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    'A prayer answered': American released from Turks and Caicos says of flight home

    By Kevin ShalveyNic Uff,

    5 days ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=352c7r_0u1lnSN100

    As Ryan Watson, an American tourist who had been charged with bringing ammunition to Turks and Caicos in April, boarded a plane after his release, he had only one thought on his mind.

    "To know that I was on a plane headed home, that's a prayer answered," Watson said in an interview that aired Monday on "Good Morning America."

    A judge last week fined Watson $2,000 for four bullets discovered in his luggage as he landed in the country in April, with the judge citing "exceptional circumstances" to avoid a potential minimum sentence of 12 years in prison. Watson would face 13 weeks imprisonment if he commits a crime in Turks and Caicos in the next nine months, the court said.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3WrUck_0u1lnSN100
    ABC News - PHOTO: Ryan Watson, an American tourist who had been charged with bringing ammunition to Turks and Caicos in April, appeared on "Good Morning America" on June 24, 2024.
    MORE: American tourist charged with bringing ammo to Turks and Caicos avoids jail time, fined $2,000

    Watson, a father of two from Oklahoma, was arrested on April 12 while returning with his wife from a trip to Turks and Caicos to celebrate several friends' 40th birthdays.

    There is no constitutional right to carry firearms in Turks and Caicos. The country prohibits anyone from keeping, carrying, discharging or using an unlicensed firearm or ammunition.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=4PdNql_0u1lnSN100
    Turks and Caicos Police Department - PHOTO: Ryan Watson booking photo.
    MORE: What to know about Turks and Caicos' strict gun laws after US tourists charged with possessing ammunition

    Watson speaking on "GMA" recounted his experience in Turks and Caicos, saying he would lie awake at night, worrying about what might happen if he were put in prison.

    "Like if things did go sideways, what my kids would look like when I did come out," he said. "As a parent, that’s just not an easy thing to think about."

    He said his kids had been the first thing he thought of as he learned that he was facing more than a decade in prison if found guilty.

    “Our kids first I mean, first and foremost, I initially and instantly think our kids aren't going to have parents," he said on "GMA." "That was really hard to imagine."

    ABC News' Meredith Deliso, Nic Uff and Robyn Weil contributed to this report.

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