A tiny British island territory is embroiled in a diplomatic row with the United States after refusing to release five Americans accused of carrying ammunition in their holiday luggage, The Telegraph can reveal.
The Turks and Caicos Islands, a Caribbean archipelago governed as a British Overseas Territory, has arrested the tourists on suspicion of illegally transporting ammunition.
Under the islands’ strict anti-firearms laws, passed in 2022 to deter gang crime, all five now face 12 years in prison if they are convicted.
The tourists all live in states where guns can be used legally, and claim the rounds were inadvertently left in their bags.
The Telegraph can reveal that the US government is protesting the tourists’ detention, arguing that more than a decade behind bars is too harsh a punishment for their alleged crimes.
A delegation of congressmen and US government officials was dispatched on Monday to negotiate with the territory’s officials in an attempt to secure their release.
However, in a statement released on Monday night, the governor’s office said it would not intervene in the cases, which it described as “ongoing”, due to the “constitutional separation of the executive and legal branches”.
It added that while a judge may exercise discretion in the tourists’ cases, their alleged crime carries a mandatory prison sentence of 12 years in prison, plus a fine.
US officials furious over treatment of ‘well-intentioned Americans’
The decision has provoked fury from US officials and the congressmen, who threatened “additional actions” against the British-owned territory if it is not reversed.
The US congressional delegation was led by Markwayne Mullin, a Republican senator from Oklahoma, and included an official from the US State Department, the Pennsylvania senator John Fetterman and three members of the US House of Representatives.