Farmer jailed for firearm, ammo, cocaine

A 41-year-old Penniston-based farmer has been handed a 39-month concurrent prison sentence by the Serious Offences Court following his guilty plea on illegal firearm, ammunition and cocaine possession charges stemming from a large-scale Royal St. Vincent and the Grenadines Police Force operation.

Orde McTair was one of three men taken into custody on March 26 during a coordinated anti-crime sweep targeting a known cannabis cultivation site in Bower Mountain, Georgetown. The operation brought together officers from multiple police units, including the Rapid Response Unit, led by Station Sergeant John to search for illicit weapons, ammunition and controlled substances at the remote farm.

Court documents detail that at approximately 6 a.m. that day, the law enforcement team arrived at a small on-site hut and found three men sleeping inside. After Station Sergeant John woke the group, identified his team as police officers, and notified them of the planned search, one man attempted to flee past responding Police Constable 73 Jack. Jack successfully detained the individual, but an initial search of his person turned up no contraband. When officers searched the bunk bed the man had been sleeping on, they uncovered a Glock 23 pistol wrapped in a multicolored sheet, loaded with 11 rounds of .40 caliber ammunition. A subsequent search of the hut also recovered approximately five grams of cocaine.

All three men—McTair, 35-year-old plumber Milton Charles of Penniston, and 36-year-old farmer Deiroy Glasgow of Rabacca and Penniston—were arrested and charged jointly with three counts of illegal possession. All three defendants denied any knowledge of the hidden weapons and drugs when cautioned by officers, and declined to provide formal written statements after being transferred to the Central Police Station.

In a surprising turn of proceedings, McTair entered a guilty plea to all three charges, while Charles and Glasgow maintained not guilty pleas. Prosecuting Inspector Renrick Cato moved to withdraw all charges against the two remaining defendants after accepting McTair’s guilty plea.

McTair’s defense counsel Grant Connell argued in mitigation for a non-custodial sentence, noting the defendant’s personal circumstances as a working farmer. However, Chief Magistrate Colin John rejected this request, pointing to McTair’s prior criminal conviction for illegal firearm possession as a key factor in justifying a strict custodial sentence. The Chief Magistrate imposed 39-month prison terms for both the unlicensed firearm and unlicensed ammunition charges, alongside a three-month sentence for cocaine possession, ruling that all sentences would run concurrently. The outcome marks a significant conclusion to one of the local police force’s targeted anti-crime operations in the region this year.