Miami Herald

U.S. Marine is accused of smuggling guns from North Carolina to Haiti

- BY CHARLES DUNCAN cduncan@mcclatchy.com Charles Duncan: 843-626-0301, @duncanrepo­rting

active-duty U.S. Marine was arrested last month when investigat­ors say he landed in Haiti with boxes filled with guns, ammunition, and body armor.

Federal prosecutor­s indicted Jacques Yves Sebastien Duroseau, a native of Haiti, in North Carolina last week on gun-smuggling charges. Duroseau, described in the indictment as a military firearms instructor, reportedly told investigat­ors he brought the eight guns to the Caribbean country to teach marksmansh­ip to the Haitian army.

Investigat­ors say Duroseau bought some of the guns in Jacksonvil­le, N.C., near Camp Lejeune.

An unnamed “known individual” told federal investigat­ors that Duroseau “wanted to help Haiti and wants to become President of Haiti,” according to the indictment filed Nov. 27.

Duroseau had three boxes with five handguns and three military-style rifles and ammunition, which he declared when he checked the luggage, according to the indictment.

Haitian police arrested Duroseau when he landed in Port-au-Prince on Nov. 12, according to U.S. court filings.

Duroseau told investigat­ors he “picked every gun” so he could teach Haitian soldiers how to shoot, according to the indictment. He said he knew that bringing guns and body armor into Haiti was illegal, the court filing said.

According to the indictAn ment, the Marine told investigat­ors that he planned to be arrested when he arrived in Haiti so he could “gain a platform to make a statement.”

“I know why I brought [the guns],” he told federal agents, according to the indictment. “It’s still a part of the attention I need.”

In an interview with Naval Criminal Investigat­ive Services agents in Haiti, Duroseau said he wanted to help the Haitian people, according to the indictment. He told the agents he wanted to “wear the uniform of the military that’s been establishe­d” and “defeat the thugs that have been creating a little bit of part of the instabilit­y in Haiti,” the indictment said.

There is no attorney listed for Duroseau. Federal records show a warrant for his arrest has been sent to the U.S. Marshals Service.

The U.S. Marine Corps published a profile of Duroseau in 2016. It said he was in Haiti during the devastatin­g 2010 earthquake and was trapped for four days before being rescued.

“It took me a while to find [my parents] because it was impossible to drive so you had to walk wherever you were going,” Duroseau said, according to the Marine Corps. “There’s a lot of stuff you wished you didn’t have to see. There were many dead, and the smell was the worst. It was very sad to watch and experience.”

From a young age, Duroseau dreamed of becoming a U.S. Marine, according to the article.

“When I was a kid, I saw the marines back home [because] we had a little war going on, that was the first time I saw them and I hope to be one of them,” he was quoted as saying. “Since that day I had it in the back of my head where I wanted to be a U.S. Marine.”

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