ANTIGUA – A Michigan couple struggling to get home from vacation because of the military operation in Venezuela explained why it’s not actually a blessing to be “stuck in paradise” for longer than expected.
Michelle Campbell and her husband, from Livonia, took a trip to Antigua and were supposed to be heading home last Saturday after a week in the Caribbean.
A Livonia couple is stranded in Antigua after the military operation in Venezuela upended travel in the Caribbean. (Copyright 2025 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit - All rights reserved.)
They ended up being there for much longer, living without the medication they need and moving hotel rooms every day.
“It was somewhere, maybe around 11 or so, that I got a notice that our flight was delayed, and my first thought was, ‘Oh, it must be a snowstorm,’” Campbell said.
A Livonia couple is stranded in Antigua after the military operation in Venezuela upended travel in the Caribbean. (Copyright 2025 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit - All rights reserved.)
That was far from true.
Just a few hours before and about 600 miles away, a military operation in Caracas had just unfolded.
Soon before, they were wrapping up a trip to paradise.
A Livonia couple is stranded in Antigua after the military operation in Venezuela upended travel in the Caribbean. (Copyright 2025 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit - All rights reserved.)
The flight cancellation finally came that night. Campbell called American Airlines, and they had no options.
“We have tried to book to go to Canada because we figured, ok, well if we can get to Canada, somebody can come across the bridge and get us,” Campbell said. “We can’t find a flight to Canada.”
A Livonia couple is stranded in Antigua after the military operation in Venezuela upended travel in the Caribbean. (Copyright 2025 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit - All rights reserved.)
The other option was to fly to London and then to New York.
That would have been about 33 hours of travel time.
“It still doesn’t get you into Detroit until Friday,” Campbell said.
A Livonia couple is stranded in Antigua after the military operation in Venezuela upended travel in the Caribbean. (Copyright 2025 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit - All rights reserved.)
They finally got a flight for Saturday to Miami, a week after they were supposed to leave.
“I think there’s a misconception that some people are like ‘Oh, you’re stuck in paradise, it’s great.’ But, we are out of medication, we are out of cash, we are out of clean clothes, and just the uncertainty that we cannot get home,” Campbell said.
The hotel said they had to move rooms nearly every day, because more guests were arriving.
A Livonia couple is stranded in Antigua after the military operation in Venezuela upended travel in the Caribbean. (Copyright 2025 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit - All rights reserved.)
Then comes their frustration with the financial situation.
She says the airline is not reimbursing them because it is a “government-mandated scenario” beyond their control.
Campbell and her husband have travel insurance, but they said it may not be covered.
A Livonia couple is stranded in Antigua after the military operation in Venezuela upended travel in the Caribbean. (Copyright 2025 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit - All rights reserved.)
“You can file a claim when you get back, and that it will be reviewed,” she said her travel insurance company told her.
A Livonia couple is stranded in Antigua after the military operation in Venezuela upended travel in the Caribbean. (Copyright 2025 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit - All rights reserved.)A Livonia couple is stranded in Antigua after the military operation in Venezuela upended travel in the Caribbean. (Copyright 2025 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit - All rights reserved.)FILE - A pelican flies over new marsh grass in front of a state-initiated dredging project near East Grand Terre Island, where the Gulf of Mexico meets Barataria Bay along the Louisiana coast, Aug. 10, 2010. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert, File) (Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)A Livonia couple is stranded in Antigua after the military operation in Venezuela upended travel in the Caribbean. (Copyright 2025 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit - All rights reserved.)
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Kyla Russell joined the Local 4 team in December 2025. She’s an award-winning journalist and a Midwest native who has spent time at NBC News and CNN, as well as in Indianapolis as an investigative reporter.