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21 accused of breaking COVID-19 quarantine on Big Isle agree to leave Hawaii

COURTESY HAWAII POLICE DEPARTMENT
                                This undated booking photo provided by the Hawaii Police Department shows Eligio Lee Bishop. Bishop, was arrested June 11 with six other men and six women at a home booked via Airbnb in the Hawaiian Paradise Park subdivision in a rural and remote district of the Big Island. They were arrested and charged with violating the state’s mandatory 14-day quarantine put in place in an attempt to protect the islands from the spread of the coronavirus, police said.

COURTESY HAWAII POLICE DEPARTMENT

This undated booking photo provided by the Hawaii Police Department shows Eligio Lee Bishop. Bishop, was arrested June 11 with six other men and six women at a home booked via Airbnb in the Hawaiian Paradise Park subdivision in a rural and remote district of the Big Island. They were arrested and charged with violating the state’s mandatory 14-day quarantine put in place in an attempt to protect the islands from the spread of the coronavirus, police said.

Twenty-one travelers arrested on suspicion of violating Hawaii’s coronavirus quarantine order have agreed to leave the state because of threats, a member of the group said today.

Kendra Carter said some of the harassment involved death threats.

“People started rolling up to our house calling us all types of names. Telling us to starve and a whole bunch of stuff. We’ve been getting death threats in our inboxes,” Carter said. “People telling us to get the (expletive) off the island.”

Carter wasn’t arrested with the others last week because police decided to let her and another woman stay with their children.

Arresting them would have meant calling child protective services, which would have meant exposing more people, Hawaii County police Lt. Rio Amon-Wilkins has said.

The group’s members spent two years traveling Central America and are misunderstood, Carter said.

“People like to call us a cult because we like to live a certain lifestyle,” she said about their vegan diet and a belief that “everybody is different shades of brown.”

Carter said the group didn’t realize that Hawaii’s mandatory 14-day quarantine on all people arriving in the state would be strictly enforced.

Court documents say members of the group were seen at a beach park on June 8. A video posted on YouTube showed their leader, Eligio Bishop, petting a sea turtle, police said in the documents.

Bishop, 38, pleaded no contest today to the quarantine violation, said Hawaii County Prosecuting Attorney Mitch Roth.

“We take our quarantine and our safety very seriously,” he said. “We’re not going tolerate people violating the law.”

The group “probably spent more time in jail on their trip to Hawaii than they spent outside of jail,” Roth said.

Bishop’s attorney, Evans Smith, couldn’t immediately be reached for comment.

Attorney Donald Wilkerson, who represents two other men arrested with the group, said today the other cases will be dismissed but would be refiled if they return to Hawaii and violate the quarantine.

“They’re leaving Hawaii,” Wilkerson said of his clients, Denedric Johnson, 23, of Texas and Jacob Benton, 24, of California. “My clients intend to go back to the mainland.”

Members of the group, known as Carbon Nation, which Carter described as a nature-loving family, were so excited to experience Hawaii that they they decided to stop at the beach before going to their Big Island rental home, she said.

The quarantine doesn’t allow travelers to leave a residence or hotel room for any reason except medical emergencies.

“We apologized for it and we’re still apologizing for it,” Carter said.

Bishop’s court file includes a copy of an “Order for Self-Quarantine” that arriving travelers receive at the airport. It shows what appear to be his initials and signature verifying that he would abide by the quarantine, including going straight to the residence from the airport.

The quarantine has helped Hawaii maintain relatively low infection rates compared to other parts of the U.S.

As of today, a total 736 people have tested positive since the outbreak began. There have been 17 deaths.

Even after their arrests, the group had planned to remain in Hawaii, Carter said. But the threats led to their decision to leave, she said.

Jessica Lani Rich, president of Visitor Aloha Society of Hawaii, which provides help to tourists, said today her organization had been prepared Friday to get them flights out of Hawaii, but they wanted to stay. She said she’s ready to resume the effort if that’s what they want.

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