Miami Herald

Men who had arsenal land in Miami

- BY JACQUELINE CHARLES jcharles@miamiheral­d.com

A group of Americans arrested in Haiti driving around Port-auPrince with an arsenal of weapHaitia­n boarded the flight and handcuffed the men, according to a tweet from Haitian TV and radio personalit­y Carel Pedre.

Three hours earlier, as the flight started to take off from Port-au-Prince, a police source told the Miami Herald: “They left.”

On board: former Navy SEALs Christophe­r Michael Osman and Christophe­r Mark McKinley and former Marine Kent Leland Kroeker as well as Americans Dustin Porte and Talon Ray Bur-

Americans who had a weapons cache when they were arrested in Haiti were flown back to the U.S. aboard a commercial airline after the U.S. government intervened.

ton. All five U.S. citizens were among eight heavily armed men whom the Haiti National Police arrested on Sunday afternoon at a police checkpoint in downtown Port-au-Prince.

The group also included two Serbians, at least one of whom is a U.S. permanent resident, and a Haitian national who was deported from the U.S.

A video of the men inside the American Airlines lounge at the Toussaint Louverture Airport shows them being escorted through the lounge without shackles, with one U.S. embassy staffer in front and another in the back.

Airport employees say the men seemed quite at ease and were taken inside the VIP diplomatic lounge to wait on the flight after their tickets were purchased at the counter. One of the two Serbians initially was not allowed to board the flight by Haitian immigratio­n authoritie­s because he had no stamps showing where he resides. After a few calls were made, he was put on the flight.

The Haitian national, Michael Estera, who goes by the pseudonym “Cliford,” was not among those sent back to the U.S. He faces illegal-weapons charges. The other seven men also faced charges of driving in vehicles without license tags.

No one would discuss the case on the record. But sources familiar with the negotiatio­ns said the U.S. government intervened and expressed concerns about the group’s safety following a CNN interview with Prime Minister Jean Henry Céant, who characteri­zed the men as “mercenarie­s” and “terrorists.”

Still, some saw the move as a slap in the face of Haiti’s justice system, which has been the recipient of millions of dollars in aid from the U.S. government over more than two decades.

“They don’t trust the Haitian justice system,” said Pierre Esperance, executive director of the National Human Rights Defense Network, a human-rights group that had been monitoring the arrests and first published a list with the men’s names. “We can’t even tally the amount of money they have spent since 1995 on not just reforming the Haitian justice system, but the penal code and the police . ... The American government has spent a lot of money.”

The United Nations Security Council also currently operates a peacekeepi­ng mission, the United Nations Mission for Justice Support in Haiti or MINUJUSTH, focused on strengthen­ing the justice system and profession­alizing the police force. The force was lauded for the arrest of the men, who were driving around in two vehicles without license tags and an arsenal of automatic weapons and pistols.

They claimed to have been on a “government mission” when stopped by police about a block from the country’s central bank.

“They should have at least let them make their first appearance before the Haitian courts,” Esperance said.

On Tuesday, a stunning revelation emerged: A letter from a car dealership to the prime minister revealed that one of the vehicles that the armed men used was purchased by a former government official and sent to the care of Fritz Jean-Louis, an adviser of President Jovenel Moïse. Jean-Louis has since fled the country, police said.

Police found license plates inside the vehicles, and at least one was registered to Jean-Louis.

Miami Herald Staff Writer Carli Teproff and McClatchy Washington Bureau reporter Alex Daugherty contribute­d to this report. Jacqueline Charles: 305-376-2616, @jacquiecha­rles

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 ?? Twitter ?? Men who were arrested in Haiti walk inside the American Airlines lounge at the Toussaint Louverture Airport.
Twitter Men who were arrested in Haiti walk inside the American Airlines lounge at the Toussaint Louverture Airport.

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