Three Somali Pirates to Appear in US Court

June 4, 2013

Three Somali men face a possible death penalty when they go on trial this week for a pirate attack that led to the death of four Americans.

Jury selection begins Tuesday in the city of Norfolk, Virginia, for Ahmed Muse Salad, Abukar Osman Beyle and Shani Nurani Sheikh Abrar, reports VOA.

The three were among 15 Somalis arrested after the killing of the Americans aboard the Quest, a vessel hijacked by pirates near the coast of Somalia in February 2011. The U.S. indictment accuses Salad, Beyele and Abrar of shooting and killing the four Americans without provocation during hostage negotiations with the U.S. Navy and FBI.

The three face a total of 26 counts of piracy, kidnapping, hostage-taking and discharge of a firearm resulting in death. All three have pleaded not guilty.

Eleven other Somalis along with an onshore negotiator arrested for the Quest incident have received sentences of life in prison.

The four Americans killed – Scott and Jean Adam of California and their friends, Robert Riggle and Phyllis Macay, both of Seattle – were sailing from India toward Djibouti when pirates seized their boat.

Source: VOA
 

Logistics News

Georgia Ports, Konecranes Celebrate 30-Year Yard Crane Partnership

Georgia Ports, Konecranes Celebrate 30-Year Yard Crane Partnership

PPG Completes 100th Dry Docking Using Electrostatic Coating

PPG Completes 100th Dry Docking Using Electrostatic Coating

DP World, Asian Terminals Inc. Deploy First Fleet of Electric Internal Transfer Vehicles in the Philippines

DP World, Asian Terminals Inc. Deploy First Fleet of Electric Internal Transfer Vehicles in the Philippines

Alleged Breach of Supply Chain Protection for Sheep in Jordan

Alleged Breach of Supply Chain Protection for Sheep in Jordan

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

WSJ reports that new details in the Air India crash investigation shift attention to the plane's pilot.
Italy asks Poste and state mint to restart talks about PagoPA
HPE signs agreement with Elliott to add KLA chairman to its board