Jon Hammars family got their Christmas wish.
The Marine veteran from Palmetto Bay who was detained for months, chained to his bed in a Mexican border prison for bringing his great-grandfathers shotgun into the country, arrived home Monday, just in time for Christmas.
Miami Herald news partner CBS4 reported that Hammar arrived at his familys Palmetto Bay home shortly before noon. Still recovering from an illness, Hammar didnt talk to reporters.
Hes inside, his father told reporters, according to CBS4. He can barely stand up right now. Hes really sick. Under doctors orders my wife took him and put him in bed.
Hammar was arrested Aug. 13 when he and a fellow Marine veteran, who were headed to Costa Rica to surf, tried to cross into Mexico.
Hammar had been told by U.S. authorities he could declare a six-decades-old .410-bore Sears & Roebuck shotgun at the border. The firearm is suitable for shooting rabbits and birds.
But Mexican officials dismissed Hammars U.S. registration papers for the disassembled relic. Prosecutors charged him with possession of a weapon restricted for use to Mexicos armed forces.
Hammar was sent to the Matamoros prison, where, at one point, inmates affiliated with local drug cartels telephoned Hammars parents to try to extort money from them.
U.S. officials intervened, and Hammar was separated from the general inmate population. But he still spent much of his time chained to a bed.
He was released Friday, and Hammar and his father drove back to South Florida. Because Hammar was ill, they had to stop along the way at a Louisiana hospital.


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