C
Charles Frick
Cruising with guns aboard in the Bahamas is standard practice particularly if one expects to anchor in remote locations. The Bahamian authorities know this, expect it; but expect that you conform to their laws by declaring all fire arms, amounts of ammunition, serial numbers, etc. Several yeas ago we entered the Bahamas at Walker's Cay expecting to cruise through the Abacos, down the length of Eluthera, accross to Little SanSalvador, down the length of Cat Island, then hop over to Conception Island, then to George Town on Great EXuma Island, a trip I had been accustomed doing for several years, anchoring out every night in what frequently were totally deserted anchorages. On declaring the guns (one a 38 cal.Smith& Wesson stainless snubnose revolver, the other a 9mm stainless automatic), I forgot to copy the serial number of one of them and on entering the information on Bahamian Customs forms, I stupidly entered a ficticious number just to expedite the proceedure. My boat at the time was a 27 ft. SeaRay Sundancer, a boat highly favored by drug runners because of its cheap price and load carrying ability (a wide 10 ft. beam). For that reason the boat (and myself) had been under suspition, for this was the 4th year in a row i had made the trip. AS a result, I spent four days in a Nassau jail because of the gun serial number discrepancy (while the authorities searched my boat stem to stern in league with the DEA). I was issued a legal clean-bill-of-health by the Bahamian Courts & their police now have two nice stainless steal weapons which were confiscated. Don't ever mess with the law in foreigh countries.