Caribbean National Weekly

Shanique Myrie found not guilty of beating husband

By CNW Reporter··1 min read
Shanique Myrie found not guilty of beating husband
Key Points(5)
  • Shanique Myrie, who arrived on the public spotlight following her successful suit against the Barbados government, has won another court case, acquitted in the United States of an assault charge.
  • The charge had stemmed from allegations made by Myrie’s estranged husband, Troy Pusey, that she had chased him with a knife, and kicked and punched him.
  • A Harford, Maryland court last Thursday announced a not guilty verdict.
  • “He went on the stand and told a bag of lies, contradicting himself, and the judge saw him for the liar that he is,” Myrie told the Jamaica Star newspaper.
  • Myrie and Pusey, who was born in Jamaica, but has U.S.

Shanique Myrie, who arrived on the public spotlight following her successful suit against the Barbados government, has won another court case, acquitted in the United States of an assault charge. The charge had stemmed from allegations made by Myrie’s estranged husband, Troy Pusey, that she had chased him with a knife, and kicked and punched him.

A Harford, Maryland court last Thursday announced a not guilty verdict.

“He went on the stand and told a bag of lies, contradicting himself, and the judge saw him for the liar that he is,” Myrie told the Jamaica Star newspaper.

Myrie and Pusey, who was born in Jamaica, but has U.S. citizenship, got married three years ago after meeting on Facebook. Pusey has accused Myrie of using him to get a green card and becoming abusive after she attained it, but Myrie has insisted that her husband is emotionally unstable and is on a mission to ruin her reputation.

The Jamaican woman first came to public attention in 2011 when she claimed that on March 14 of that year, when she arrived at the Grantley Adams International Airport in Barbados, she was assaulted by a female Immigration officer, badly treated, and then denied entry to the island.

She took the matter to the Caribbean Court of Justice which ruled in her favour and she received BDS$75,000 (US$37,500) in non-pecuniary damages and BDS$2,240 (US$1,120) in pecuniary damages.

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