How Donald Trump officials ended up saving condom business tycoon after he fell asleep on yacht in enemy waters
How Donald Trump officials ended up saving condom
business tycoon after he fell asleep on yacht in enemy waters
Condom business tycoon Eric Arthur reportedly ended up stuck in Venezuela after his yacht trip went wrong
Retired condom business tycoon Eric Arthur has spoken out
following his return from Venezuela where he alleges he was held captive.
After selling his condom manufacturing business, at the age of 62, Eric
Arthur bought a 48-foot yacht - named Tambo - and began crossing the Atlantic in December, seeing
in the New Year's in Barbados before heading to Venezuela. However, his trip
didn't go to plan.
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On January 6 at around 11:30pm, Arthur's yacht ended up colliding with
some rocks and he was forced to board his life raft, taking fresh water, his
laptop and a radio.
He sent out SOS messages every hour and after three days,
his signals were picked up by a group of fisherman.
Alas, rather than being saved, Arthur's troubles were
only just beginning, the fishermen delivering the retiree to a Venezuelan
military base on a remote island where military officials allegedly demanded he
read a statement to a camera the next morning thanking President of Venezuela
Nicolás Maduro for saving him and saying 'how great' he is.
Nicolás Maduro is the President of Venezuela (Jesus
Vargas/Getty Images)
Branding it 'propaganda,' Arthur refused - and it
reportedly didn't go down well, leading to a 10-hour boat ride to another
island, the retiree placed 'under coast guard watch, house arrest,' at a
military commander's home.
Despite allegedly being told by military officials he
would be freed, Arthur says he was moved to a prison in Caracas where he was
stripped from his belongings, allegedly forced to sit on a chair for 14 hours a
day, not allowed to stand or talk much.
The radio was played and lights kept on so Arthur didn't
get much sleep either.
And he was there alongside multiple other Americans too.
As part of one of his executive orders to deport illegal
immigrants, Trump had Venezuelan nationals who didn't have permission to be
living in the US, rounded up by federal officers. A White House official was
sent to Caracas on January 31, helping seal a deal with Venezuela to get some
Americans transferred back in return.
Trump's administration helped get Arthur returned (Andrew
Harnik/Getty Images)
Venezuela agreed to the deal and the release of six
American men who'd been arrested in Venezuela between September and December on
charges such as espionage or terrorism. However, Arthur had not yet been
charged with a crime and wasn't part of the deal.
When two other prisoners refused to leave their cells,
Arthur was allowed to take one of their places instead and has since returned
to the US but is left with the memories, resolving he doesn't 'know if [he'll]
ever want to leave the country again'.
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