MORE PROOF THAT THERE ARE SERIOUS RISKS TO TOURISTS TRAVELING TO "BEAUTIFUL ISLANDS"
Does Justice Take a
Until something goes wrong.
Brandie Black thought she'd found paradise when she moved from Fort Worth, Texas, to the Dutch island of St. Maarten to study medicine at the American University of the Caribbean. But in late February, Black got a harrowing look at the dark side of island life.
Black was asleep in her student apartment on the university campus. It was about
The assailant fled, but not before grabbing her wallet with $1,000 in cash, some jewelry and her digital camera. He left her with a black eye and, she would later discover, two broken ribs.
But that was only the beginning of her traumas.
In an instant, several students who were sleeping in neighboring apartments came to her aid. One dialed 911. The dispatcher told him that the police had no one to send. Ten minutes later the neighbor called 911 again. Again he was told there were no officers available. When he asked for an ambulance he was told it would take an hour.
Several students bundled Black into a car to drive her across the island to the hospital. On the way they met the ambulance. But the attendants refused to take Black, telling her that because it was a sexual assault, they had to wait for police.
"We told them that police weren't coming," Black said. "Finally, they said they would take me."
She said it got worse when she arrived at the hospital. Because she'd been sexually assaulted, the medical staff would not touch her until the detectives arrived to gather evidence. Black said she believes it was around
Several days later her credit card company called to ask about some questionable charges. She called St. Maarten police to tell them the card had been stolen. They told her they had no record of her incident. Black said that with help from the school she filed a complaint about the way police handled the case. She has heard nothing.
St. Maarten is part of the
A Familiar Story
It was almost a year ago that the conduct of police in
It sounds all too familiar to Dick Jefferson. He is one of two American TV producers who were assaulted with a tire iron outside a bar in St. Maarten in early April.
"The police response has been no response," he told ABC News just days after the incident. "The best way I can put it is that when the detective finally came after three phone calls to get my report, he asked me 'Why should I even bother talking to you? Are you guys even going to file charges? You are just going back to
Taco Stein, the chief prosecutor in St. Maarten, said the response time in the assault case was not acceptable. "I have asked the chief of police to report to me why this happened," he said. "We need to find out what needs to be done to make it better."
Little Crime Means Little Experience
Stein notes that the assault happened very late at night. "The problem is that like everywhere in the world we have less police officers on duty at
That is a very real challenge for an island with 41,000 inhabitants and just 70 police officers. There are only 15 detectives. Stein said most of the officers are trained in
"If you only have one murder in your career, you have less experience than if you have investigated 20 or 30 murders," he said.
But Stein cannot explain the reluctance of police to investigate the assault on Jefferson and Smith. St. Maarten police spokesman Johan Leonard and the island's chief of police did not return calls from ABC News.
Several days after the April 6 assaults, inspector Leonard told The Associated Press: "We do not take the ill-treatment of any person, whether resident or visitor, lightly, and we are pursuing this matter to find the suspects."
A report in the St. Maarten Daily Herald on April 24 said police there have arrested two suspects in the beating case, but added that neither the police or the prosecutor would confirm the arrests. The newspaper also reported that a third suspect -- thought to be the main suspect -- is still at large.
Americans 'Didn't Have Any Rights'
On Feb. 18 he was in a car with a group of students heading back to the university after a day on a cruise. He says they were cut off by an angry driver, who began hitting two of the students. This time police did arrive quickly, but Santana said instead of going after the assailants they handcuffed the students.
"The officer told me to shut up and that we deserved anything coming to us," Santana said. "While we were being thrown into the car I was repeatedly hit by the officer and called 'A piece of sh-t.'"
Santana said the police put the students in a holding cell and refused to let them make a phone call. "We were told we weren't in
The men spent the night in jail. Santana said they were threatened with deportation. The next morning they were told they would be released if they paid for the repair of their attacker's car. Santana said it became clear that the attacker was a friend of the police officers.
A Tourism Investigation
Dick Jefferson said that two days after his assault, when he still had not heard from the police, he got a call from a St. Maarten tourism official.
"She told me they [the Department of Tourism] were taking over the investigation," he said. "I couldn't help but laugh at her. It is ludicrous that the tourism department is trying to prosecute and become a police department. They are not the experts -- they are the experts at getting tourists to the island. It's like saying you got hurt in
Stein, St. Maarten's chief prosecutor, said he was not aware of that call. And he insisted the assault is being fully investigated. "There is a lot of misunderstanding about our legal system," he said. "We have our proceedings more in the courtroom than in the public domain."
But that is little comfort for foreigners who turn to the police for help. The wife of a medical student -- who did not want her name used -- summarized her experience on St. Maarten this way: "There is real harassment for the people who aren't local," she said, "the police force here is horrible. They don't respond in a timely manner and when they do they treat us horribly."
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