Turks and Caicos, June 1, 2026 – No one thought that a premier who had been so fiercely defended by supporters and so widely celebrated across the Caribbean for helping to transform the Turks and Caicos Islands would one day be looking out at the country he once led from behind prison walls.
Yet that is the reality confronting former Premier Michael Misick following Friday’s sentencing in the long-running corruption prosecution
that has shaped political discourse in the Turks and Caicos Islands for nearly two decades.
Before the transactions, decisions and conduct that ultimately led to convictions, Michael Misick was widely regarded as one of the most influential political figures in modern Turks and Caicos history. During his tenure as leader of the Progressive National Party government, the country experienced unprecedented levels of investment, development and international attention. To supporters, he was a visionary and relentless leader. To critics, he became the face of a government whose actions ultimately triggered allegations of corruption, abuse of power and failures of accountability that reverberated throughout the territory.
On Friday, those competing narratives collided in dramatic fashion.
As Justice Rajendra Narine handed down prison sentences, the atmosphere inside the courtroom reportedly shifted from anticipation to shock. Supporters stood silently. Some wept. Others struggled to absorb a reality that had long seemed possible in theory but distant in practice.
The reality of the ruling became apparent almost immediately.
Armed police officers remained inside the courtroom as arrangements were made to take the convicted men into custody. Rather than exiting through the front of the Supreme Court, Michael Misick, attorney Thomas “Chal” Misick and former Cabinet Minister McAllister Hanchell were escorted from the building through a rear exit, avoiding what could have become a highly charged public scene outside the courthouse.
By Friday evening, the three men were behind bars.
For many residents, that was the moment the significance of the ruling truly settled in. Convictions had been handed down. Appeals had been argued. Court appearances had stretched across years. But imprisonment was different. It transformed a legal saga into an immediate and undeniable reality.
The sentence imposed on Michael Misick was also shaped by factors extending far beyond the offences themselves.
Justice Narine revealed that he began with a starting point of eight years’ imprisonment for each of the bribery convictions before weighing aggravating and mitigating factors. The court ultimately reduced that starting point by five years after considering a range of circumstances, including the extraordinary delay in the proceedings, a finding that Misick’s constitutional right to be tried within a reasonable time had been breached, the 339 days he spent in custody in Brazil during extradition proceedings, his lack of previous convictions, years of public service, family circumstances and medical evidence presented by the defence.
After those reductions were applied, the court imposed sentences of three years on Counts One and Three and five years on Count Two. The
additional credit for the 339 days spent in Brazilian custody further reduced the effective sentence to two years and 16 days on Counts One and Three and four years and 26 days on Count Two.
The judge’s reasoning was nevertheless clear. Despite the mitigating factors, the seriousness of the offences, the abuse of public trust and the need to uphold standards of good governance required custodial sentences. In essence, the court concluded that penalties short of imprisonment would fail to adequately reflect the gravity of the conduct.
The outcome is unprecedented in modern Turks and Caicos history. Never before has a former premier of the territory been ordered to serve a custodial prison sentence.
The political and family dimensions make the development even more extraordinary.
Michael Misick and Chal Misick are brothers of Premier Charles Washington Misick. All three convicted men were prominent figures associated with the Progressive National Party administration at the centre of the corruption allegations. While Premier Charles Washington Misick has consistently remained separate from the proceedings and has never been implicated in the case, Friday’s events nevertheless placed him in the unusual position of leading the country while two brothers begin serving prison terms.
Yet even as three years long prison sentences await the men, we learn the legal battle is not over.
Sources indicate appeals could be filed as early as Monday, with requests for bail expected to accompany those efforts. It remains unclear whether the challenges will focus on the convictions, the sentences imposed, or both.
What is clear is that after nearly two decades of investigations, hearings, trials, judgments and appeals, the story is still being written.