USA: SOMALIS FACE DEATH SENTENCE IN PIRACY TRIAL

06 June 2013 :

3 Somalis go on trial today for the high-seas murder of 4 American citizens whose yacht was captured by pirates in the Indian Ocean off Oman on February 18, 2011.
Federal prosecutors say they will seek the death penalty for Ahmed Muse Salad, Abukar Osman Beyle and Shani Nurani Shiekh Abrar for the shooting deaths aboard the sloop Quest. Its owners Scott Adam, 70, and Jean Adam, 66, both from Los Angeles, had set off from New Zealand to sail around the world. Their friends Bob Riggle, 67, and Phyllis Macay of Seattle joined them for the Indian Ocean leg. They were the 1st Americans to be killed in a dramatic outbreak of Somali-based maritime piracy off the Horn of Africa that has since waned significantly as international naval forces stepped up patrols.
The trial in Norfolk, Virginia, the Mid-Atlantic port city that is home to the US Navy's Atlantic fleet, starts with jury selection. It is expected to run for several weeks.
Nearly 2 dozen pirates have been convicted in US courts as part of a global legal crackdown, but Tuesday's case is the 1st in which the death penalty is being sought. Prosecutors alleged that Salad, Beyle and Abrar were among 19 Somali pirates operating from a commandeered Yemeni mother ship in the Indian Ocean on the lookout for a vessel to capture in return for a ransom.
On February 18, 2011, about 200 miles  off the coast of Oman, they easily captured the Quest with the intention of taking it to Somalia and holding the American hostages for ransom. But within 2 days US warships including the aircraft carrier Enterprise caught up with the yacht. 2 of the pirates eventually boarded a US destroyer for face-to-face negotiations. When they turned down an offer to keep the Quest but surrender the Americans, the pair were detained on the ship, the defense team says.
On February 22, the US navy moved closer to the Quest, gunfire rang out, a pirate fired a rocket and navy SEAL commandos stormed the yacht, court papers say. Besides the 4 Americans, 4 of the pirates were killed and 15 captured.
 

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