In a major joint law enforcement operation targeting illegal weapons trafficking, Guyanese authorities have seized 23 United States-manufactured AK-47 assault rifles and hundreds of rounds of ammunition in Schoonord, West Bank Demerara, senior law enforcement officials confirmed Friday. One suspect has been taken into custody, while two other accomplices managed to evade capture following the Thursday night interdiction, according to Deputy Police Commissioner Wendell Blanhum, head of the Guyana Police Force’s Criminal Investigations Department (CID).
Ballistic experts have already confirmed that all 23 seized assault rifles originated from the U.S. Blanhum noted that one of the weapons still has its original serial number fully intact, while the identifying markings on the remaining 22 rifles have been deliberately destroyed to hinder tracing efforts. Along with the firearms, officers seized a substantial cache of ammunition; local outlet Demerara Waves has confirmed the haul totals 504 rounds of 7.62X39 caliber, the standard ammunition for the AK-47 platform.
The intercepted cache was discovered during a targeted stop of a suspicious motor vehicle, carried out through a partnership between the Guyana Police Force and the Customs Anti-Narcotics Unit (CANU), an agency focused on disrupting cross-border illicit trade. The arrested suspect has been identified as 28-year-old Jonathan Gans, a Venezuelan national residing in Third Street, Grove, East Bank Demerara. As of Friday afternoon, Gans remained in police custody as detectives conduct ongoing interrogations, while CID Crime Laboratory firearms specialists continue forensic examinations of the seized weapons to build a full case file.
The seizure comes as Guyana and the broader Caribbean Community (CARICOM) have for years repeatedly called on the United States to step up collaborative efforts to stem the steady flow of illegally trafficked firearms into the region. In response to these regional concerns, the U.S. has previously extended an invitation for Caribbean nations to join the Regional Integrated Ballistic Information Network (RIBIN), a cross-border database system designed to help detect, track, and intercept illicit weapons moving through the Caribbean.
This latest high-volume weapons seizure also follows a separate major arms bust just one month prior, when 10 other AK-47 assault rifles were recovered in Berbice. Three Guyanese nationals are currently facing prosecution in court over that earlier incident, underscoring the growing challenge of transnational weapons trafficking impacting the South American Caribbean nation.
