Weekly Weather Forecast With Jesse Daley
Police Investigate Fatal Shooting in Estate Tutu
Officers dispatched to Yellow Cedar Avenue in Estate Tutu, Saturday May 16, discovered an unresponsive male who sustained what appeared to be multiple gunshot wounds. This followed the Shot Spotter Detection system detecting gunshots around 11:32 p.m. Friday, May 15th in the area of Estate Tutu, the Virgin Islands Police Department reported.
Emergency Medical Technicians responded to the scene and concluded the male did not have any vital signs. The victim’s next of kin identified him as 54-year-old Luciano A. Warrell Jr., the police report stated. His death marks the fifth homicide of the year on St. Thomas, and the 12th for the territory, according to the Source Homicide List.*
Anyone with information regarding this incident is urged to contact the VIPD at 340-774-2211 or the Major Crimes Unit at 340-642-8449 via WhatsApp. Individuals can also call Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477 (TIPS) or dial 911.
*The Source Homicide List is a chronological log of the homicides recorded in 2026 in the U.S. Virgin Islands, as reported by the VIPD. Cases are broken down by island. While this listing is based on VIPD reports, the Source does not include suicides or vehicular homicides in its listing, which the police and some other media do. This can lead to a discrepancy in the number of incidents reported.
Two Virgin Islands Cargo Ships Banned From San Juan

Two Virgin Islands cargo ships returned to Christiansted and Tortola Friday after being barred from San Juan for allegedly blocking a vital shipping lane.
The Water Spirit 2, operated by Water Spirit Freight Services VI, conducted regular sailings between St. Croix, Tortola, St. Thomas, and Puerto Rico — until May 1 when the U.S. Coast Guard cited the ship and another vessel for blocking San Antonio Channel within the San Juan Harbor.
“Until further notice, vessels Water Spirit 2 and Admiral Pride will not be cleared to re-enter San Juan Harbor unless they demonstrate to the Coast Guard their ability to moor in accordance with well-established industry standards without impacting the safe navigation of vessels within the harbor’s finite waterways,” according to a statement from the Coast Guard.
The two boats were improperly moored in the narrow channel, according to the Coast Guard. The 1.2-mile-long waterway is one of the busiest in the Eastern Caribbean despite being only 300-to-500-feet wide. Some of the world’s largest cruise ships regularly moor “just across” from where the Admiral Pride and the Water Spirit 2 had used the med-mooring technique while obstructing the navigable channel, the statement said.
It was not clear if the vessel owners had been fined, but they could have faced fines of up to $117,608 for each day of a continuing violation, according to the statement. It was not immediately clear if Water Spirit Freight Services VI also owned the Admiral Pride, which arrived in Road Harbour Friday.
“It is critical for commercial, military, and recreational traffic to have equitable and safe access to the federal navigable waterways in the bay. While urban development has displaced some cargo operations, facilities still exist to accommodate these vital supply vessels. Laying anchor in the channel and reducing its navigable capacity is unlawful, endangers navigation, affects the local economy and puts the safety of our maritime facilities and vessels at risk,” said Capt. Luis J. Rodríguez, commander of Coast Guard Sector San Juan.
The Water Spirit website has added a statement that they no longer offer shipping to and from San Juan. A person answering the phone at their office said they were not sure when it would be able to again.
The VI Port Authority issued a statement Friday recognizing the docking restriction would significantly impact cargo transportation services between Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, adversely affecting residents and local businesses.
Water Spirit Freight Services VI had offered twice weekly sailings from the USVI to San Juan and once weekly from Tortola, shipping dry goods, produce, refrigerated material, vehicles, heavy equipment, furniture, large appliances, construction materials, and fragile items, according to the company’s website.
USVI Outdoor Recreation Website Invites Public to Help Shape Future Park, Trail, and Waterfront Projects

A new public engagement website is inviting residents and visitors to weigh in on the future of parks, trails, beaches, sports fields, and other outdoor recreation spaces across the U.S. Virgin Islands, as officials prepare a plan to guide improvements over the next decade.
The website is part of the 2026-2036 U.S. Virgin Islands Territorial Comprehensive Outdoor Recreation Plan (TCORP), a federally required plan that will help guide outdoor recreation and conservation priorities across St. Croix, St. Thomas and St. John.
New Website Launches for Public Input
The public engagement site was launched by the Horsley Witten Group (HWG), an environmental consulting firm working with the Virgin Islands Department of Planning and Natural Resources (DPNR) and its Division of Territorial Parks and Protected Areas.
The site gives the public two ways to provide feedback: a public opinion survey and an interactive mapping tool.
“The online platform marks a key step in the public engagement process for the TCORP, providing tools for island residents and visitors to share how they use outdoor recreation and conservation areas,” according to a press release from HWG. “It features two separate surveys: a traditional public opinion survey for feedback on recreation habits, preferred amenities, and access to parks, trails, and waterfront spaces, and an interactive “Survey123” web map for location-specific input,” HWG said.

“The interactive map allows users to drop pins directly on a digital map of the U.S. Virgin Islands and leave comments tied to specific sites. Participants can highlight areas needing improvement or suggest new recreational amenities, offering a detailed and geographically specific form of public input.”
The Source contacted Craig Pereira, senior planner/project manager with the Horsley Witten Group, for additional details about the project. Pereira explained that his role includes coordinating with Kristina “Kitty” Edwards, director of Territorial Parks and Protected Areas as the project moves through inventory work, site assessments, and public engagement.
Pereira said the team has been developing an inventory of recreation sites that will be reviewed as part of the planning process. The work will include on-island site assessments, meetings with stakeholders, consultations with a technical advisory committee, and public workshops across the territory.
“Currently we’re working on developing our itinerary and schedule for those on-island site assessments as well as the public meetings across the three main islands of the USVI,” Pereira said.
Interactive Map
The “Survey123” mapping tool allows users to drop a pin on an existing or proposed recreation location and provide input tied to that specific place. The website also allows users to view a map inventory of outdoor recreation facilities in the territory, click on map points for more information, and upload photos for the project team to review.
“This phase of the project is about making it easy for residents and visitors to provide meaningful feedback on the territory’s outdoor recreation resources,” Pereira said in the press release announcing the website launch. “The interactive map, in particular, allows users to connect their input directly to specific parks, trails, sports fields, and waterfronts, helping ensure future investments will reflect how these spaces are actually used.”
Pereira told the Source that the interactive map gives the public a way to comment on existing sites, identify concerns, and point out locations that may not yet be formally recognized as recreation assets.
Through the mapping tool, users can also identify lesser-known outdoor spaces that they believe should be considered in the planning process.
Public Survey Looks at How Recreation Areas Are Used
The website also includes a separate Public Opinion Survey, which asks broader questions about how people use outdoor recreation facilities and open spaces in the territory.

“We want to know what individuals across the territory are happy with and what activities they are not happy with. For example, are people satisfied with amenities that are provided at a park, and are there issues like safety or security measures or better access to a park that would improve the use and enjoyment of an outdoor recreation facility? When we understand the needs of the public, we can start to develop a list of what’s working and what could be improved upon,” Pereira said.
The online survey is open to residents and visitors. Pereira said the project team is seeking input from anyone who uses outdoor recreation facilities and open spaces in the territory.
Edwards said in the press release that the surveys will help the project team better understand how outdoor recreation areas are currently used and where improvements may be needed.
“We are excited to have the public engagement phase of this project kicked off! The Public Opinion Survey will serve to better understand how residents and tourists utilize outdoor recreation – where they visit, what are the preferred amenities, and how they typically access parks, trails, and waterfront areas,” Edwards stated. “The Survey 123 web map will provide site-specific information regarding favorite destinations or the identification of areas that may be underserved and in need of outdoor recreational facilities.”
Public participation will continue beyond the online tools, with outreach efforts expected to include on-island meetings and coordination with local organizations.
Pereira said the project team will post information about upcoming workshops and meetings once the schedule is finalized.
“Once our on-island itinerary is confirmed, we’ll be posting our workshops and meetings, including when we’re going to be on island and where, so we want to make sure people are well aware of that in advance,” Pereira said.
Plan Will Guide Future Recreation Funding
The public input gathered through the website will help inform a plan that carries both local and federal importance for the territory’s outdoor recreation future, according to the HWG press release.
“The TCORP is a federally required plan that allows the U.S. Virgin Islands to remain eligible for Land and Water Conservation Fund support, administered by the National Park Service,” the HWG reported. “More than $2 million is expected to fund improvements to parks, recreational facilities, and public access across the territory, with the plan guiding how these funds are prioritized and invested over the next decade in coordination with DPNR and its Division of Territorial Parks and Protected Areas. The TCORP is expected to be completed by early 2027.”
Residents and visitors can access the project website, public opinion survey, and interactive maps at https://www.usvioutdoors.com/.
Virgin Islands Center for Autonomous Research showcases technology at Boating Expo

On Saturday, at the third annual Virgin Islands Boating Expo, held at IGY’s Yacht Haven Grande Marina in St. Thomas, researchers from the University of the Virgin Islands showcased cutting-edge technology during a Virgin Islands Center for Autonomous Research demonstration.
At the VICAR outreach event, researchers from the University of the Virgin Islands’ Virgin Islands Reef Response and VICAR also showcased live coral, virtual reality headsets, and underwater robots to help residents, especially children, better understand what is happening beneath the surface of local waters.
Lauren Ollinger, a research assistant professor at UVI’s Center for Marine and Environmental Studies and head of VICAR, said the work builds on years of diver-based coral reef surveys.
“The history of the Center for Autonomous Research is we have for a long time been doing manual diver-based surveys of coral reefs, specifically. Here in the Virgin Islands, we have 34 sites that we monitor annually, so divers go out every year to the same sites. These systems are changing and dying faster than we can keep up with using these traditional ways of surveying them.”
She said advances in artificial intelligence, autonomous vehicles, sensors, and batteries are now reshaping how that work is done.
“With this explosion in artificial intelligence and this revolution in autonomous vehicles and sensors, even batteries, there’s really a lot of these kinds of devices coming online. We set out early on to see how we could use these kinds of technologies to incorporate them into this program, and it was a strategic approach to develop methods specifically for the monitoring program.”
Ollinger said the team is already using the robots on real missions.
“We are actually deploying these technologies out on the coral reefs, and we pre-program these missions so they run by themselves. They can behave intelligently, they have obstacle avoidance, and they collect images at a really efficient rate compared to humans. That’s one of the reasons we’re motivated to use them, because they help us collect higher-resolution data.”
Samuel Gittins Jr., a coral research fellow and professional science master’s student at the University of the Virgin Islands, said the technology is being developed to identify “diseases and other different stressors in the coral space” underwater.
Gittins also said the hands-on experience helps spark student interest in marine science and robotics.
“It really helps spark their excitement,” he said. “Honestly, in the world of science, I bet they didn’t know that something like this existed, that you could actually control it yourself.”
Ollinger said children quickly adapted to the robot controls. She added that VICAR works with many different groups within the Center for Marine Science at UVI.
Nicholas Durgadeen, coral restoration technician with the Virgin Islands Reef Response program at UVI, said the technology helps students better understand an underwater world many have never experienced firsthand.
“Technology just provides that extra avenue in which we can teach them and really get them to understand what it’s like to be in that world,” Durgadeen said. “For kids who may not have had the experience to be in the water or scuba dive before, they get to see what it’s like and decide if this is a path they want to go down in life.”
Durgadeen said the reef restoration work often runs alongside the autonomous research group at UVI, which takes a different approach to accomplishing the same goals.
“They have a lot of autonomous and remotely operated vehicles that they try to go out and survey and monitor coral reefs. Instead of what our lab does, where we’ll go down to these sites and assess them with manpower people actually there, this lab is trying a different approach using remotely operated vehicles or autonomous operating vehicles.”
Ollinger said VICAR is a core group within the university working to develop new technologies and apply them across multiple research labs.
“We are the VICAR Lab, so we are a core group of people working to develop these technologies and then plug them into different labs,” she said. “A big part of that is the data infrastructure that we’re building. Behind the scenes of all this snazzy robots is actually a lot of coding that we’re doing day to day, and the purpose of that is to make these approaches usable for our entire department, not only for our single project and our single lab, but to eventually be used for mangrove surveys or coral restoration.”
She said the hands-on learning component is also important for students.
“Learning these kinds of skills, learning about engineering, learning about how things work, how it looks versus how it functions. I think it’s important,” she said.
Win Secures Smith Spot in SEC Championships Saturday
VI Sports Ambassador Michelle Smith, a sophomore at the University of Georgia, delivered an outstanding performance in the 400m Hurdles at the SEC Championships, winning her heat in a time of 56.05 seconds.

With this victory, she has secured her place in the finals, set to take place on Saturday, May 16.
The Virgin Islands Track & Field Federation proudly congratulates Michelle on this achievement, recognizing her talent, dedication, and continued success as she represents the Virgin Islands on the collegiate stage.
Harold Ezekiel Brown Sr. Dies at 85

Messages of Pride, Perseverance Highlight UVI’s 62nd Commencement on St. Croix




UVI Celebrates 62nd Commencement Ceremony on St. Thomas

Candidates for associates, bachelors, and graduate degrees took their seats in the Elridge Blake Sports and Fitness Center shortly after 1 p.m. They were welcomed by UVI President Safiyah George and Board of Trustees Chairman Henry Smock.
”I am extremely proud of the entire ambitious Class of 2026,” the president said. “The nearly 300 graduates in the Class of 2026 will be adding to the over 11,000 graduates from the College of the Virgin Islands and the University of the Virgin Islands over the past 64 years since our founding in 1962 as the territory’s only institution of higher education,” George said.
Joining the president on stage were members of her administration, Lieutenant Gov. Tregenza Roach, Senate President Milton Potter and Delegate to Congress Stacey Plaskett. They were joined by Class Speaker Zeidan Bass and Keynote Speaker Adam O’Neal.
Chairman Smock led the line of dignitaries handing out diplomas to students who completed their studies and qualified for graduation.
In her remarks, George pointed out the degrees earned by five students completing studies as Education Specialists in School Psychology – degrees being awarded for the first time in 10 years. The Class of 2026 also included students completing studies in the School of Agriculture and others from the Executive Masters in Business Administration.
Also singled out for recognition were students graduating with top grade point averages, student athletes and leaders of the UVI Student Government Association.
“UVI’s Class of 2026 is full of unicorns and scholars,” the president said.
Bass, the class speaker, once served as student government president. He is also one of UVI’s international student hailing from St. Kitts. He addressed his classmates with a mix of humor and relief.
“Today is more than just a ceremony. It is a celebration of years of sacrifice, determination, and surviving on little sleep and pure faith during finals week,” he said. “Each of us sit here at this graduation ceremony with different backgrounds, different struggles, different dreams; but today all of those journeys meet with one shared accomplishment — we made it,” Bass said.

It was also a day to celebrate the recognition of a popular local entertainer, entrepreneur and military combat veteran. St. Croix Soca Artist Adam O’Neal – known as Adam O – received a Doctorate of Humane Letters for valor, creativity and global reach as a Virgin Islands cultural ambassador.
“It’s an honor to be here with you and I want to debunk one thing; one thing that keeps circulating in our community, and that thing is this: the Virgin Islands does support our own. The Virgin Islands supports our own in ways that the rest of the world can’t understand.
‘And I’m standing here right now as an embodiment of my community supporting me and making me go all around the world with a flag I am most proud of,” O’Neal said.
Commencement celebrations wrapped up on Friday at the Albert Sheen Campus on St. Croix presenting degrees to students there. The keynote speaker for the day was Rena Brodhurst, longtime publisher and editor of the St. Croix Avis.
Bowsky Students Celebrate ‘Week of the Young Child’ with Truck Show

Fourth- and fifth-grade students at Yvonne E. Milliner-Bowsky Elementary School on St. Thomas met professional truck drivers Friday, who volunteered their time during a hands-on career event highlighting transportation jobs and future workforce opportunities.
The event was part of the school’s “Week of the Intermediate Child” celebration, a program focused on older elementary students as they prepare to transition into middle school. This year’s theme, “Big Rigs, Big Dreams: Moving Places,” transformed the campus into a career-focused learning space centered on trucking and transportation, encouraging students to think broadly about future career paths.
“We’re highlighting the Week of the Intermediate Child, which focuses on our fourth and fifth grade students,” said assistant principal Kalamis Maduro. “It actually originated here years ago, so it’s something that’s sustainable that we wanted to keep active and going in the school.”
Maduro said the week included a series of themed activities leading up to Friday’s truck show. Students built cardboard trucks earlier in the week, which truck drivers were scheduled to judge for realism, creativity and innovation. They also participated in career dress-up days, took part in a “Wacky Wednesday,” and observed transportation-themed activities representing different modes of travel.
Maduro said the event also aimed to challenge stereotypes about who can work in the trucking industry, noting that students often associate truck driving with men. She said organizers intentionally highlighted women and younger drivers to broaden that perception and show students a wider range of role models.
Among the participants were Le’cajae Henry, a recent Ivanna Eudora Kean High School graduate who drives a truck known as “Unruly Beast,” and Namibia Williams, a Department of Education employee who also works in transportation.
The event also featured 9-year-old Keegan Brooks of the British Virgin Islands, who can already operate a truck under supervision. Organizers said his participation was meant to show students that age should not limit what they believe they can achieve.
Maduro said the final activity would involve a water truck interacting with students in a celebratory end-of-week event.
Paraprofessional Kishma David said one goal of the event was to expand students’ understanding of success beyond a traditional college path. She said many students are often taught that a four-year degree is the only route to stability, but that skilled trades can also lead to strong careers.
David pointed to trucking as an example, noting that students can pursue training, earn a commercial driver’s license and build high-paying careers in the industry without attending college. She said the message was intended to show students that multiple pathways can lead to success in life and that they should not feel limited in their future options.
She also said the idea for the truck show was partly inspired by students’ natural interest in trucks during school activities, recalling how excited children would be when drivers honked their horns during outdoor time. That enthusiasm, she said, helped spark the idea for a hands-on career event featuring real trucks and drivers on campus.
The truckers were volunteers who, according to staff, were eager to attend and answer students’ questions.
“Apparently it seems like it’s been over three years since there was a truck show,” Maduro said. “So the truck drivers were very enthusiastic and willing. Today we even had truck drivers that came that weren’t invited because they were so excited to share their craft and their careers… just showing the children that there are other things that you can do once you apply yourself, and as the years go on, we’ll pick different trades for them to explore.”




