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Florida grandmother arrested in Turks and Caicos over ammo in bag fined $1,500 and given suspended sentence

Turks and Caicos revises firearm offenses law
Turks and Caicos revises law requiring mandatory 12-year sentence for firearm-related offenses 01:35

The fifth American who was arrested in the Turks and Caicos Islands in recent months for having ammunition in her bag was fined $1,500 and given a suspended sentence of 23 weeks Thursday, the court confirmed to CBS News. Sharitta Grier, a grandmother from Florida, went to the British territory on a surprise Mother's Day vacation that ended with her in custody when authorities found two bullets in her carry-on bag as she was trying to go home.

She told reporters after Thursday's sentencing hearing that hugging her loved ones and eating some soul food would be among the first things she'd do upon her return to Orlando.

"I'm just excited about everything, ready to get back home to my family and my grandkids," Grier said ahead of her expected departure from the islands Thursday afternoon. "It's been a long time coming, but, you know, God is still good. I've seen the hand of God move during this whole journey, so I'm satisfied."

She said people provided her with food, shelter and support during her weekslong stay on the islands.

"It was like strangers reaching out at me and like just blessing me out of nowhere, so I could really see the hand of God," she said.

Sharitta Grier speaks with reporters after her sentencing for having ammunition in the Turks and Caicos Islands, July 11, 2024.
Sharitta Grier speaks with reporters after her sentencing for having ammunition in the Turks and Caicos Islands, July 11, 2024. TCI Sun

After her mid-May arrest, she told CBS News she had to spend a few nights in jail.

"They chained me to a chair by my leg," she told CBS News senior transportation correspondent Kris Van Cleave. "It's cold, scared, it was awful, it was so awful, I couldn't sleep."

When she was released from custody, Grier had to remain on the islands with a possible prison sentence hanging over her as her case went through the courts.

"You have good days, bad days — mentally draining, like not knowing what's going to happen or when it's going to happen, if a court date's going to be pushed back," she told Van Cleave last month. "It's a lot, it's a lot mentally."

She had said she was optimistic about her case after other Americans who were also arrested over ammunition found in their bags avoided prison time but had to pay fines before they could return to the U.S.

In May, Bryan Hagerich of Pennsylvania was given a suspended sentence and fined $6,700 over 20 rifle rounds that were in his bag at the end of a vacation. Tyler Wenrich of Virginia was sentenced a few days later to time served and a $9,000 fine for two 9 mm bullets that were found in his backpack as he was trying to board a cruise ship.

Ryan Watson of Oklahoma received a suspended sentence and a $2,000 fine last month over four rounds of ammunition that were found in his carry-on bag when he and his wife visited the British territory earlier this year. Michael Lee Evans of Texas, who was allowed to return to the U.S. for medical reasons while his case was pending, was also given a suspended sentence.

The five Americans had faced potential mandatory minimum sentences of 12 years in prison. Amid pressure from U.S. lawmakers to show the Americans leniency, elected officials on the islands changed the law to give judges more discretion for sentences in firearms cases.

Sarah Barth and Elizabeth Campbell contributed to this report.

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