, the former BVI premier serving an 11-year prison sentence on drug smuggling and money laundering charges. (Photo courtesy BVI GIS)

Newly released documents from the 2024 cocaine-conspiracy trial of Andrew Fahie show the former BVI premier was so comfortable with the proposed drug smuggling and money laundering plan that he brought his teenage daughter to what turned out to be his arrest.

Transcripts from the trial in Floridaโ€™s Southern District Court reveal other yet-unreported details of the Drug Enforcement Administrationโ€™s sting operation that snared not just the British Virgin Islands’ premier but also its Ports Authority director and her son.

The newly-released records outline the extraordinary size of the phony drug-running plan cooked up by DEA agents. If the scheme was real, it would have potentially streamed thousands of kilograms of cocaine in and out of the BVIโ€™s harbors, with the Ports Authority director and her son setting aside 60 kilograms for themselves to sell locally.

Fahie, 55, was convicted Feb. 8, 2024, on all charges: conspiracy to import more than five kilograms of cocaine, conspiracy to engage in money laundering, attempted money laundering, and foreign travel in aid of racketeering. He wasย sentenced toย 135 months imprisonment, followed by five years supervised release.

Oleanvine Pickering-Maynard, 63, and son Kadeem Stephen Maynard, 34, pleaded guiltyย to conspiracy to import a controlled substance. Their sentences โ€”ย nine years and four months for mother, and 57 months for son โ€” were less severe because the court found they played a less integral role in the plot. Fahieโ€™s attorneys disputed that the Maynards played a minor part, arguing that the duo met with undercover agents posing as Sinaloa Cartel representatives first, hatched the plan, and then brought it to Fahie.

Oleanvine Pickering Maynard, 63, and son Kadeem Stephen Maynard, 34, brought the plan to Andrew Fahie but were given lesser sentences. (Source photo illustration)

Fahieโ€™s attorney told the court theyย intended to appeal his being labeled as a major part of the crimes, which warranted the harsher sentence. Fahie did not make a statement in court after his conviction because of the appeal, he told the judge.

The summaries below come from voluminous transcripts requested by Fahieโ€™s attorneys in his appeal. They feature quotes from, among others, undercover law enforcement agentsโ€™ testimony, where they describe events leading up to the April 2022 arrests. In some cases, the agents add context toย secretly recorded audioย played for the jury.

The agents were pretending to be from the Sinaloa Cartel, a murderous crime syndicate the United States government regards as a terrorism network.

Fahie brought men he believed to be terrorist drug smugglers to his teenage daughterโ€™s home.

The second-floor apartment of former BVI Premier Andrew Fahie’s daughter overlooks the complexโ€™s parking lot, where Fahie met with DEA agents posing as drug runners. (Photo by Mat Probasco)

Fahie did not share his phone number with men he believed to be Sinaloa Cartel members, meaning they needed to call him through Pickering-Maynard. He did, however, give them the gate code at his teenage daughterโ€™s Miami apartment building. The supposed drug runners did not ask for her address. Fahie volunteered it.

A DEA agent testified, โ€œThe plan the next day was to pick up the defendant from the address he gave us, and from there to take him to the airport. We were going to show the defendant the $700,000.โ€

The undercover agents told Fahie his $500,000 and Pickering-Maynardโ€™s $200,000 would come from a fictional $1 million drug deal theyโ€™d just completed. Fahie asked if the money could be hidden in a suitcase with a secret compartment. It was eventually put in luxury retail brand boxes.

At Fahieโ€™s daughterโ€™s apartment, the agents posing as criminals helped load Fahieโ€™s luggage into their car. The BVI leader thought he was being flown from Miami to Philadelphia by the cartel.

Fahie had asked if they could use a Sinaloa Cartel private plane to fly his 18-year-old daughter to college. Fahie had requested a flight to Lehigh Valley International Airport in Allentown, Pennsylvania, but the agents posing as smugglers said the cartel plane did not fly there.

In the car on the way to the airport, the undercover officers in the front seats distracted Fahie with small talk so the then-BVI premier would not spot other law enforcement vehicles following behind. They didnโ€™t have to work too hard as Fahie took a call from a friend or relative along the way.

At Miami-Opa Locka Executive Airport, the teenager waited in the lobby while her father went on the tarmac to inspect the money aboard the small private plane.

A law enforcement officer pretending to be the pilot walked Fahie out to the aircraft.

Fahie was photographed with a Louis Vuitton box full of money on his lap. He was arrested almost immediately after.

It was not clear what happened to Fahieโ€™s daughter after the arrest or when and how she learned of it.

After the arrest, the agents quickly reset for a similar performance for Pickering Maynard, who was in charge of arranging the money transfer.

Fahie had essentially sold the BVI to the Sinaloa Cartel, both prosecutors and the federal judge said.

Fahie told agents posing as drug runners that heโ€™d ensure the BVI acted as a shipping agent for cocaine smugglers. All the criminals needed to do was say when they were coming and when they wanted to leave.

โ€œSo what our company do is just clear you to come in just to be โ€” give the clearance and then, and then, see what time you are leaving. Come in and be like a broker,โ€ Fahie was recorded saying, according to the transcript.

Fahie said he could help Sinaloa Cartel representatives get BVI passports.

Fahie assured the undercover officers that Pickering-Maynard was clearing government red tape for the smuggling operation: โ€œI am going to get her going with all the necessary licenses, we got to work on them very quickly,โ€ Fahie was recorded saying, according to the transcript.

If the plan were real and followed through on, BVI officials were supposed to allow eight shipments of cocaine to come through undetected before busting a dummy boat laden with low-quality cocaine โ€” then eight more and another dummy. This was to give the impression of a robust antidrug trafficking operation in the BVI.

U.S. Assistant District Attorney Kevin Gerarde said Fahie had betrayed his countrymen.

โ€œAt the time of this event, the defendant was the elected premier of the British Virgin Islands, and he met with someone who he believed to be a member of the Sinaloa Cartel; someone who told this defendant he wanted to move not hundreds but thousands of kilograms of cocaine through the British Virgin Islands on route to the United States,โ€ Gerarde said at Fahieโ€™s July 15 sentencing. โ€œAnd the defendant, knowing that, agreed to go along with it.โ€

โ€œWhat he basically did is he took the British Virgin Islands and sold the island and himself to the Sinaloa Cartel. The government believes that is an extremely severe offense and that a guideline sentence at the bottom of the guidelines will appropriately reflect the severity of that offense,โ€ the prosecutor said.

Judge Kathleen Williams agreed.

โ€œThe confidential source clearly identified himself as a representative of the Sinaloa Cartel. I don’t believe anyone of Mr. Fahie’s educational or political background could misunderstand what that meant for him or for the BVI. And when a government official uses his or her own position to personally profit by this type of activity, it is indeed a violation of public trust. It undermines public safety; and is the ultimate betrayal of a government official to their own citizens in terms of their lives and their community. And so the idea that the Maynards and Mr. Fahie were going to take the BVI from being a renowned tourist destination to a hub for narco-trafficking is beyond the definition of a serious offense,โ€ Williams said at the sentencing hearing.

Law enforcement went deep undercover to snare Fahie.

Fahieโ€™s attorneys had asked several times for theย identity of the informantย who made more than 8,000 minutes of audio recordings where Fahie, Maynard, and undercover police discussed the plan. The informant, going by Roberto, did not even share his real name with other law enforcement agents.

The agents made up another cartel operative named Charlie, who arranged private air travel for smuggling associates. They also invented two cartel-run construction companies.

Fahie used the code name Head Coach in the scheme. Pickering Maynard used the alias Rose P. Her son went by his usual nickname, Blacka.

The Maynards introduced Fahie to the supposed cartel operatives on April 7, 2022. Pickering-Maynard testified Fahie initially didnโ€™t know the plan involved cocaine. Fifteen days later, all three conspirators were in handcuffs.

Fahie fell for a DEA โ€œspecial sauceโ€ lie that the judge found unrealistic.

The government agentsโ€™ phony cocaine-smuggling scheme included a bizarre twist. The fictitious narcotics were going to be prepared in a way that kept them from testing positive for cocaine. Then, after passing Customs inspections in Puerto Rico, the pseudo-drugs would be treated to restore their narcotic elements.

At Fahieโ€™s sentencing, Judge Williams asked why the government had bothered to concoct the hard-to-believe โ€œmagic cocaineโ€ lie.

โ€œJust out of curiosity โ€” since this was, in fact, a DEA case โ€” why were there these discussions about the new magic cocaine that was undetectable until they added the special sauce; and in all places, Puerto Rico? Why even add that into the mix so to speak,โ€ the judge asked.

Prosecutor Gerarde said he did not know, but Fahie only had to believe he was agreeing with a plot to smuggle cocaine, even if there was no real contraband involved, to be found guilty.

Judge Williams said the fanciful magic cocaine subplot muddied what could have been a clearer presentation.

โ€œYes. But I was curious as to why, in fact, our confidential source spun this particular tale. I understand the idea of no detection โ€” and I think it was referred to at some point during trial as magic cocaine. But then this idea that it would somehow be made viable in Puerto Rico, of all places, sort of set us all aback,โ€ she said.

Fahie said he used a regular smuggler and mindreader.ย 

Fahie told the undercover officers he was accustomed to illegal activities, including hiding money, saying, โ€œnot my first rodeo.โ€

In addition to having a regular smuggler named Tattoo who helped him, Fahie also believed he had a clairvoyant who would know if someone was dishonest. Fahie said this fortuneteller was โ€œ99.9 percent accurate.โ€

The mindreader wasnโ€™t needed, however, because Fahie believed he could tell a liar by their eyes. According to the transcript, he was recorded telling the DEA agents posing as drug runners, โ€œWhen I met you I could read the eyes โ€” I know that you weren’t a fake.โ€

Fahie wanted to be partially paid in construction materials for his home.

Once the operation got going, Fahie hoped to clear $3 million in profits for every shipment successfully sold in the United States.

Fahie was worried, the DEA agent said, about bank accounts attracting law enforcement attention. โ€œAccounts will be a problem, no, I will have to set those up properly.โ€

The supposed cartel representatives were also going to extend a $35,000 line of credit to help Fahie build a home, and potentially send him $300,000 worth of building materials through a make-believe cartel-run construction company. Fahie asked that the money be taken from his share of profits from the cocaine import-export scheme.

Fahie brought up the construction materials several times on the recordings, according to the transcripts.

The fictional cocaine โ€” arriving from Colombia to Tortola before being moved to Puerto Rico and then Miami and New York โ€” was going to cost the supposed drug runners $650 per kilogram to make.

At one point, Pickering-Maynard tried to hide from Fahie plans for her $200,000 cartel payment, according to the transcript.

The Maynards told undercover DEA agents they had โ€œtaken care ofโ€ airport tower personnel and BVI Customs and Immigration agents to ensure certain bags and vessels were not inspected.

Oleanvine Pickering Maynard and her son planned to import cocaine for sale in the BVI

Both Maynards โ€” mother and son โ€” were involved in a so-called side deal that would have imported cocaine into the BVI for local sale without Fahieโ€™s knowledge.

โ€œThe side deal that he is not charged with involved bringing 60 kilos of cocaine at a time into the Virgin Islands for Kadeem Maynard with the assistance of his mother, Oleanvine Maynard, for approximately $11,000 a kilogram,โ€ attorneys told the court.

Pickering-Maynard had been the Ports Authority managing director since March 2021 after serving as deputy managing director from 2019. In 2015, she launched her unsuccessful bid to unseat Kedrick Pickering, who represented Tortolaโ€™s 7th District. She called herself the candidate for reform and action.

In their evidence against Pickering-Maynard in the alleged cocaine-smuggling plot, U.S. prosecutors quoted an unnamed alleged international drug runner as saying he โ€œownedโ€ her.

Both Maynards were released early.

Kadeem Maynard wasย released from prison in April after serving less than 36 months of his 57-month sentence.

Judge Williams had granted Oleanvine Pickering-Maynard a sentence reduction because of reported health issues. She was released to a Baltimore halfway house in February and was set free in March. She was incarcerated for less than three years since her April 2022 arrest.

Fahieโ€™s position as premier may have led to a longer sentence but Kadeem Maynard lacked the โ€œintellectual heftโ€ to lead the scheme, the judge said.

In arguing for the same โ€œminor roleโ€ status that gave the Maynards lesser punishments, Fahieโ€™s attorneys said the person who instigated the disastrous smuggling plot, Kadeem Maynard, was punished least.

Judge Williams said prosecutors may be โ€œconflating Mr. Fahie’s position with the actions that he took in this particular conspiracy,โ€ but the younger Maynard lacked capacity for much more.

โ€œHe may have been the genesis, but I do not think that Mr. Maynard has the intellectual heft to do anything other than what he was told. He is not someone to whom you would assign anything of moment to be implemented; and so that is why I believe he got that minor role,โ€ the judge said at Fahieโ€™s sentencing hearing. โ€œI think the most powerful attribute that he had is that he had a mother who was trying her mightiest to keep him housed and employed. But other than that, I don’t really think he had any agency that would translate into anything other than the sentence he was given.โ€

Later at the sentencing hearing, Judge Williams explained the sentencing disparity between the three convicts.

โ€œMs. Maynard operated at the direction of Mr. Fahie, who was her supervisor, and who influenced her behavior from a position of strength. And also her son influenced her because of his weakness,โ€ the judge said.

Shortly after his arrest, Fahie had tried to avoid charges by claiming he was a BVI โ€œhead of stateโ€ and thus enjoyed diplomatic immunity. In October 2022, BVI police arrested Najan Christopher, the British overseas territoryโ€™s assistant secretary of external affairs, for allegedly creating and mailing an unauthorized letter to the court demanding Fahieโ€™s release. The court rejected the idea.

After sentencing Fahie, Judge Williams said, โ€œGood luck to you, Mr. Fahie. We are adjourned.โ€

That was not the end, however, as soon after two jurors seemed to not understand, or have misgivings, about their role in the verdict. Newly released documents give insight into the legal process of sorting the mess but, in the end, Fahie remained guilty.

The Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals has granted Fahie’s attorneys three extensions. The next deadline for Fahie’s appeal brief is Jan. 16.

Fahie, many said, was an otherwise model citizen and prisoner.

In many letters to Judge Williams before Fahieโ€™s sentencing, friends and family outlined the BVI leaderโ€™s many positive attributes. He was an active church member, an attentive mentor, helped young people obtain college degrees, and was someone who helped place foster children.

Between his conviction and sentencing, Fahie mentored other prisoners while in the federal detention center, his attorney Richard Della Fera said.

โ€œHe has been coordinating assisting Spanish speakers learning English, and English speakers learning Spanish. He has been teaching guitar, teaching music classes. He has been helping inmates that are trying to attain their GED; he is assisting them in their studies. He is also participating in church as well as the various counseling programs that are available. I think that it would probably not be a surprise to know that, your honor, given what we know about how he has spent his life in his community; helping people that are less fortunate than him. So even in a situation where he is incarcerated and is limited in his ability to help people, he is helping them in whatever ways that he can, and he is doing so willingly. No one has asked him to do it; and he hasn’t done it based on any expectation of any sort of reward. He is doing it because that is the kind of person that he is; when he sees someone who needs help, he offers help,โ€ Della Fera said.

Judge Williams said the criminal conspiracy seemed out of character for Fahie.

โ€œAnd so it is inexplicable how Mr. Fahie lost his way and became involved in this sort of scheme,โ€ Williams said before sentencing Fahie to 135 months in prison.

It was not, however, the first time Fahie had been investigated for potential money laundering.

Arrested and released, then-BVI Ports Authority Deputy Chairman Roxane Sylvester was present at conversations about the scheme.

Sylvester was arrested along with Pickering-Maynard at Opa Locka Airport but only Pickering-Maynard was charged. The degree and nature of Sylvesterโ€™s involvement โ€” or lack of involvement โ€” in the events leading up the arrest remains unclear.

The court transcript didnโ€™t say if Sylvester was to fly with Pickering-Maynard and the boxes of drug money. But Pickering-Maynard was recorded saying Sylvester was nervous about an upcoming plane ride.

โ€œI told her she’s going to be OK. She was concerned about the small flight,โ€ Pickering-Maynard was recorded saying, according to the transcript.

Fahie told the undercover DEA agents he didnโ€™t mind if Sylvester knew he was flying on a Sinaloa Cartel private plane. It was not clear from court filings if she did know, but attorneys for Fahie said later she did not have direct knowledge of the smuggling scheme.

Her arrest, however, may account for a statement made in June 2022 as Fahie was attempting to raise bail money.

When Albion Hodge posted $500,000 to assist in Fahieโ€™s release in June 2022, the USVI and BVI businessman needed to convince the Florida judge that the money had not been obtained by some criminal enterprise. Hodge, who runs a ferry service, stated, without further explanation, that he was not now nor had ever been married to Roxane Sylvester. Hodge also said he was not the brother of Alvin Hodge โ€” explaining to the court that Hodge was simply a very common BVI surname.

Albion and Alvin Hodge were not brothers but also not strangers. In 2002, U.S. and BVI authorities started investigating questionable telecommunications contracts in the construction of the Terrance B. Lettsome International Airport.

A new company started by Albion and Alvin Hodge, B&A Networking Services, was awarded a telecommunications contract despite the company having no experience or expertise in the field, investigators said. B&A Networking Services used a Banco Popular account in Tortola to collect close to $1.8 million, court records show. It was the same branch in which Sheila Fahie, Andrew Fahieโ€™s wife, worked, investigators said.

Investigators alleged the Road Town branch was a central setting in the scheme.

Andrew Fahie, then the BVIโ€™s 33-year-old Minister of Education and Culture, and his wife allegedly started receiving money from the B&A Network Services account and funneling it to Miami in a way that avoided detection.

Prosecutors investigated a complicated scheme of alleged payments and kickbacks. While court records donโ€™t explain exactly how the alleged plot worked, they do show investigators claimed by April 2002, when BVI police started making arrests, that the Fahies were sneaking money to the U.S. mainland.

International travelers to the United States carrying more than $10,000 must list it on their Customs Declaration Form. The Fahies allegedly used couriers to carry $9,000 each, then give it back in Miami. They repeated this in June and also sent themselves money via Western Union, court records show, investigators alleged.

In October 2003, the U.S. government started investigating the Fahies for money laundering.

On Jan. 19, 2004, Albion Hodge, Bevis Sylvester, a budget coordinator, Berton Smith, a manager of the BVI government telephone services and Ludwis Allen Wheatley, the BVIโ€™s financial secretary from 1998 until he was suspended from duties in March 2002, were sentenced after they pleaded guilty in a BVI court to deceptive business practices and related crimes. Hodge and Bevis Sylvester were sentenced to six months and fined. Wheatley and Smith were sentenced to nine months in prison and fined.

It was unclear if the investigation into the Fahies continued. It was also not clear if charges were ever leveled against Alvin Hodge, who continued to receive government contracts well after the B&A Network Services incident. A 2008 BVI Auditor General report listed Hodge as being paid $55,871.03 for road paving, fencing, and gut cleaning. The report begins with the motto, โ€œTowards Greater Accountability.โ€

The BVI has not officially charged anyone locally in the scheme.

Some mysteries about the case remain, despite the transcripts. U.S. law enforcement was not able to identify a woman standing near Fahieโ€™s daughterโ€™s Miami apartment. One of the officers was recorded saying, โ€œGood morning. God bless youโ€ to the woman. Undercover officers peppered Fahie with questions about the woman, trying to discern if she was his wife, Sheila Fahie, as they drove the BVI premier to Opa Locka airport.

The identity of the man known only as Tattoo also remains unknown. Other BVI government employees potentially involved in the scheme could include law enforcement agents and port employees awaiting bribes โ€” but none was named in released court filings.

If the scheme were real and not a U.S. federal agent sting, Premier Fahie planned to bribe Sylvester and BVI Customs Commissioner Wade Smith, and then instruct subordinates to bribe other law enforcement and port officials, prosecutors said in a June 28, 2024 court filing.

โ€œThe defendant personally recruited at least two accomplices in the cocaine importation scheme โ€” Roxane Sylvester and Wade Smith,โ€ prosecutors told the court in their filing. โ€œThe defendant described Sylvester as 110 percent his and that she could be trusted.โ€

In 2024, federal prosecutors revealed the names of people Fahie corresponded with shortly before his arrest. The partially-redacted list included W. Smith, R. Sylvester, and B. Sylvester. Inclusion on Fahieโ€™s Pickering-Maynardโ€™s call list isnโ€™t an indication of any wrongdoing, but prosecutors thought the phone calls and messages were important enough to include as evidence.

All but two of the names on the evidence list were a first letter and a surname, like C. Maritza, M. Vanterpool, D. Osborne, C. Kettle, and R. Garaway. One exception was Royal Virgin Islands Police Force Commissioner Mark Collins.

Then-BVI Gov. John Rankin launched a probe into Collins in 2023 or early 2024 over a laundry list of complaints, including that he ordered officers to destroy evidence, according to local reports. Collins had been on the job since Jan. 18, 2021.

To date, the BVI has not announced charges against anyone in relation to the would-be smuggling scheme.

New Broo โ€˜Nansi Tale Takes Flight With Weekend Book Launch on St. Thomas

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Members of the St. Thomas Gypsy Carnival troupe bring the world of Broo โ€˜Nansi and Hummingbird to life โ€” the story that inspired Picayo’s new book. (Submitted photo)

Little Bell Caribbean, the publishing house behind some of the Virgin Islandsโ€™ most beloved childrenโ€™s books, is adding a new title to its Broo โ€˜Nansi collection just in time for the holidays. Broo โ€˜Nansi and Hummingbird, written by longtime Virgin Islands author Mario Picayo, debuts this Saturday at Island Booksellers at Buccaneer Mall on St. Thomas.

The book joins two earlier installments published by Little Bell Caribbean โ€” Broo โ€˜Nansi and the Tar Baby by Lois Hassel-Habtes (as told by Ector Roebuck) and Broo โ€˜Nansi and Sis Iwana by Yohance Henley.

The story follows the famously mischievous spider as he promises to design dazzling costumes for the upcoming Carnival โ€” a plan that leaves Broo Tukuma doubtful, Sis Iwana cautiously hopeful, and Hummingbird quietly observant. Picayo describes the tale as full of โ€œtwists, turns, humor, and wisdom,โ€ woven with familiar characters like Broo Ram Goat and set against unmistakably Caribbean backdrops featuring avocado trees, hummingbirds, hurricanes, and Carnival itself.

A member of the historic St. Thomas Gypsy Carnival troupe, Picayo said the idea grew from a request by the troupeโ€™s executive committee to craft a Broo โ€˜Nansi story that could shape their 2025 theme. With costume fabrics already chosen, he blended these elements into a narrative that could play out both on the page and on the parade route.

Picayo, who was born in Cuba and has lived in the Virgin Islands since his teens, has spent decades collecting and retelling Broo โ€˜Nansi and other Caribbean folktales โ€” a passion that began during his work with the Smithsonian Folklife Festival in 1990. His newest book features vibrant illustrations by artist Raquel Picayo, who created the images using textures from nature and fabric to achieve what she describes as a โ€œkaleidoscopic effectโ€ while keeping the style simple enough to complement read-aloud storytelling.

Broo โ€˜Nansi and Hummingbird will be presented this Saturday, December 6, at Island Booksellers in Buccaneer Mall on St. Thomas. A childrenโ€™s reading begins at 10:30 a.m., followed by a book signing and conversation with the author at 11:00 a.m. The event is free and open to the public.

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