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  • “Call Them Out”: Belize Renews Call for Sex offender Registry

    “Call Them Out”: Belize Renews Call for Sex offender Registry

    A surge in high-profile child sexual abuse cases involving trusted adults across Belize has reignited urgent public and official demands for the implementation of a long-discussed national sex offender registry, with child safety advocates and government leaders warning that inaction is putting the country’s youngest populations at growing risk.

    The latest controversy that pushed this long-simmering issue to the forefront of public discourse stems from recent charges against 41-year-old Elias Tzib, a Santa Elena-based teacher based in the Bullet Tree Falls area. Tzib was arrested following a report from a student, and now faces four counts of assault and two counts of rape. The case has sent shockwaves through the community, as residents question how an educator with access to vulnerable children could face such serious allegations in a space that is supposed to be one of the safest for young people.

    This arrest is far from an isolated incident. Just weeks earlier, a suspended police officer, Dexter Diego, was returned to prison on four additional counts of child rape involving a 10-year-old and an 11-year-old, with offenses occurring between 2024 and 2025. This was not Diego’s first brush with allegations: he had previously been accused of abuse against a 14-year-old, revealing a troubling pattern that could have been flagged earlier if a public registry was already in place, according to advocates. Other high-profile cases have already made headlines this year: in January, 47-year-old San Pedro educator Alex Noralez was found guilty on two out of three counts of sexual assault, and is currently appealing his conviction to stay out of prison. In 2025, former UDP senator and teacher Macario Coy was also hit with sexual misconduct allegations; while he was ultimately cleared, the case still raised serious questions about weak oversight of adults who work closely with children.

    Officials confirm that documented cases of reported child sexual abuse are on a steady upward climb. Adele Catzim Sanchez, CEO of Belize’s Ministry of Human Development, noted that the ministry’s internal tracking database shows consistent annual growth in the number of abuse reports brought to authorities. “What we know historically and from research is that people who have a tendency to be sex offenders seek out professions in which they will have access to children and people who can become their victims,” Catzim Sanchez explained. “And so it’s in the professions that are supposed to be helpful, like teaching professions, health professions, other professions civil society, where we might see people gain access to children or those who become their victims.”

    For the first time, multiple government agencies have aligned behind the push for a fully operational public registry. The Office of the Special Envoy for Women and Children has led the renewed call for action, which has gained formal backing from both the Ministry of Human Development and the Ministry of Home Affairs. Catzim Sanchez said the ministry is eager to collaborate with partner agencies to move the registry from proposal to implementation: “we’re ready to work or collaborate with our partner agencies including the Office of the Special Envoy and the Ministry of Home Affairs to make sure that this, the sex offender registry is operational.”

    Oscar Mira, Minister of Home Affairs, expressed unwavering support for the initiative, emphasizing that zero tolerance for child abuse requires transparent public accountability. “I cannot understand how someone would look at a child, you know without saying any names, but children as young as four years old,” Mira said. “We have to make sure that we treat their people in a different kind of way. We cannot tolerate the abuse of children from anybody, you know, and be it male or female. I think that I fully support her call. I think that if you are convicted of something like that, then the public should know who you are.”

    Child safety advocates echo this urgency, arguing that a centralized, publicly accessible registry is a critical tool to prevent repeat offenses. Currently, the lack of a centralized system allows convicted offenders to move between communities and continue working in roles that give them regular access to children, putting new populations at risk. Proponents say the registry will not only give families critical information to protect their children, but also allow law enforcement and institutional leaders to conduct more thorough background checks for adults working with minors. After years of discussion, the recent wave of high-profile abuse cases has turned public conversation into a widespread demand for immediate action, with leaders across Belize now signaling that the registry is finally moving forward.

  • Child Sex Crime Victims Can Now Testify Behind Closed Doors

    Child Sex Crime Victims Can Now Testify Behind Closed Doors

    In a landmark shift toward victim-centered justice for survivors of child sexual abuse, the Central American nation of Belize has approved sweeping amendments to its Criminal Code that will permit young survivors to give sensitive testimony behind closed court doors. The policy change, set to enter formal parliamentary debate in June 2026, represents one of the most significant updates to the country’s child protection legal framework in recent years, crafted to address longstanding gaps in how the justice system supports vulnerable victims.

    According to Adele Catzim Sanchez, Chief Executive Officer of Belize’s Ministry of Human Development, the core motivation for the reform is to eliminate the secondary trauma that many child survivors experience during open court proceedings. When cases are heard in public, children are forced to recount traumatic experiences under the glare of public scrutiny, a process that can re-traumatize young victims even as they seek accountability for the crimes committed against them. By closing courtrooms to the general public for these sensitive hearings, policymakers aim to remove the pressure and fear that often prevent children from testifying fully and honestly.

    Beyond protecting child well-being, officials project that the reform will strengthen the entire judicial process for sexual offense cases. When victims feel safe to speak openly, prosecutors are able to build stronger, more credible cases against accused offenders, which officials anticipate will lead to higher conviction rates. The reform also addresses another critical barrier to justice: the reluctance of many survivors and their families to report abuse in the first place. By creating a more supportive courtroom environment, policymakers hope to encourage more survivors to come forward, breaking the cycle of silence that allows many offenders to avoid accountability.

    The closed-door testimony amendment is not the only child protection reform advancing through Belize’s government right now. The Ministry of Human Development has also introduced a separate Families Bill that aims to speed up resolution of cases involving minor victims. Advocates for child protection have long criticized systemic court delays for prolonging children’s trauma and denying them timely closure, as drawn-out proceedings leave young survivors in limbo for months or even years. The new bill would mandate that all child-focused protection cases be resolved within a fixed timeline, streamlining judicial processes to deliver faster justice and improve outcomes for victims.

    Sanchez confirmed that the reform effort has secured bipartisan institutional support, with backing from both the national cabinet and the Attorney General’s Ministry. Once tabled in Parliament next month, the amendment will proceed through standard parliamentary debate and voting procedures before going into effect. For child protection advocates across the country, the approval of this reform marks a long-overdue recognition that justice cannot come at the cost of re-traumatizing the very survivors the system is meant to protect.

  • Clinging On: The Dangerous Reality of School Runs on Motorcycles

    Clinging On: The Dangerous Reality of School Runs on Motorcycles

    Across Belize, daily school pickups have exposed a troubling public safety gap, driven by widespread economic necessity that puts young children at severe risk of fatal road accidents. For countless low-income Belizean households, two-wheeled motorcycles are not recreational vehicles or a leisure choice — they are the only affordable option for commuting to work and ferrying children to and from school. But what starts as a routine daily trip has devolved into a life-threatening gamble, with traffic and transportation officials warning that the status quo will inevitably lead to preventable tragedy.

    Every weekday afternoon, when school gates swing open to release hundreds of students, chaotic rush-hour congestion clogs roads across the country. Amid the scramble of parents hurrying to collect their children, motorcycles weave through packed traffic, most carrying multiple young passengers with little to no safety precautions. Many children ride without helmets entirely, while others rely on uncertified head protection that cannot absorb impact or prevent traumatic brain injury in a crash. Children are often crammed between the driver and an adult passenger, forced to dangle their legs over the edge of the bike because they cannot reach the motorcycle’s standard foot pegs for rear passengers. In the most extreme cases, officials report seeing one motorcycle carrying a driver and three children, with kids stacked both in front of and behind the adult rider.

    Local transportation leaders say the hazards extend far beyond a lack of proper head protection. Overloading motorcycles beyond their manufacturer-set passenger limits throws off the vehicle’s critical balance, making it far harder for drivers to react to sudden road changes, avoid collisions, or maintain control in emergency scenarios. Leon Gentle, Chief Transport Officer of Belize, laid out the scope of the daily risks in an interview with local outlet News Five. “Sometimes you see these motorcycle riders taking along a child with an uncertified helmet, a helmet that cannot save their lives – with their feet stuck out because they cannot even reach the foot stand for the pillion rider on the bike. And so these are things that we have to look closely at,” Gentle explained.

    Mauricio Gonzalez, Traffic Enforcement Manager for the Belize City Traffic Department, confirmed that the dangerous practice is seen on city streets every single school day. He emphasized that addressing the issue requires a sustained public education effort, rather than just punitive enforcement. “It’s an education process so that they understand that, you know what? You’re risking your family. You’re risking your own family’s lives even if they all have on a helmet. With the control of motorcycle comes with balance, and that’s the reason why they have the passenger limit set. So with additional passengers, then it brings the opportunity for the driver to lose control,” Gonzalez said. “But it does pose a challenge to us. It’s something that we see every morning and something that we continue to educate the residents of Belize City about.”

    For enforcement teams, the situation creates a difficult ethical balancing act: officers must prioritize road safety, while also recognizing the underlying socioeconomic reality that pushes many families to rely on motorcycles. Many parents argue that motorcycles are the only accessible, low-cost transport option they can afford, especially when cheaper public transit or private school shuttle services are unavailable in their communities. Still, transportation officials stress that convenience and cost cannot justify putting children’s lives at risk. Gentle urged families to explore all alternative options whenever possible: “If there’s accessibility to shuttle runs or public transportation that may be available to take them to and from as well try our utmost best to use those modes of transportation.”

    For traffic officials, witnessing the unsafe school runs first-hand sparks urgent concern. “When you see these types of practices, three children on a motorcycle – a parent, a child in between, it brings out a fear in all of us. What are they thinking? What are they doing? I mean that’s the thought running through our head,” Gonzalez said. Closing his on-the-ground report from Belize City’s busy streets, correspondent Shane Williams noted that while motorcycles will remain the most budget-friendly transport option for many Belizean families for the foreseeable future, safety must be the non-negotiable top priority when transporting children.

  • Motorcycle Riders Remain Belize’s Most Vulnerable Road Users

    Motorcycle Riders Remain Belize’s Most Vulnerable Road Users

    Across Belize, overall traffic fatalities have slowly fallen in recent years, but one persistent public safety crisis continues to claim lives: motorcycle-related crashes. New government data confirms that motorcyclists make up nearly 40% of all road accident deaths in the country, cementing their status as the most vulnerable group of road users in the nation.

    For years, policymakers have pushed for sweeping safety reforms centered on mandatory formal training for all new motorcycle riders, but that legislative effort has stalled in recent sessions. With crash rates showing no signs of decline, transport authorities have pivoted to a more straightforward, evidence-backed intervention that they say can immediately reduce fatalities: stricter helmet regulations.

    Leon Gentle, Belize’s Chief Transport Officer, outlined the upcoming policy changes in a recent public briefing, noting that the current mandatory helmet law carries a critical gap. While current rules require all riders to wear some form of head protection, there are no enforced standards for what type of helmet is allowed on roads. As a result, riders often use inadequate gear ranging from bicycle helmets to flimsy half helmets that do not provide sufficient protection against high-impact collisions. Data collected by the Transport Department shows that the vast majority of fatal motorcycle crashes involve severe head injuries, making improved helmet standards a top priority.

    “One of the closest pieces of legislation we are moving forward with is upgrading helmet safety standards,” Gentle explained. “This will directly raise safety levels because the data we’ve collected on fatalities clearly shows most deaths stem from head trauma. We’re taking a close look at setting clear, enforceable specifications for motorcycle helmets to address this gap.”

    Beyond the new helmet rules, transport officials remain committed to advancing mandatory rider training in the long term. Gentle emphasized that Chief Executive Officer Williams of the Ministry of Transport has repeatedly stressed that formal training is a non-negotiable component of long-term motorcycle safety improvement, and the department will continue to push for that reform once legislative momentum returns.

    The push for updated safety measures comes shortly after a delegation of Belizean transport officials attended a regional motorcycle safety conference hosted by the Pan American Health Organization, where experts from across the Americas shared data and policy strategies to reduce motorcycle-related deaths.

    With the new helmet regulations moving forward, officials project that stricter standards and proper enforcement will cut the number of fatal head injuries substantially in the coming years, addressing the most immediate threat to motorcyclists across the country.

  • Man Mysteriously Dies After Firing Gun in San Ignacio

    Man Mysteriously Dies After Firing Gun in San Ignacio

    A fatal and confusing incident in Santa Elena, near San Ignacio, has left local law enforcement working to unpack the full sequence of events that led to the death of 39-year-old Joel Sierra just hours after he opened fire in a residential neighborhood.

    The incident unfolded on the morning of Saturday, May 16, 2026, at approximately 11:21 a.m., when San Ignacio Police received multiple emergency calls reporting gunfire in the Hillview area of the town. First responders arrived at the scene within minutes to find a chaotic landscape: multiple spent 9-millimeter shell casings littered the street, and Sierra, the identified shooter, was in severe respiratory distress, hyperventilating heavily. A search of the immediate area turned up the 9-millimeter pistol Sierra had been firing, which officers seized as evidence.

    Circulating social media footage from nearby bystanders captured the moments before police arrived, showing Sierra running through public streets while brandishing his firearm and repeatedly firing shots into the open air. No bystanders or other people were injured in the incident, a minor relief that has done little to clear up the core mystery surrounding Sierra’s death.

    After being taken into police custody at the scene, Sierra was rushed immediately to a local hospital for urgent medical care. Early investigative assessments noted that Sierra showed clear signs of being under the influence of an illegal controlled substance at the time of the incident. Despite medical intervention, Sierra was pronounced dead just over nine hours after the shooting, at approximately 8:30 p.m. the same evening.

    Authorities have confirmed that Sierra was no stranger to the criminal justice system: he had an existing criminal record, including a well-documented previous prison escape, that adds additional context to the ongoing investigation. To date, no official cause of death has been released, and law enforcement has scheduled a full post-mortem examination to determine exactly what led to Sierra’s unexpected death hours after the shooting. Investigators are still working to confirm the motive behind the public shooting, as well as trace the origin of the recovered firearm to confirm whether it was obtained legally.

  • Two Men Behind Bars; Belmopan Intercept Leads to Weapons Charges

    Two Men Behind Bars; Belmopan Intercept Leads to Weapons Charges

    In a series of coordinated anti-weapons operations carried out across Belize in mid-May 2026, law enforcement officials have taken three individuals into custody and seized an unlicensed cache of firearms and live ammunition, marking a notable advance in the country’s ongoing crackdown on illegal weapons trafficking.

    The first interception unfolded on the morning of May 15, 2026, at approximately 8:30 a.m. in Belmopan City, when officers from the Belize Police Department pulled over a vehicle carrying two young men. A subsequent search of the vehicle uncovered a hidden illegal weapons stash: a 9mm Beretta pistol, 28 live rounds of 7.62-caliber ammunition, 15 live rounds of .2-caliber ammunition, and 8 additional live rounds of 9mm ammunition, according to Assistant Superintendent of Police Stacy Smith, a staff officer with the department.

    Following the seizure, 23-year-old Kamron Adolphus of Burrel Boom Village and 20-year-old Vaughn Culzac of Roaring Creek Village were arrested and jointly charged with three violations of Belize’s firearms laws: possession of an unlicensed firearm, possession of unlicensed ammunition, and possession of prohibited ammunition. As the case progresses, Adolphus has entered a guilty plea, while Culzac has maintained his not guilty plea. Both men have been remanded to the Belize Central Prison, with Adolphus awaiting sentencing and Culzac awaiting his next court appearance.

    When pressed by reporters on how illegal weapons continue to enter Belize despite repeated crackdowns, Smith pointed to the country’s porous borders as a primary entry point for traffickers. “We know the border, the porous border, serves as one of those areas that illegal firearms are brought in. We saw the instance where one person sought to import a number of firearms, but thankfully the check that happens at customs, that was intercepted. We continue our efforts on our part to try to conduct operations along the border lines and those porous areas with a view to deterring these types of activities. The mobile interdiction team is one unit that is particularly tasked with such a mandate,” Smith explained.

    Shortly after the Belmopan intercept, a separate court-sanctioned operation carried out by the department’s specialized Gang Intelligence Investigation and Interdiction Unit (GI3) at a Belize City residence led to a second illegal weapons seizure. During the search of 34-year-old Thomas Ferguson’s home on Electric Avenue, officers found a black 9mm pistol loaded with 15 live rounds of 9mm ammunition. Ferguson was immediately arrested and charged with two counts of unlicensed weapons and ammunition possession.

    Belize police officials confirmed that both recent arrests are the direct outcome of the department’s stepped-up anti-illegal weapons campaign, which has seen specialized units ramp up targeted patrols, intelligence gathering, and surveillance operations across the country. The department says it will continue to invest resources into these operations to disrupt trafficking networks and remove unlicensed firearms from communities. This report is a transcribed excerpt from an evening television newscast, originally published online.

  • 12 Grams of Crack Cocaine Busted in Orange Walk

    12 Grams of Crack Cocaine Busted in Orange Walk

    In a fresh push against the illegal drug trade in northern Belize, law enforcement officials have seized 12 grams of crack cocaine and taken three local residents into custody on drug trafficking charges. The bust, carried out at a residential property in San Jose Village, Orange Walk, is part of a broader nationwide crackdown on transnational and local criminal activity, authorities confirmed.

    Following a targeted search of the residence, officers found the illicit controlled substance and immediately took the three suspects into custody: 41-year-old Arturo Oh, 39-year-old Iliana Angeles, and 29-year-old Gilda Guardado. All three have been jointly charged with possession of a controlled substance with intent to supply, the formal charge for drug trafficking under Belizean law.

    Assistant Superintendent of Police Stacy Smith, Staff Officer for the department, confirmed the details of the operation in an official statement. “Police have formally arrested and jointly charged forty-one-year-old Arturo Oh, thirty-nine-year-old Iliana Angeles, and twenty-nine-year-old Gilda Guardado, all of San Jose Village, Orange Walk, for the offense of possession of controlled drugs with intent to supply to another, more commonly known as drug trafficking,” Smith said. “These charges followed police operation at the residence, which resulted in the discovery of twelve grams of crack.”

    Law enforcement officials noted that this latest seizure is just one component of amplified, multi-front operations underway across the country. The ongoing campaign targets a wide range of criminal enterprises, from illegal firearms trafficking to narcotics distribution, as police work to dismantle organized criminal networks and improve community safety. This report is adapted from a transcript of an evening television news broadcast originally published online.

  • More Women are Demanding Space in Belize’s Maritime Industry

    More Women are Demanding Space in Belize’s Maritime Industry

    Dated May 18, 2026, a growing movement led by women in Belize is reshaping the historically male-dominated maritime industry, working to carve out permanent, influential space for female professionals at all levels of the field.

    At the center of this shift is 28-year-old Jaeda Sutherland, who leads the Belize Chapter of the Women in Maritime Association of the Caribbean (WiMAC). Sutherland’s unexpected career path—beginning with a literature degree from St. John’s College Junior College, far removed from maritime studies—stands as a testament to the untapped potential of women breaking into non-traditional roles in the sector. Today, she heads the Projects and Quality Unit at the Belize Port Authority while pursuing a master’s degree in Logistics and Supply Chain Management, and serves as a visible example of what women can achieve in maritime work.

    During the recent Women in Maritime Conference, a clear passing of the torch highlighted the growing momentum of the movement: veteran trailblazer Captain Monique Lamb shared decades of hard-earned lessons from her career breaking barriers at sea, while Sutherland stepped forward to steer the next phase of advocacy. For Sutherland and her fellow organizers, the movement’s goals extend far beyond simply hiring more women. They are focused on retaining female talent, elevating women to leadership positions, and transforming the industry’s culture from the inside out.

    Sutherland has firsthand experience with the ingrained bias women face in the field. “Men who have been in the industry for over thirty years have looked at me and asked, how is it that you are even my captain,” she shared, noting that common microaggressions include questions about whether women can handle core technical tasks like engine repairs or night navigation. But she approaches these challenges with unshakable confidence: “For me I really jumped into it with the mindset that us females, anything a man can do, we can do, sometimes even better.”

    Industry leaders already recognize the tangible value that greater gender diversity brings to maritime operations. Belize Port Commissioner Kaylon Young notes that women bring unique, critical perspectives to management and daily operations. “Having more people involved, more women involved gives a different dynamicity to how we see things, a different point of view to how we see things. We might see things, males might see things different than how females see things, our way of management, our way of operations,” Young explained.

    Global data underscores just how far the industry has to go to achieve equity: women make up only roughly 1% of seafarers worldwide. In the Caribbean, while 63% of women in maritime work hold shore-based roles in the private sector and 19% work for maritime authorities, just 1 to 2% hold seagoing positions operating vessels. Against this backdrop, WiMAC’s core mission is to build a supportive advocacy and networking network to address this stark underrepresentation.

    For Sutherland, the central priority is securing women a place at decision-making tables. “The power of a woman’s voice is becoming heavier and heavier. Previously we had joined this sector and we were very quiet in terms of not being in the forefront of all of it. Now, we have been trying to push ourselves, trying to get into leadership, and trying to get at seat at the table especially. That is very important for me and something I always promote, try to get a seat at the table where the decisions are actually being made,” she said.

    With less than four years of experience in the sector, Sutherland has already carved out that influential seat alongside her WiMAC executive team. At the conference, members positioned themselves as intentional changemakers, united in their goal to dismantle long-standing barriers and build a more inclusive maritime industry for future generations of women.

  • Belize Reframes Migration as National Opportunity

    Belize Reframes Migration as National Opportunity

    Nearly 10 years in the planning, Belize is breaking with conventional narratives around cross-border movement, launching a landmark national process to codify a new approach that positions migration as a core driver of national progress rather than a crisis to manage.

    On May 18, 2026, government leaders, international collaborators and local stakeholders convened in the capital city of Belmopan to kick off the first national consultation phase for the country’s inaugural Migration and Development Policy. The multi-day engagement will stretch across four major population centers: Belmopan, Belize City, Bella Vista and the popular coastal hub of San Pedro, with a week of structured dialogue designed to inform a holistic policy framework that integrates migration planning across national security, labor markets and social service systems.

    Opening the gathering, Immigration Minister Kareem Musa framed the consultation as a long-awaited turning point for the small Central American nation. “It is my honor to stand before you today as we open this first National Stakeholder Consultation on the Belize Migration and Development Policy, a milestone that our ministry, government and this country have been working on for almost a decade,” Musa told attendees. “I want to begin with something simple but important. Migration is not a problem to be solved. It is a reality to be managed wisely, humanely and strategically — and for too long, Belize has been navigating that reality without a comprehensive national policy to guide us.”

    Tanya Santos, chief executive officer of the Ministry of Immigration, expanded on the holistic vision guiding the new policy, noting that migration can no longer be reduced to a narrow border security concern. “Migration can no longer be considered just a border issue. It is a labor issue, a health issue, an education issue, a demographic issue and a national development issue,” Santos said. “The development of a Migration and Development Policy is Belize’s formal recognition of this reality.”

    This public consultation phase comes as Belize adapts to shifting regional migration patterns, and the inclusive stakeholder process is intended to ensure the final policy addresses the needs and perspectives of communities across the country. Once finalized, the framework will be the first formal national policy guiding migration management in Belize’s modern history, aligning cross-sector planning with the country’s long-term social and economic development goals.

    This report is adapted from a transcript of an evening television news broadcast, with transcribed Kriol language statements adjusted to follow standard English spelling conventions for digital publication.

  • Andrew Bennett’s Extradition Fight Heads Back to High Court

    Andrew Bennett’s Extradition Fight Heads Back to High Court

    A landmark ruling from the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) has upended a years-long, high-profile extradition battle involving prominent Belizean attorney Andrew Bennett, opening a new chapter in debates over digital privacy rights and constitutional protections in cross-border law enforcement.

    Bennett has been fighting U.S. attempts to extradite him on money laundering charges, allegations he has repeatedly and vehemently denied. At the heart of the American government’s case against him is a cache of private WhatsApp messages, which prosecutors have framed as critical evidence to support the extradition request.

    In its May 18, 2026 decision, the CCJ overturned prior rulings from Belize’s lower courts that had upheld the admissibility of the WhatsApp evidence. The top regional court found a critical flaw in the earlier decisions: both the High Court and Court of Appeal had grounded their rulings in the Interception of Communication Act – a piece of legislation that was not yet in force at the time law enforcement collected the private messages.

    The CCJ declined to issue a final ruling on whether the collection of the messages violates Belize’s constitutional protections for privacy and protection against arbitrary search and seizure, noting that legal arguments on those core questions had not been fully tested in lower courts. Instead, the court remanded the entire case back to the Belize High Court for an entirely new hearing, setting the stage for what legal observers describe as a defining showdown over digital privacy rights in the region.

    Speaking after the ruling, lead defense attorney Hector Guerra emphasized that the CCJ’s decision serves as a critical reminder that the protection of citizens’ fundamental rights must take precedence in extradition proceedings. Guerra explained that his legal team brought a broad argument centered on abuse of process before the CCJ, arguing that any extradition of a Belizean citizen must adhere strictly to existing domestic law, rather than bypassing constitutional safeguards.

    “In this digital age, we all use platforms like WhatsApp and other messaging services to share private information, and every citizen has a legitimate expectation that their communications will remain protected,” Guerra said. “The CCJ’s ruling confirmed that lower courts made a material error in relying on a law that was not even active when the evidence was gathered.”

    Guerra added that even without the Interception of Communication Act in place, Belize’s common law framework requires judicial oversight for any interception of private communications. Those constitutional and common law arguments will now be fully advanced in the new High Court hearing.

    Guerra confirmed that Bennett’s legal team is currently drafting new arguments for the upcoming hearing, including an additional claim of entrapment. As of the latest update, no official date has been scheduled for the new proceedings.