Former Turks and Caicos Premier Jailed in Landmark Caribbean Corruption Case

Nearly two decades after systemic political corruption was first exposed in the Turks and Caicos Islands (TCI), one of the Caribbean’s most high-profile and long-running public integrity scandals has reached a defining milestone: former TCI Premier Michael Misick has been handed a custodial prison sentence following his conviction on multi-count corruption charges.

In a packed Supreme Court hearing held Friday, Justice Rajendra Narine imposed a sentence of four years and 26 days behind bars. The conviction itself was handed down on February 4, 2026, when the judge found Misick guilty on three counts of bribery tied to fraudulent government land and development agreements. Misick was not convicted alone: his co-defendants, former Cabinet minister McAllister Hanchell and attorney Thomas Chalmers Misick, were also found guilty in the same ruling.

Misick held the highest elected office in TCI from 2006 to 2009, when the scandal first upended the territory’s government. The scheme at the heart of the case relied on complex, opaque multinational corporate structures and hidden cross-border banking transfers totaling more than $21 million U.S. dollars, all connected to large-scale luxury tourist development projects across the island chain.

In his sentencing remarks, Justice Narine emphasized that corruption among elected public officials amounts to a severe breach of the fundamental trust that citizens place in their leaders. He noted that the public interest unequivocally demands prison time for such offenses, serving both as punishment for the wrongdoing and a deterrent to other officials who might consider similar illegal conduct. The judge categorized Misick’s offending as falling into the highest tier of severity, pointing to three key aggravating factors: the massive personal financial gain obtained through the scheme, the deliberate abuse of a senior public office, and the sophisticated, layered tactics the co-conspirators used to carry out and hide their criminal activities. In his earlier February conviction ruling, Narine went further, stating plainly that public office “is not a licence for personal enrichment” and confirming that Misick’s actions directly violated the basic standards of honesty and integrity that the public is owed by elected representatives.

The case stretches back almost 20 years to its initial exposure. In the mid-2000s, a public Commission of Inquiry commissioned by the United Kingdom — which holds sovereign responsibility for TCI as an overseas territory — and led by retired judge Sir Robin Auld uncovered conclusive evidence of systemic corruption and widespread abuse of office among TCI’s top senior officials. The scale of the findings was so severe that the UK government took the extraordinary step of suspending key provisions of the territory’s constitution in 2009, imposing temporary direct British rule while law enforcement launched full criminal investigations into the wrongdoing.

To pursue the complex case, authorities established a dedicated Special Investigation and Prosecution Team. Over the course of more than 15 years, the team navigated tangled international legal processes, countless legal challenges from defendants, and multi-country extradition proceedings before finally securing the historic convictions against Misick and his co-conspirators. Friday’s sentencing closes one of the final major chapters in a scandal that reshaped public accountability expectations for small island governments across the Caribbean region.