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Only one vessel in Abaco to cope with boat thefts

Officers in Abaco with the stolen vehicle they intercepted near the Berry Islands with the assistance of the US Coast Guard.

Officers in Abaco with the stolen vehicle they intercepted near the Berry Islands with the assistance of the US Coast Guard.

By NICO SCAVELLA

Tribune Staff Reporter

nscavella@tribunemedia.net

POLICE in Abaco have just one vessel to combat the high levels of boat thefts in and around the island, officials said yesterday, adding that “limited funds” prevent the force from purchasing more police vessels to combat the problem.

Sergeant Hubert Smith, an officer in the Royal Bahamas Police Force’s (RBPF) Marine Support Services branch, attested to the difficulty of patrolling all of Abaco’s waters with just one boat. The island has been informally dubbed by some as “the boat theft capital of The Bahamas.”

“It’s difficult,” Sgt Smith told The Tribune yesterday. “Only thing we do, we go on the grace of the good Lord to guide us. Because it’s so open, and it’s only one boat.”

His comments came after police, with the assistance of the US Coast Guard, intercepted a stolen vessel in waters near the Berry Islands. Two Bahamians were arrested and taken into custody, for what police believe was a foiled drug trafficking attempt.

According to reports, sometime around 5.30am, the police control room in Freeport, Grand Bahama contacted Bullocks Harbour police and reported that a white, 32-foot Contender vessel was stolen.

A crew from the Berry Islands’ RBPF Marine Unit, with a crew from Grand Bahama, assisted by a United States Coast Guard helicopter, intercepted the vessel some 15 miles off Chub Cay. Two suspects were arrested on board the vessel and were taken to Nassau with the stolen boat.

Police said the two suspects would now face charges in Freeport.

While police said boat thefts occur throughout the country, most incidents occur in Abaco.

Last month, Tribune Business reported that Abaco’s tourism industry is being undermined by the island’s growing reputation as “the boat theft capital of the Bahamas.”

Dennis Lightbourne, the island’s Chamber of Commerce president, told Tribune Business that boat thefts in the Abacos have been a “serious and ongoing” concern, creating the impression that it was an unsafe boating destination.

Recently, North Abaco MP Renardo Curry said he feared the destruction of Abaco’s tourism market as a boat theft ring continues to thrive “at an all time high.” At the time, Mr Curry said a recent boat theft victim was the son of the Miami Dolphins owner, Stephen Ross.

The MP added that the lack of law enforcement on the island has allowed illicit human smuggling to plague Abaco through the use of its northern passage, which extends from Grand Cay to Crown Haven.

In April, an article in the Abaconian, the island’s local newspaper, reported that Kevin Mortimer, officer-in-charge of the Abaco district, noted some increased measures to track down and reduce the number of thefts taking place.

Mr Mortimer reportedly said that there has been a “considerable effort from different agencies,” including the Royal Bahamas Defence Force and the Department of Immigration to assist in combating the problem. He added that a RBDF craft had been assigned to the area to aid in patrol efforts.

Nonetheless, Assistant Superintendent Carlton Adderley of the RBPF’s Marine Support Services, yesterday explained that “limited funds” compromise police’s efforts to ramp up patrol and subsequent apprehension efforts against boat thieves.

As an illustration, he said: “A place like Bimini, you need a boat in Bimini. The demand for a boat in Bimini is much higher than Mayaguana. The demand for a boat in Abaco is much higher than Acklins. So you find that Acklins and Mayaguana presently do not have a boat.

“So wherever the demand is for that vessel, that’s where the vessel goes.”

Nonetheless, he offered tips for Abaco residents to thwart the efforts of boat thieves, who he said typically operate between the hours of midnight and 6am.

He suggested boaters place GPS trackers in a secure location so that they cannot be easily removed by thieves and outfit their boat with security cameras.

He added: “Persons must properly secure their vessel. There’s a number of ways you can do that. Move your prop from your engines, or if it’s on the boatlift, sometimes (thieves) take the boat off the boatlift. They carry these big bolt cutters around and they cut the cables that hold the lift up. Once they cut those cables that boat comes down. Those guys, it takes them just a few minutes to hot-wire those vessels and steal them.

“Put cameras in place that monitor your boat 24 hours a day, put in place a tracking system on your vessel, and also lock your vessel down. Especially if you are leaving your vessel for some length of time.”

Comments

sheeprunner12 8 years, 9 months ago

The RBDF has lots of small boats and 3 or 4 big boats .......... why cant 3 or 4 boats be stationed in the North?????????? ............... oh, I forget they dont even have a Commodore now

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Hogfish 8 years, 9 months ago

they keep sending the gaddamn stinking dominican poachers back with there boat.

seize the boats, sell them and buy the RBDF boys some decent boats.

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sheeprunner12 8 years, 9 months ago

But ............... they get the Police doing the RBDF job ....... thats the "egg shells" problem what Perry talking about now

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asiseeit 8 years, 9 months ago

Go and look at all the boats up on dry land at the police base next to the bridge! A bunch of broken boats because nobody looks after government things, they just break them and then wait for the U.S. to donate another one. Abaco needs more boats as crawfish season is right here and Bahamians and foreigners are poaching as we speak. Never mind the foreign boats that come down and harvest as much as their freezers can hold. This country is run by morons who have no idea what happens in our waters, how many in the HOA can drive a boat much less swim? Come August 1st. Bahamian fishermen have to compete with foreign fishermen for the crawfish, they dive our habitats and use compressors. I have seen this with my own two eye's. The government is a joke and does NOTHING to protect our waters. This is because 90% of them know NOTHING of our waters or what is out there. The government of The Bahamas sucks donkey balls!

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Economist 8 years, 9 months ago

You are correct about the broken boats.

The Police have no discipline and you need to be disciplined in maintenance when it comes to boats and saltwater.

I have watched the police for years as they tear up the boats.

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newcitizen 8 years, 9 months ago

This is not limited to boats or the police. Maintenance is a foreign word to Bahamians.

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birdiestrachan 8 years, 9 months ago

The Police may have limited resources. But the owners of the boats will have to do more to ensure that their boats are not stolen. then again there is the insurance aspect . and are there so many boat thieves in Abaco.?

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The_Oracle 8 years, 9 months ago

What good will more boats do when they cannot hold onto the perps when they catch them? The one from the GB/Berries heist slipped his cuffs and dove into the harbor and got away! Probably casing his next boat now if he hasn't already stolen another! Competencies is what is missing, in maintenance, discipline, maritime skills and logistics. While even the U.S. 7th fleet could not entirely cover Bahamian waters, a damn sight better job could be done. The courts aught to start charging them with piracy on the high seas, not boat theft! Again, incompetencies abound.

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