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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
World
John Dunne

Sarm Heslop: Family of British woman who vanished in the US Virgin Islands appeal to Joe Biden for help

The mother of a British woman who went missing three years ago when she vanished from a boat in the US Virgin Islands has appealed to President Joe Biden for help to find her.

Sarm Heslop was living and working on a catamaran belonging to her new boyfriend Ryan Bane after moving to the islands to start a new life with him.

The former air hostess, 41, from Southampton disappeared from the vessel overnight on March 8, 2021, and is still on the official missing list.

But her mother Brenda Street, who now lives in Essex, believes she was killed and has called for the US president to intervene.

She told Sky News: "There are places where people can be put in the ocean and never found. I believe that's what happened. I'd like to just bring her home, I can grieve then. I haven't grieved because I don't have her, and I don't know how to.

“I emailed President Biden ... but he didn’t reply. I’m asking for his assistance, for some department to help us.”

Ms Heslop and Mr Bane were spotted on a night out at a sports bar in Frank Bay, St John, before she went missing.

(PA)

Her boyfriend reported her disappearance to the Virgin Islands police department at 2.30am, saying he woke up only to find she had gone.

The police told him to report the incident to the coastguard, which he did not do until nine hours later. The coastguard report claimed he was “highly intoxicated” and refused a search of the cabin.

A forensic examination of the Siren Song was never carried out and Mr Bane has not been interviewed by police.

The island’s force has also refused assistance offered by the FBI.

Ms Street added: “They’ve not not done their job as police officers, not done their job as human beings.”

The family now have an investigator, a former Metropolitan Police commander of homicide and serious crime, who is helping them look into the case as they await updates from the force on the island.

Ms Street, who has previously travelled to the island as part of the search for her daughter, told the People: “There’s too many things that don’t make sense and don’t add up.

“When we went to the island, people wouldn’t speak to us about Sarm and on the posters asking for information someone had gone round and scrubbed out the number to call.”

She has called on Mr Bane to provide the police with everything he knows about her daughter’s disappearance.

Under US law, Mr Bane – the last person known to have seen Miss Heslop and described as a “person of interest” by police – can stay silent and officers must show “probable cause” to get a search warrant.

His lawyer David Cattie said in a statement: “Mr Bane is heartbroken over Sarm’s disappearance. We certainly understand and empathise with her mother’s pain and frustration.

“Mr Bane called 911 immediately upon waking and finding Sarm was not on board. He took his dinghy to shore to meet with VIPD (Virgin Islands Police Department) that night and called the USCG (US Coast Guard) the next day when no-one appeared at his boat. He also had the USCG on his vessel twice following Sarm’s disappearance.

“Later Mr Bane and I personally took all of Sarm’s belongings to the police, including all of her electronic devices.”

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