Haiti News – Coral Springs Vice Mayor Nancy Metayer Bowen’s Voice Silenced In Florida Tragedy

News Americas, NEW YORK, NY, Thurs. April 2, 2026: The killing of Haitian American Coral Springs Vice Mayor, Nancy Metayer Bowen, is reverberating far beyond Florida, sending shockwaves through Caribbean diaspora communities grappling with both the loss of a rising political voice and the deeper issues her death has brought into focus.

Metayer Bowen, 38, was not just a local elected official in Coral Springs. She represented a new generation of Caribbean American leadership – young, accomplished, and increasingly influential in shaping political engagement among immigrant communities.

Authorities have charged her husband, Jamaican roots Stephen Bowen, with first-degree murder following her death inside their home. Police have described the case as domestic in nature, underscoring a tragic and persistent reality that cuts across communities: intimate partner violence remains one of the leading causes of death for women in the United States. Bowen is being held in the Broward County main jail on charges of premeditated murder and tampering with or fabricating physical evidence. At a first-appearance hearing in Broward County Court Thursday morning, a judge ordered him held without bond.

Bowen, 40, worked at Delray Medical Center, according to the affidavit. He has an active license as a certified radiologic technologist that was issued in 2014 by the Department of Health. He was listed as the chief operating officer of Men of St. Luke Inc., a nonprofit based in Hollywood, as of 2025, state business records show. The organization originally registered in 2009 under the name The Most Worshipful Union Grand Lodge of Florida, St. Luke Lodge #530 and was described as a statewide Masonic organization.

Bowen frequently posted videos of himself at tactical shooting ranges on his personal Instagram. One video pinned to his profile depicts him on a wild boar hunt, smoking a cigar. His bio reads, “God | Husband | Armed.”

Officers found the vice mayor’s body, wrapped in a comforter and black trash bags, in the bedroom of her home in the 800 block of Northwest 127th Avenue Wednesday after her coworkers became concerned that she had not shown up for scheduled city meetings.

Coral Springs City Manager Catherine Givens said at the news conference that the city will have a behavioral health program available to employees.

“What’s worse is the tremendous grief that her family must endure. If you knew Nancy, her family was everything,” Givens said. “… She wasn’t just a leader; she was the light in every room that she entered. She was a steady voice in difficult times, a compassionate soul who lifted others up and a friend to so many.”

Commissioner Joshua Simmons spoke on behalf of the commission, which he said is now “incomplete.”

“She had such a good heart. She truly cared about people, even when people were saying some of the most horrible things about her and us,” Simmons told reporters. “She still cared, rolled up her sleeves, went to every event that she could go to because she truly cared about people and making sure people had a relationship with their elected officials.”

On it’s website, the City posted an image of her with the words “Rest In Peace. A statement added: “The City of Coral Springs remembers Vice Mayor Nancy Metayer with gratitude, respect and deep appreciation for her service to our community. A dedicated public servant, Vice Mayor Metayer served the residents of Coral Springs with passion, integrity and a strong commitment to building a better future for all. Her leadership reflected a deep belief in community, service and stewardship, and her contributions will continue to leave a lasting mark on our city.

But for many in the Haitian and wider Caribbean diaspora, the loss carries an additional weight.

Metayer Bowen was a trailblazer – the first Black and Haitian American woman elected to the Coral Springs Commission – and a key figure in mobilizing Caribbean voters in Florida, a critical political battleground. Her work extended beyond local governance into national politics, including roles connected to presidential campaign outreach targeting Caribbean American communities.

Her death leaves a void not only in public office, but in a growing movement aimed at strengthening diaspora representation and civic participation. Community leaders and advocates say the tragedy is forcing difficult conversations about the intersection of cultural stigma, domestic violence, and access to support systems within immigrant communities.

Rep. Dan Daley, D-Coral Springs, and Rep. Christine Hunschofsky, D-Parkland, attended the news conference to announce her sudden death. They were both close friends of Metayer Bowen. Rep. Anna Eskamani, a Democrat representing the Orlando area, in a statement shared on social media Wednesday said that Metayer Bowen’s family has “already experienced deep loss” with his suicide.

Metayer Bowen’s younger brother, Donovan Joshua Leigh Metayer, died by suicide in their family home in December at age 26. He was a senior at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland during the 2018 mass shooting and struggled with mental health issues afterward, according to a GoFundMe online fundraiser for funeral expenses.

“Nancy and I worked side by side in the reproductive rights movement for years, and I’ve been honored to call her not just a colleague, but a dear friend,” Eskamani wrote. “She was brilliant, compassionate, and deeply committed to justice. I’m heartbroken by this loss, her future in politics and leadership was only just beginning, and our communities will feel that absence profoundly.”

Her family shared a statement on Metayer Bowen’s social media Wednesday evening.

“Throughout her years in public office, she led with integrity, compassion, and an unwavering sense of purpose,” the family’s statement said. “She believed in bringing people together, listening to those she served, and working tirelessly to create positive change in her community. To us, she was a source of strength, wisdom, and love – someone who always put others before herself.”

“While many knew her as a leader and advocate, we knew her as a sister, a daughter, and a friend whose warmth and laughter filled every room. Her legacy will live on not only in the policies she helped shape but in the countless lives she touched.”

While domestic violence is a global issue, experts note that Caribbean and immigrant communities often face additional barriers, including fear of stigma, lack of resources, and reluctance to seek help.

Metayer Bowen’s story, they say, highlights the urgency of addressing these challenges openly.

Her life also reflects the broader trajectory of Caribbean excellence in the diaspora – from public service to scientific work – demonstrating the expanding role Caribbean Americans are playing in shaping U.S. civic life.

Even as the investigation continues, her legacy is already being defined by more than the circumstances of her death. It is rooted in her work to amplify Caribbean voices, expand voter engagement, and open doors for future leaders.

Now, her passing is prompting a renewed call for both protection and progress. For many, the question is no longer just about what happened – but what must change.

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