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Guilty pleas in Caribbean gay cruise arrests - Associated Press - Posted: Mar 21, 2012 5:29 PM EDT | US man tells of 'humiliating' arrest in Dominica via Puerto Rico - Associated Press - Newswire on 3/23/12

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KEYC - Mankato News, Weather, Sports -Guilty pleas in Caribbean gay cruise arrests
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The two were aboard the Celebrity Summit cruise ship that had departed Puerto Rico on Saturday with about 2000 passengers. The ship departed for St. Barts late Wednesday, leaving the men behind. The cruise was organized by Atlantis Events, ...
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Guilty pleas in Caribbean gay cruise arrests
Posted: Mar 21, 2012 5:29 PM EDT<em class="wnDate">Wednesday, March 21, 2012 5:29 PM EST</em>Updated: Mar 22, 2012 2:00 PM EDT<em class="wnDate">Thursday, March 22, 2012 2:00 PM EST</em>

By CARLISLE JNO BAPTISTE
Associated Press

ROSEAU, Dominica (AP) - Two Southern California men pleaded guilty on Thursday to indecent exposure in Dominica after they were arrested during a stop on a gay cruise of the Caribbean.

John Robert Hart, 41, and Dennis Jay Mayer, 43, of Palm Springs, said they regretted their actions. Police said they were seen having sex in plain sight of people on land, prompting officers to board the ship and arrest them on Wednesday.

"We humbly apologize to the people of Dominica," both men said during the hearing.

The two initially were arrested on suspicion of the local equivalent of sodomy in the eastern Caribbean island, which prohibits sex between two men.

The men's attorney, Bernadette Lambert, said they were remorseful.

"They were struck by the beautiful mountains, the clean and clear fresh air and were having a few cocktails, and so threw caution to the wind," she told the court.

Chief Magistrate Evaline Baptiste ordered the men to pay a nearly $900 fine after calling them "rogues and vagabonds." They made no comment after the hearing and police drove the men to the airport after they were released.

The two were aboard the Celebrity Summit cruise ship that had departed Puerto Rico on Saturday with about 2,000 passengers. The ship departed for St. Barts late Wednesday, leaving the men behind.

The cruise was organized by Atlantis Events, a Southern California company that specializes in gay travel. President Rich Campbell did not immediately respond to requests for comment following the hearing.

Dozens of islanders packed the courtroom in the capital of Roseau to attend the 30-minute hearing.

Dominica Tourism Minister Ian Douglas said that tourists should abide by local laws regardless of their religious or sexual orientation, and that cruise ship officials should make passengers aware of these laws.

"It cannot be the responsibility of Dominica to screen guests and tourists before they come into the country," he said. "It is expected that any time people come to a country, they will respect the laws of the country."

Gay Caribbean cruises have been popular for several years despite hostility to homosexuality on certain islands, especially in Jamaica, Barbados and the Cayman Islands.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

 

US man tells of 'humiliating' arrest in Dominica

via Puerto Rico Newswire on 3/23/12

... on a deck of a Celebrity Summit cruise ship by someone on the dock. (Dominica Police Department / AP) SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) - A Southern Californian said Friday that he and his partner were taunted, humiliated and subjected to inhumane ...

 

US man tells of 'humiliating' arrest in Dominica

DANICA COTO, Associated PressCopyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

DANICA COTO, Associated Press
Updated 08:04 p.m., Friday, March 23, 2012
  • In this two picture combo, John Hart, 41, Dennis Jay Mayer, 43, both of Palm Springs, California, are seen in this police booking mug provided by the Dominica Police department, Thursday March 22, 2012.  The Southern California men have pleaded guilty to indecent exposure in Dominica following their arrest during a stop on a gay cruise of the Caribbean. Police said the two men were seen engaging in a public sex on a deck of a Celebrity Summit cruise ship by someone on the dock. Photo: Dominica Police Department / AP

    In this two picture combo, John Hart, 41, Dennis Jay Mayer, 43, both of Palm Springs, California, are seen in this police booking mug provided by the Dominica Police department, Thursday March 22, 2012. The Southern California men have pleaded guilty to indecent exposure in Dominica following their arrest during a stop on a gay cruise of the Caribbean. Police said the two men were seen engaging in a public sex on a deck of a Celebrity Summit cruise ship by someone on the dock. (Dominica Police Department / AP)

 

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — A Southern Californian said Friday that he and his partner were taunted, humiliated and subjected to inhumane treatment when they were arrested and jailed after being escorted off a gay cruise in the Caribbean this week.

Dennis Jay Mayer, 53, told The Associated Press that he has no doubt they were arrested in Dominica because they were gay. Police said it was because they were seen having sex in public on the balcony of their ship cabin. He said they were not having sex, but were "partially clothed."

Mayer, a retired deputy sheriff, spoke to the AP in San Juan, where he and his partner of 17 years, John Robert Hart, arrived after being released following their guilty plea to indecent exposure.

"The total experience was horrendous," he said. "They told us that they did not like us, that they did not like gay people."

Dominica is among several Caribbean islands that have laws prohibiting sex between men.

The trouble began shortly after the cruise ship Celebrity Summit docked Wednesday morning at Dominica in the eastern Caribbean. Mayer and Hart were in their room when they got a call from a cruise ship official.

"We were summoned that the captain wished to speak to us," Mayer said. "We were caught off guard."

Three cruise ship officials and six Dominica police officers were waiting for them. After police interviewed both men separately, the assistant captain spoke, Mayer said.

"At this time, we are going to eject you from the ship. We have zero tolerance toward your behavior," Mayer recalled him saying.

Police drove them to their headquarters, where they sat on a bench for nearly two hours without legal representation despite repeated requests, Mayer said.

After police took pictures and obtained fingerprints, a high-ranking officer began a nearly four-hour interrogation.

"He said: 'You're being arrested for being gay. We're arresting you for the crime of buggery,'" Mayer said. "He said that other people said that we were engaging in homosexual sex. He repeated that several times. I told him I didn't know why they would say that. I wasn't doing that."

Mayer said he was naked in his cabin and nearly naked on the balcony. "I was less partially clothed than I should have been."

During the interrogation, the police official threatened to take them to a clinic and have them medically examined for proof of homosexual activity, Mayer said.

"He said, you know, we're looking for specific things, fluids, bruising, things of that nature," Mayer said.

After making the threat, the official left the room, then came back saying they had a right to refuse the test, Mayer said.

The two men were charged with indecent exposure and put in a five-by-eight-foot cell to await an appearance before a magistrate.

"The treatment was inhumane," Mayer said. "We were detained for approximately 26 hours, and 19 of those locked in a cement cell, which had no running water, no toilet, no lights. It stunk of feces and urine. It was infested with cockroaches, ants and bugs."

Mayer said police brought in government officials to look at them.

"They paraded many people by to look in on us as if we were some type of animal, which was quite humiliating," he said. "People got great joy in the pleasure of taunting us."

On Thursday morning, police drove them to the courthouse in the capital of Roseau, passing through an angry crowd, Mayer said.

"They were chanting and banging on the police vehicle. They were screaming things," he said. "I've never seen anything like this in my life, other than in movies. Both my partner and I really feared for our safety."

Police drove around the block twice to avoid the crowd and journalists. Officers formed a barricade with their bodies and urged Mayer and his partner to run into the courthouse and not stop.

"It was very frightening," Mayer said.

Once in the courtroom, Chief Magistrate Evaline Baptiste ordered the men to pay a nearly $900 fine after they pleaded guilty to indecent exposure. He called the two men "rogues and vagabonds."

Police then drove them to the airport, Mayer said.

He said he would never return to Dominica.

"I would not spend my money in a country that does not support gay behavior," he said. "Shame on us for not doing our research."

However, Colin Robinson, executive director of a Trinidad-based gay rights group, warned against labeling the entire Caribbean as homophobic. He said a heterosexual couple in the same situation would have been charged as well.

"Things are not as bleak as the journalists in the U.S. like to paint the Caribbean as being," he said.

Read more: http://www.timesunion.com/news/article/US-man-tells-of-humiliating-arrest-in-Dominica-3430620.php#ixzz1q1CqM4Hs

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