REPEAT OFFENDER? Kareem Harrigan (far right, mouth open) was sentenced to one year today.
[ad name=”HTML-68″] [wpedon id=”23995″ align=”left”]CHARLOTTE AMALIE — A Hidden Valley man was sentenced today to a year behind bars because he pleaded guilty to a gun crime that occurred in August, the Virgin Islands Free Press has learned.
Kareem Harrigan, 29, who was originally charged with one count each of unauthorized possession of a firearm, unauthorized possession of ammunition, possession of a controlled substance with intent to distribute and failure to register pleaded guilty to the single charge of failure to register.
“I’d like to say sorry,” Harrigan told the court before V.I. Superior Court Judge Denise Francois handed down her punishment – one year incarceration with all but three months suspended with credit for time already served.
Harrigan was immediately remanded into custody to begin serving his sentence.
Attorney General Claude Earl Walker said the Department of Justice and the people of the Virgin Islands take gun violation and gun possession very seriously.
“We will continue to aggressively prosecute these gun cases to combat the problems caused by illegal firearms,” AG Walker said.
According to an affidavit filed by Det. Alex Dorsett detailing the incident that led to Harrigan’s arrest, on Aug. 31, 2017, police responded to a report of a suspicious backpack found in the lower cabinet of an apartment at Tutu Highrise. When officers arrived at the house, a woman told them that she discovered a small black backpack inside one of her kitchen cabinets. She stated that the backpack does not belong to her or anyone who resides inside her apartment.
The woman told police that a few days earlier, Harrigan asked her if he could leave his backpack at her residence, but she refused. She said she believes Harrigan hid his backpack inside her kitchen cabinet when she went into her bedroom. An inspection of the backpack revealed a loaded handgun and a blue cookie pan containing 38 plastic bags of marijuana, Dorsett wrote.
Harrigan turned himself in to police on Sept. 2, 2017, and admitted to police that the backpack and its contents belonged to him, according to Dorsett.
It is possible that vi free press obtained this photo from Mr. Harrigan social media, however it would be nice to block out the faces of the other men in the photo. The other young men in the photo is never talked about in your article or have they been charged of a crime.