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Firearm Seized, Suspect Arrested in St. Croix Domestic Violence Case
A man accused of assaulting a woman and a child while pointing a firearm at them was arrested after police executed a search warrant at his home on St. Croix earlier this month, the V.I. Police Department announced.
According to the VIPD, a woman called the 911 Emergency Call Center at about 1:57 a.m. July 1 to report being assaulted by Michael Weeks. Detectives with the Criminal Investigation Bureau investigated and learned that Weeks allegedly brandished a firearm at the victim and a minor child.
On Sept. 4, a Superior Court judge approved a warrant to search Weeks’ residence and authorized his arrest, setting bail at $50,000. One week later, on Sept. 10, officers from the Criminal Investigation Bureau and Special Operations Bureau executed the warrants. Police said a firearm was found inside the residence.
Weeks was advised of his Miranda rights and admitted to owning the weapon, according to the department. He was arrested and charged with third-degree assault, carrying a firearm openly or concealed, possession of a dangerous weapon during a crime of violence, and brandishing and exhibiting a firearm, according to VIPD.
Unable to post bail, Weeks was transported to the John Bell Correctional Facility pending his Advice of Rights hearing, police said.
Roach Announces Closure of Public Schools and Government Offices Wednesday Due to Inclement Weather
Acting Gov. Tregenza A. Roach announced Tuesday that all public schools in both the St. Thomas-St. John and St. Croix districts, along with central government offices and all nonessential and non-emergency operations, will be closed Wednesday, because of forecasted inclement weather tied to tropical wave AL 94, a Government House press release announced.
“The safety of our students, public servants, and residents is our highest priority,” Roach said in a statement. “We are taking these steps to minimize risk, ensure our emergency response teams can operate effectively, and allow road crews the access they need to assess and clear our roadways, particularly in areas still saturated from heavy rainfall over the past week.”
Officials urged residents to stay off the roads to protect themselves and to allow emergency personnel and road crews to operate without obstruction, according to the press release.
Government agencies will conduct assessments throughout Wednesday to evaluate potential impacts on schools, public infrastructure, and communities. Officials are also monitoring another weather system in the region, the press release stated.
Updates will be provided Wednesday by the Virgin Islands Territorial Emergency Management Agency, the National Weather Service, and other emergency partners. Roach reminded residents to stay alert to official advisories, exercise caution, and prioritize their families’ safety, the release stated.
Marilyn Donawa Dies
The family of the late Marilyn Donawa is saddened to announce her passing on Sept. 10, 2025.
She was preceded in death by aunts: Minerva Washington, Gertrude and Esedra Powlis; Sisters: Rita Simeon, Shirley Marcus, Delores Hansen and Former Senator Alicia “Chucky” Hansen; Brothers: Louis Simeon and Joseph Marcus.
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DOJ Has Until Noon Wednesday to Defend its Appeal of Death Penalty Order in Dangleben Case
The V.I. Justice Department has until noon Wednesday to respond to an emergency motion to dismiss, or at least expedite, its appeal of a V.I. District Court order striking the government’s bid to seek the death penalty in the murder case of Richardson Dangleben Jr., the clerk of the Third Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled.
Clerk Patricia S. Dodszuweit has also advised that the case has been listed for possible dismissal “due to jurisdictional defect.”
Jury selection for Dangleben, charged with murder and other crimes in the July 2023 shooting death of V.I. Police Detective Delberth Phipps Jr. on St. Thomas, is set to begin in less than three weeks, on Oct. 6.
The government stated in February 2024 that it would not seek the death penalty but abruptly changed course in May after the Trump administration issued an executive order saying it would review all decisions not to seek capital punishment in eligible cases charged during the Biden administration, which did not support the death penalty.
After briefing on the issue by both sides, District Court Chief Judge Robert Molloy in August struck the government’s notice of intent to seek the death penalty, citing a number of concerns, including the fact that the DOJ’s request was not based on new information not previously available to the government, it came more than a year after the initial “no-seek” decision, was filed 22 months after Dangleben’s initial arrest, 19 months after his first indictment, and less than five months before trial.
With the trial now less than three weeks away, the DOJ filed notice Sept. 15 that it intends to appeal Molloy’s order to the Third Circuit. Public Defender Matthew Campbell, who is representing Dangleben, filed an emergency motion Friday asking that the appeal be dismissed or at least expedited.
“This Court should dismiss the appeal for lack of jurisdiction. The Court immediately recognized, sua sponte, that jurisdiction may not lie for this appeal. It does not. It is a bedrock rule of federal law that the courts of appeals lack jurisdiction over a governmental appeal in a criminal case except in circumstances explicitly authorized by Congress. None of those circumstances applies here. The Government pretends otherwise, invoking 18 U.S.C. § 3731, which authorizes certain specified interlocutory appeals. But that statute does not authorize an appeal from an order striking a death-penalty notice,” according to Campbell’s emergency motion.
Barring that, the court “can at least mitigate the harm by providing expedited consideration of this motion to dismiss and/or expedite the appeal, and by promptly considering and disposing of the Government’s meritless appeal, so that the trial can proceed on its current schedule if Mr. Dangleben prevails on either jurisdictional or merits grounds,” Campbell wrote.
He noted that Molloy’s order is also “consistent with the decisions of every other district court to have ruled on this issue to date, nationwide,” as they too have faced 11th-hour reversals of no-seek notices by the government since President Donald Trump took office.
“Moreover, the Government has foregone an appeal in every one of those other cases, which suggests that it is aware of the weakness of its position,” said Campbell.
Additionally, the government’s “belated attempt to file a Death Notice and now to appeal its striking threatens to delay the trial that the district court had announced and both sides understood is scheduled to commence in just three weeks, on October 6. The district court has explained that it would not be inclined to ‘grant a continuance because delaying this trial solely to accommodate the government’s flip-flopping would implicate the Defendant[’s] constitutional speedy trial rights,’” the motion states.
The resulting delay of an appeal “will not only implicate Mr. Dangleben’s speedy trial rights, it will also exacerbate his psychological anguish because of the uncertainty surrounding the potential punishment” should he be convicted, Campbell wrote.
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