Stabroek News

US couple likely dead after Caribbean boat hijacking, police say

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KINGSTOWN, (Reuters) - A U.S. couple who disappeare­d a week ago after their catamaran was hijacked by three escaped prisoners in the Eastern Caribbean are likely dead, local police told a press conference yesterday, though they said the investigat­ion was ongoing.

Grenadian police Commission­er Don McKenzie said the prisoners had escaped custody on Feb. 18 and the following day commandeer­ed a catamaran named Simplicity - with U.S. citizens Kathy

Brandel and Ralph Hendry on board.

“Informatio­n suggests that while traveling between Grenada and St. Vincent, they disposed of the occupants,” McKenzie said. The couple was last seen on the night of Feb. 18 and their boat was later tracked leaving the island late at night at an unusual speed.

The three fugitives were captured by police in neighborin­g St. Vincent and the Grenadines on Wednesday, he said, adding that a team from Grenada had been dispatched to collaborat­e on “having a complete and thorough investigat­ion of the matters at hand.”

The countries are separated by about 105 km (85 nautical miles).

Ron Mitchell, 30; Trevon Robertson, 19; and Abita Stanislaus, 25, were being held at the South Saint George Police

Station near the island’s southweste­rn tip on charges of robbery with violence, when they escaped, police said last week.

Mitchell, they said, also faced counts of rape, attempted rape and indecent assault.

Police from St. Vincent said in a statement they had discovered the ship with no bodies but items strewn across the deck and possible blood on board.

Yesterday, they said, the suspects appeared in court on four immigratio­n counts, to which they pleaded guilty, and they had been remanded into custody with sentencing set for March 4.

St. Vincent police Superinten­dent Junior Simmons said that though the couple are presumed dead, “the investigat­ion and search for the missing persons continues.”

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