Shem Wayne Alexander, a 36-year-old national of Trinidad and Tobago who was extradited from Jamaica, has been sentenced to four years and nine months in a United States federal prison for conspiring to smuggle more than 200 firearms from the U.S. to Trinidad and Tobago.
The sentence was imposed by U.S. District Judge John L. Badalamenti in the Middle District of Florida. The court also ordered Alexander to forfeit firearms seized during the offence. He had previously pleaded guilty.
According to the United States Department of Justice, between April 2019 and April 2022, Alexander and his co-conspirators unlawfully exported firearms, firearm components, including upper and lower receivers and gun parts kits, and related items from Florida to Trinidad and Tobago.
In total, more than 200 firearms were smuggled from the United States into Trinidad and Tobago.
On April 21, 2021, officers from the Trinidad and Tobago Police Service and the Customs and Excise Division at Piarco International Airport seized a shipment containing two punching bags.
The shipment had been sent from the United States to Trinidad and Tobago and described as “household items”. Authorities later discovered that the punching bags concealed approximately 11 9mm pistols; two .38 calibre revolvers; a 12-gauge semi-automatic shotgun; three AR-15 barrel foregrips; 19 lower pistol grip assemblies; 11 forearm bolt assemblies; three AR-15-style barrels with forearm grips; 32 AR-15 magazines; one AR-15 drum magazine; 470 rounds of AR-15 ammunition; 34 9mm magazines; three 9mm drum magazines; 284 9mm rounds; 15 .38 calibre rounds; 36 shotgun shells; six magazine couplers; and two shotgun chokes.
The Department of Justice said Alexander and his co-conspirators arranged the shipment without providing written notice to the shipper about its true contents.
The case was investigated by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Homeland Security Investigations, including its Attaché Caribbean office, and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.
Authorities said the Trinidad and Tobago Police Service—including its Transnational Organized Crime Unit and Special Investigations Unit—provided assistance along with U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, U.S. Customs and Border Protection and the Department of Commerce’s Office of Export Enforcement.
The Department of Justice’s Office of International Affairs, the Jamaica Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions and the Jamaica Constabulary Force also supported Alexander’s extradition.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Adam W. McCall prosecuted the case in the Middle District of Florida.
