Somali gets life in prison for US yacht hijacking

4 October, 2011

A federal judge sentenced a third Somali man to life in prison on Monday for his…

 Macay and Bob Riggle
Macay and Bob Riggle are seen on a yacht in Bodega Bay, Calif. The U.S. military says that pirates killed four American hostages they were holding on the yacht Quest off Somalia's coast. The victims are the Quest's owners, Scott and Jean Adam of California, and Macay and Riggle, both of Seattle. Joe Grande/Associated

A federal judge sentenced a third Somali man to life in prison on Monday for his role in the hijacking of a yacht off the coast of Africa that left all four Americans on board dead.
The owners of the Quest, Jean and Scott Adam of Marina del Rey, Calif., along with friends Bob Riggle and Phyllis Macay of Seattle, were shot to death in February several days after being taken hostage several hundred miles south of Oman.
They were the first Americans to be killed in a wave of piracy that has plagued the Gulf of Aden and the Indian Ocean in recent years.
Their 58-foot sailing vessel had been boarded by 19 men looking to bring the Americans to Somalia so they could be ransomed. But the pirates’ plans fell apart when U.S. Navy warships started shadowing them.
“As the government said, it’s difficult to imagine what must’ve been going through the minds of the four victims,” U.S. District Judge Mark Davis said before handing down the mandatory life sentence. “They were probably terrified and confused and to some extent in disbelief as the events unfolded.”
Muhidin Salad Omar was the pirates’ skiff driver and was one of two pirates on board a U.S. Navy ship when the Americans were killed. The Navy offered to let the pirates take the yacht in exchange for the hostages, but the pirates said they wouldn’t get the kind of money they wanted for it. Hostages are typically ransomed for millions of dollars.
“Although the defendant was not on the Quest at the time of the deaths of the American hostages, he must remain accountable for their murder as he willfully engaged in the piracy of the Quest. The boarding of the Quest by nineteen armed and desperate men, unwilling to negotiate and intent on a ransom for the Quest and its crew, certainly set the stage for the violence and murders to follow,” prosecutors wrote in the government’s position on sentencing.
During sentencing in federal court, Omar said through an interpreter that he was sorry for the loss experienced by the victims’ families. He also said he would like for the victims’ families to forgive him.
“He is not here today to make any excuses for his actions,” said Omar’s court appointed attorney, John Gardner.
None of the victims’ family members was in court Monday, but they had sent letters detailing the painful losses they felt.
Omar is one of 11 men who have pleaded guilty for their roles in the case. A fourth man was scheduled to be sentenced later Monday, and two more men were scheduled to face sentencing Tuesday.
Three other men are charged with murder and a series of other charges that could bring the death penalty. Another man who never boarded the Quest and operated as a land-based negotiator also is facing piracy charges. U.S. authorities released one person because he was believed to have been a juvenile. When American forces boarded the boat, all but two men surrendered. Those two were shot and killed by U.S. forces. Another two men also died aboard the boat.
Omar and the others who pleaded guilty have agreed to help prosecutors in those cases and possibly others in exchange for the possibility of eventually having their sentences reduced and being deported.

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