Miami Herald

Miami bond-jumper, accused of smuggling migrants, now in custody

- BY JAY WEAVER jweaver@miamiheral­d.com

A Miami man who jumped bond amid the coronaviru­s outbreak after being charged with smuggling more than a dozen migrants from the Bahamas to South Florida has been arrested and is being held at the Federal Detention Center.

Milton Morgan Ferrell III — son of the high-profile Miami lawyer and Democratic political fundraiser Milton M. Ferrell Jr., who died in 2008 — was taken into federal custody in Tampa and transferre­d to Miami. The defendant lasted one month on the lam.

A federal magistrate judge ordered last week that Ferrell, 37, be detained, after conferring with the U.S. Attorney’s Office and the federal public defender representi­ng him. Ferrell pleaded not guilty to a multi-count indictment chargtried, ing him with smuggling undocument­ed migrants in a stolen vessel for profit.

Ferrell was stopped by the U.S. Coast Guard on the evening of March 13 — when the coronaviru­s pandemic was starting to grip South Florida — as he commandeer­ed a sport fishing boat with 13 undocument­ed migrants on board.

The vessel, a Sea Fox 286 Commander reported stolen from a North Bay Village marina three days earlier, was stopped about 18 miles east of Key Biscayne, according to court records.

At first, Ferrell said he was the boat captain and that he was traveling with his girlfriend and 13 friends on a trip from Coconut Grove to the Bahamas, according to the federal criminal complaint. When he was asked to identify any of them, Ferrell said he didn’t know their names.

“You all know what this is,” Ferrell told the Coast Guard crew, according to the complaint affidavit. “I and I got caught.”

The crew officers took Ferrell, his girlfriend, Fiona Bucher, and the 13 migrant passengers to the Coast Guard station in Miami Beach, where the boat captain was questioned by Homeland Security Investigat­ions agents. Three of the passengers — Nicholas Carvell Brown, Dexter Andrew Carindon and Oral Dwayne Williams — had been previously deported from the United States, the affidavit said.

Ferrell told agents that he had stolen the boat and gone with his girlfriend to Bimini, where he met a Bahamian friend who made arrangemen­ts for him to smuggle the migrants to South Florida, according to the affidavit. Ferrell said he agreed to transport the undocument­ed passengers because he was broke and wanted to use the money to buy an apartment in Miami.

Ferrell had $3,600 in U.S. and Bahamian currency on him when was arrested, the affidavit said. Ferrell admitted that he had smuggled migrants from the Bahamas to the United States in the past, and that the latest load was his biggest ever.

Agents also interviewe­d some of the migrant passengers, who said they paid between $3,000 and $6,000 to be smuggled to the Bahamas and then paid the same amount of money to be illegally transporte­d into the United States, according to the affidavit.

After his arrest, Ferrell made his first appearance in Miami federal court on March 16, when he was granted a $50,000 bond co-signed by his mother. After Ferrell and three of his undocument­ed passengers were charged by indictment a few days later, he was scheduled for arraignmen­t on March 30.

But before the arraignmen­t, Magistrate Judge Lauren Fleischer Louis issued a bench warrant for Ferrell’s arrest after investigat­ors said he had “absconded.” When he failed to appear in federal court for the arraignmen­t, Magistrate Judge John J. O’Sullivan ruled he was a fugitive and issued another warrant for his arrest. time, presented their stories in their own voices.

After publicatio­n of their original series, Brown and Michot continued to cover the issue through the courts and the political arena. This included pursuing a lawsuit to unseal previously sealed records.

In the wake of their efforts, Epstein was arrested by federal authoritie­s. In August 2019, Epstein, 66, died. He was found hanging in a Manhattan jail cell as he awaited trial.

“At numerous junctures the reporters could have moved on, but they stayed with the story despite a system designed to keep them at bay,” the judges said. “The results created national headlines that reverberat­e to this day. There are few better examples of the wealthy and powerful being held accountabl­e for horrific behavior.”

“Perversion of Justice” has received several journalism awards, including the Sidney Hillman Foundation’s 2019 prize for journalism in service of the common good and the George Polk Award.

The NLA recognizes the best in print, digital, photo and video content in 11 categories, including the Batten award.

There were a total of 455 entries which, because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, were for the first time not evaluated and debated by judges gathered in a single location.

“The finalists cited here exemplify the important and powerful work under way in newsrooms across the country, in defiance of the economic trends we hear so much about and in service of the First Amendment,” said NLA President Michael Days, a vice president of the Philadelph­ia Inquirer. “We are proud to recognize so much inspiring work that shines a light on the most important issues of our day around the country and the world.”

 ?? Miami Herald file ?? Julie K. Brown, left, and Emily Michot
Miami Herald file Julie K. Brown, left, and Emily Michot

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