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Life sentences for Somali pirates | |||
2013-08-05 | |||
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Reached by phone in California, the sister of one of the victims lamented the jury did not see fit to sentence the three men to death. "I don't know how they can shoot someone with an AK-47 and not get the death penalty," Cynthia Macay said through tears. "They almost will have a better life in prison than in Somalia."
The charges stemmed from the deaths of four Americans on Feb. 22, 2011, on a 58-foot yacht named Quest. The victims were Scott and Jean Adam, a California couple who owned the boat, and Phyllis Patricia Macay and Robert Riggle, both of Seattle, who had joined them on the voyage. FBI agents, Navy officials, and convicted pirates who were involved in the fatal hijacking testified during the trial. According to prosecutors and court records, the Adams and their friends were asleep at sea Feb. 18 when 19 men boarded the yacht armed with assault rifles and a rocket-propelled grenade launcher. They took control and began to sail for Somalia, where they intended to conduct ransom negotiations. The hijackers never made it to shore, however, and four days of negotiations at sea with Navy officials failed. Prosecutors said one of the pirates fired a rocket-propelled grenade at the American guided missile destroyer Sterett. Shortly thereafter, Salad, Beyle and Abrar opened fire on the hostages.
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Posted by:Steve White |