‘I can’t fight these people no more’

For more than two years, Marvin and Aynalel Deveaux fought for answers after $9,000 in cash earmarked for life-changing medical treatment vanished from their Marathon Estates home during a police search. Now, that fight has ended with Marvin’s death – he never got to learn what happened to the money, or see the conclusion of the investigation his family waited so long for.

Mrs. Deveaux, 51, shared that her husband passed away in her arms in the early hours of last Thursday, following decades of debilitating health struggles. For roughly 20 years, Marvin battled kidney disease that required constant dialysis, and his 61st birthday would have fallen on July 2. In his final days, he told his wife he had lost the strength to keep pushing for accountability. “Anna, I can’t fight these people no more. My heart already broke. I don’t have energy,” he told her. “Today I die, or I die tomorrow, I don’t know how you will bury me because you don’t have money.” Just three days after he spoke those words, he died.

The long-running saga first came to public attention in May 2024, when the couple went public with their allegations against Bahamian law enforcement. The $9,000 that disappeared had been carefully saved to fund a medical trip to Turkey, where Marvin planned to undergo back surgery followed by a kidney transplant – Aynalel was set to donate one of her kidneys to give him a new chance at life.

According to Mrs. Deveaux’s account, officers arrived at the couple’s home with a search warrant, looking for illegal drugs and unregistered firearms. Despite having the warrant, officers ultimately entered a locked bedroom that belonged to her late mother-in-law, where the family had stored the cash in a secure hiding place. Because Marvin struggled with mobility due to his illness, Aynalel accompanied officers through the entire search. She says officers acknowledged seeing the cash, placed the bag it was stored in back in its spot, and then moved to search another section of the home. When Mrs. Deveaux tried to return to close the bedroom door moments later, an officer blocked her, saying the search was not finished and ordered her to go back to her own bedroom. After officers finished their search and left the property, she returned to the bedroom and found the entire sum of cash gone. She added that officers later admitted they had targeted the wrong home in the search.

The couple filed an official report for the missing money with local police the same day the search took place. When the case first became public, then-Deputy Commissioner of Police Leamond Deleveaux told local media that any findings from the internal investigation would be released to the public once the probe wrapped up. But by July 2025, more than a full year after the initial complaint was filed, the Deveaux family still had no update on the investigation, and no answers about where their money had gone. Mrs. Deveaux spoke at the time about the heavy toll the uncertainty took, explaining she struggled to juggle full-time work, mounting legal bills, and the growing cost of her husband’s ongoing medical care with no resolution in sight.

When The Tribune recently reached out to current Commissioner of Police Shanta Knowles to ask for an update on the investigation’s status, Knowles said she would check with the internal complaints unit to get clarity on the case. As of press time for this report, no additional update or comment has been provided from police leadership. In the months between July 2025 and Marvin’s death, the couple continued reaching out regularly for updates, but never received a satisfactory explanation for the missing funds before Marvin passed. As his health declined steadily, the lack of closure only grew into a heavier source of frustration and heartbreak for the couple.

Now, as Mrs. Deveaux grieves, she is also struggling to cover the cost of her husband’s funeral. Final arrangements are still being worked out, and severe financial constraints have forced her to consider cremation instead of the larger, traditional service she would have preferred. She has had to rely on support from friends and colleagues to cover basic funeral costs, and she says she is reaching out to members of the public for any assistance they can offer.

She also opened up about her deep disappointment with local politicians, who she says quickly reached out to express support when her husband’s case first made headlines, but have since fallen completely silent. “Election time, people come asking me what’s happened, what’s going on,” she recalled. “Now, you can’t find them. You have to make an appointment if you want to speak to them.”

The entire ordeal has left Mrs. Deveaux deeply disillusioned with life in the Bahamas, saying she feels completely abandoned by the country’s authorities and elected officials as she navigates grief and fights for accountability. “This country broke my heart,” she said. “Nobody came and asked what happened or what we needed.” The unfair experience has even pushed her to make the decision to leave the country permanently. “How can you stay here when you lose your husband and nobody helps you?” she questioned.

Mrs. Deveaux holds firm to the belief that her husband’s outcome would have been very different if the couple had been able to move forward with their plans for treatment in Turkey. “He was happy because he thought he was going to Turkey,” she said. “He told everybody ‘I’m going to fix my kidney and come back normal.’ After the money was gone, everything changed.” While there is no way to confirm definitively that the treatment would have saved Marvin’s life, his widow says he would have at least had a fighting chance. For her family, the loss was never just about the money – it was about the life that could have been. “The people didn’t take money,” she said. “The people took my husband’s life.”

Members of the public who wish to contribute to Marvin Deveaux’s funeral expenses can contact Aynalel Deveaux directly at 431-5105.