Source: Date: 2017
'VT Gun Incident':

GOV Analysis:
* * * * * ** * * * * *

Date: 1/3/2017Town: Vermont
VT Resident?: YesLaw Abiding Citizen Prior to Incident: felon
Event Type: PossessionFirearm Crime: Felon in Possession
Injury Type: NONE
Actual Gun Use: YesGun Actually Fired: NO
Domestic Violence: NoSuicide: NO
Details: FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Friday, March 24, 2017
Burlington Man Charged with Human Trafficking and Possession of a Firearm

The Office of the United States Attorney for the District of Vermont announced that on March 21, 2017, Naquan Bowie entered a plea of not guilty in District Court in Burlington before Chief United States District Court Judge Christina Reiss to a federal indictment charging him with one count of human trafficking and one count of being a felon in possession of a firearm. Upon the government’s motion for detention, Judge Reiss ordered Bowie temporarily detained pending a detention hearing on March 24. However, on March 23, 2017, the defendant withdrew his opposition to the government’s motion for detention pending trial.

According to the federal grand jury indictment returned March 16, 2017, Bowie trafficked “Victim M.P.” from in or about October 2016 to in or about January 2017, in Vermont, knowing that force, the threat of force, fraud, and coercion would be used to cause Victim M.P. to engage in commercial sex acts. Court documents further indicate that Bowie used heroin and crack cocaine, as well as violence or the threat of violence, to cause M.P. to perform commercial sex acts for Bowie’s financial gain. Bowie is further accused of unlawfully possessing a Jennings .22 caliber pistol following two prior felony convictions involving the sale and possession of cocaine.

If convicted of human trafficking, Bowie faces a statutory mandatory minimum sentence of fifteen years of imprisonment. Bowie faces a maximum sentence of ten years on the gun charge. The actual sentence, however, would be determined by the Court with guidance from the advisory Federal Sentencing Guidelines. The charges in the indictment are merely accusations and the defendant is presumed innocent unless and until he is proven guilty.

Co-defendant Gary Carter is scheduled to be arraigned on felon-in-possession charges on April 10. Carter is not charged with human trafficking.
NO law will prevent crime. No law will stop criminals from getting guns. Gun Control only effects the law-abiding citizen and the politicians know it.

News Articles
Source 1: 3/24/2017: Burlington Man Charged with Human Trafficking and Possession of a Firearm
Source 2: 3/24/17: Vermont Man Accused of Human Trafficking, Pleads Not Guilty
Source 3: 3/16/2017: United States v. Bowie (5:17-cr-00031)
District Court, D. Vermont
Source 4: 1/28/2019: https://vtdigger.org/2019/01/28/burlington-man-gets-7%C2%BD-drugs-firearms-human-trafficking-count-dropped/
Source 5: 4/10/2019: Trafficked: How the Opioid Epidemic Drives Sexual Exploitation in Vermont
Source 6: 11/2021: Christina Nolan - Former US Attorney
(scroll down to this audio - where former US Attorney Nolan explains how women will be victimized by legalizing prostitution in Vermont)
The link between human traffickiing and the use of force is only prosecuted on gun and drug charges.

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Last Updated: 12/14/2022