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Somali pirate gets 33 years in jail | |||
2011-02-17 | |||
[Al Jazeera] A teenage Somali pirate who attacked a US-flagged ship in 2009 has been sentenced to more than 33 years in prison. Abduwali Abdukhadir Muse was charged with kidnapping, hijacking and hostage-taking for his role in the seizure of the Maersk Alabama container ship and two other vessels in the Indian Ocean. Federal Judge Loretta Preska on Wednesday cited the need for deterrence in issuing the sentence of 33 years and nine months. Muse's lawyers had asked for the minimum term, 27 years. Muse - the sole surviving pirate after others were killed by US Navy marksmen -
Prosecutors described Muse as a hardened pirate leader who displayed a cruel streak when he pretended to shoot captives. Muse's lawyers have argued he was only in his mid-teens at the time of the crime.
The infamous However... a judge ruled that there was sufficient evidence of Muse being at least 18 and that he could be tried as an adult. "Muse's attorneys had tried to argue that he should get a more lenient sentence, saying he was very young when the crime occurred, and also that he grew up in terrible conditions, in extreme poverty," Al Jizz's Kristen Saloomey, reporting from the court, said. "Muse himself addressed the court, apologised for his actions and said that he had been led astray by certain people who were smarter than him and more powerful than him."
US prosecutor Preet Bharara said: "For five days that must have seemed like an eternity to his victims, Abduwali Abukhadir Muse terrorised the captain and crew of the Maersk Alabama. Now he will pay for those five days and the events leading up to them." | |||
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Navy Probes SEALS over Missing Pirate Cash | |
2009-06-01 | |
Tens of thousands of dollars in Somali pirate booty has apparently vanished -- leading the Navy to probe members of its own elite assault team, The Post has learned.
"We don't comment on the details of an ongoing investigation," said NCIS spokesman Ed Buice. But sources say the SEALs, along with the members of the international anti-piracy Combined Task Force 151, and the crew of Maersk Alabama are being questioned over the missing cash. According to the federal criminal complaint against accused pirate leader Abduwali Abdukhadir Muse, the evidentiary items recovered from the lifeboat were two loaded AK-47s, ammo, cellphones and radios, among other items. There is no mention of cash. "You are asking questions about an ongoing federal investigation on which I don't have any comment," said Maersk spokesman Kevin Spears. A band of pirates stormed the Maersk Alabama on April 8 off the coast of Somalia as it steamed toward Kenya with a cargo of relief supplies. The brigands allegedly forced the crew to open the ship's safe, where they made off with $30,000 in cash and took Capt. Richard Phillips hostage, according to the criminal complaint against Muse. "The captain opened the safe and took approximately $30,000 in cash. Muse and the two other pirates then took the cash," stated FBI Special Agent Steven Sorrells in the criminal complaint. Muse and three accomplices then retreated to a covered lifeboat where they negotiated with the FBI, aboard the destroyer USS Bainbridge, while making escape plans with other pirates. "Muse also handed out some of the approximately $30,000 in cash from the Maersk Alabama to the other pirates," Sorrells wrote. For five days, Phillips was held hostage on the lifeboat before Muse alone surrendered to the USS Bainbridge. That day, the SEAL snipers, hiding on the USS Bainbridge's fantail, took out the remaining three pirates in a masterfully executed operation -- one shot for each bandit. | |
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Africa Horn |
Somali pirate fears good times maybe finished |
2009-05-26 |
![]() The 35-year-old has no regrets about joining one of the gangs operating out of the pirate lair of Eyl, a former fishing village that overlooks the Indian Ocean and the strategic shipping lanes linking Europe to Asia through the Gulf of Aden. Their attacks have driven up insurance costs and delayed U.N. aid deliveries. But Said's career has brought him riches he could never have imagined as an impoverished fisherman. He and his colleagues have hijacked nearly 30 vessels this year, meaning 2009 is on course to be even worse than last year, when pirates from the Horn of Africa nation seized 42 ships. But the crime wave has prompted a hurried deployment in the region by foreign navies, thwarting several attacks -- and now the weather is turning too, making the seas rougher and the pirates' prey harder to hunt."My biggest fear is that the piracy business will have to stop. The weather will be terrible in the coming days and the warships have increased in number," Said told Reuters in Eyl. Goddamn climate change... "I have experienced the bitter-sweetness of piracy," he added, pointing out that his car, satellite telephone and speedboat were all paid for with his cut from ransoms. I've laughed, I've cried, I've bought lotsa toys... But the last few weeks have not been so successful. He knows he was lucky to get off scot-free after being captured once. "I recently went to sea ... but all of my last three attempts have been in vain. I was even caught by a Portuguese warship, but fortunately they released me and my friends." NATO forces have been disarming and releasing gunmen detained during its anti-piracy operation. Said is well aware that if it had been a different warship, he might well be dead, or facing trial in a courtroom far from home. Last week, a Somali teenager accused of holding a U.S. ship's captain hostage during a foiled hijacking denied 10 charges in New York including piracy and kidnapping. Abduwali Abdukhadir Muse was the sole surviving accused pirate after the U.S. military said its snipers shot dead three of his companions during an operation to rescue the captain. Said? What...does Reuters think they died of swine flu? Even after the weather improves, Said worries that the foreign navies might make the pirates' business impossible. "If dozens of warships remain in our waters, our work will be as futile as a chameleon trying to catch a fly," he said. Hmmmmm. Sounds like somebody's been watching Kung Fu on Somalian TV... Lighting an imported Benson & Hedges cigarette and unwrapping a roll of leafy khat, a mild narcotic popular in the Horn of Africa, he says he is holding out for his share in a $1.7 million ransom being demanded for a hijacked German ship. At small cafes on Eyl's dusty, unpaved streets, pirates are also swapping gossip about negotiations in progress for the release of a Dutch ship. The buccaneers want $2.5 million, but the owners have only offered $1.5 million so far. "If they give me some cash I will clear my debts. You know khat is expensive here," he said, chewing on a twig from the bunch wrapped in banana leaves, then puffing on his cigarette. Those who have must enjoy their earnings, while the have-nots die of hunger and worry," Said added with a shrug. "I wish this merry life would last forever. But I'm afraid that circumstances may force me to give up piracy completely." |
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Accused Somali pirate arraigned in U.S. court | ||
2009-05-22 | ||
NEW YORK (CNN) -- A Somali suspect in the hijacking of the U.S.-flagged Maersk Alabama last month pleaded not guilty to 10 counts including piracy, hostage-taking, and firearms charges in U.S. District Court in New York on Thursday. Abduwali Abdukhadir Muse faces life in prison if convicted in any of eight of the 10 counts, according to the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York. The U.S. Navy took Muse into custody April 12 after the hijacking in the Indian Ocean. He arrived in the United States April 21. At his arraignment Thursday, Muse stood before Judge Loretta Preska wearing navy-blue prison garb and a bright orange undershirt. The defendant appeared dejected as he listened to the proceedings through the voice of an interpreter, looking downwards at his lap and feet most of the time. The indictment charges Muse with eight counts that each could carry a maximum sentence of life in prison: piracy, possession of a machine gun while seizing a ship by force, hostage-taking, conspiracy to commit hostage-taking, possession of a machine gun during hostage-taking, kidnapping, conspiracy to commit kidnapping, and possession of a machine gun during kidnapping. The remaining two charges carry a maximum sentence of 20 years behind bars: seizing a ship by force and conspiracy to seize a ship by force. Defense attorney Phil Weinstein asked the court for time for the defense to conduct its own investigation into the case, and the judge agreed, setting the next hearing date for September 17. Weinstein then expressed concern over Muse's treatment under incarceration, alleging that prison officials were administering medication to him without proper consent and were denying him phone calls to his family in Somalia. Weinstein also expressed concern about Muse's detention conditions. "He's been held in administrative segregation since his arrest, which means he's detained alone for 23 out of 24 hours a day," Weinstein told reporters gathered outside the courthouse. "He's unable to communicate with anyone except for us."
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Somali Teenager Is Indicted for Piracy in New York |
2009-05-20 |
NEW YORK -- A Somali teenager has been indicted on piracy and other charges in the hostage taking of the captain of an American-flagged cargo ship in April. Abduwali Abdukhadir Muse faces 10 counts, including piracy, seizing a ship by force and hostage taking. The piracy charge carries a sentence of up to life in prison. A lawyer for Mr. Muse didn't immediately return a phone call seeking comment Tuesday. The American-flagged container ship Maersk Alabama was hijacked by a group of pirates off the coast of Somalia in the Indian Ocean on April 8. Prosecutors alleged that Mr. Muse was the first pirate to board the ship, and that he conducted himself as the leader of the group. The pirates later left the ship on a lifeboat and took its captain hostage, prosecutors said. On April 12, Mr. Muse left the lifeboat and boarded the U.S.S. Bainbridge, a U.S. Navy missile destroyer that was by then shadowing the lifeboat, while the other pirates continued to hold hostage the captain, American Richard Phillips, prosecutors said. Mr. Muse demanded safe passage for the pirates and received medical attention. U.S. Navy snipers later killed the three remaining pirates on the lifeboat, freeing Capt. Phillips. Mr. Muse was brought to the U.S. last month and charged. |
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Somali pirate to stand trial as adult in US | |
2009-04-23 | |
[Al Arabiya Latest] A teenaged pirate captured by United States forces in a high-seas drama off Somalia was ordered to stand trial as an adult Tuesday on charges that could put him in jail for life. Abduwali Abdukhadir Muse, the sole surviving accused pirate from the foiled bid to hijack huge U.S. container ship the Maersk Alabama earlier this month, was put in custody until his next court appearance on May 21. Muse, who prosecutors said "conducted himself as the leader of the pirates," is charged with piracy, conspiracy to seize a ship by force, conspiracy to commit hostage taking and related firearms offenses. The captain of the Maersk Alabama, Richard Phillips, was held hostage on a lifeboat for several days after he volunteered to go with the pirates in exchange for the crew. He was rescued when U.S. Navy snipers killed three pirates and captured Muse. A crime against all nations
"An act of piracy against one nation is a crime against all nations," Acting U.S. Attorney Lev Dassin said in a statement. "Pirates target ships and cargo, but threaten international commerce and human life." Muse was first to board the ship, took the lead in issuing demands and said he had hijacked other ships, according to the complaint. Speaking to reporters outside the courthouse, Deirdre von Dornum, one of Muse's lawyers, said the legal team was investigating the possibility Muse may have been "kidnapped and taken hostage." She also said she was looking into whether the Geneva Convention, which governs the treatment of war captives, applies in this case since Somalia is engaged in civil war. Parts of the hearing were closed to the public due to questions about whether Muse was less than 18 years old. Defense attorney Philip Weinstein said he spoke to Muse's father in Somalia, who said his son is 15 years old but prosecutors said Muse told the FBI he was 18. U.S. Magistrate Judge Andrew Peck eventually ruled Muse is 18 years old. No money Muse at one point cried out and appeared to wipe away a tear. When told by the judge he would be represented by lawyers free of charge, he said through a Somali translator, "I understand. I don't have any money." Photographs of Muse arriving on Monday showed him smiling broadly, while local media reported he did not speak English and seemed unaware of the gravity of his situation. Asked about that by reporters, Weinstein said, "He comes from a place with no electricity, no water" and has a "very limited education." "He is obviously scared, confused and is obviously troubled by what's going on," Weinstein said. The teenager, wearing a dark blue prison jumpsuit over a red T-shirt, was not required to appear in court but von Dornum said she wanted him to "so that he would be able to understand what was happening and have some trust in us." He wore a large, white bandage over his left hand. Professor of international law at Fordham Law School Thomas Lee said he believed this to be the first piracy charges brought in more than a century since the Spanish American War. | |
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