http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5h4EgKa7MqczR69asBLj1GwTCwT
lw?docId=0bea748dacec4acc8fb53dc65d83ff35 

Suspected Somali pirate pleads not guilty in US

(AP) - 4 days ago

NORFOLK, Va. (AP) - A Somali man the U.S. believes is the highest-ranking
pirate it has ever captured pleaded not guilty in federal court Wednesday to
piracy, kidnapping and weapons charges related to the February hijacking of
a yacht that left four Americans dead.

Mohammad Saaili Shibin, 50, is accused of acting as chief negotiator for
more than a dozen pirates who took control of the yacht Quest in the Arabian
Sea.

The owners of the Quest - Jean and Scott Adam of Marina del Rey, Calif. -
were shot to death along with friends Bob Riggle and Phyllis Macay of
Seattle after they were taken hostage several hundred miles south of Oman.

Unlike the other suspected pirates, court documents say Shibin never boarded
the Quest and that he operated from land. He is the first suspected pirate
to be taken into custody in Somalia rather than at sea. Court documents say
Shibin researched the hostages online to determine how much of a ransom to
seek for them. Shibin has also acknowledged acting as a negotiator for a
German vessel, the M/V Marida Marguerite, that was taken hostage by pirates
in May and released in December, receiving $30,000 for his services,
prosecutors said.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Joseph DePadilla said the U.S. government is
currently in negotiations with the German government and that additional
charges could be forthcoming in that case.

In court Wednesday, Shibin said he made a living as a teacher, social worker
and oil worker. Federal agents confiscated $1,600 in U.S. currency from
Shibin when they took him into custody, but he said he couldn't afford an
attorney because the money he made in Somalia had been spent on him and his
five children.

Shibin's court-appointed attorney, James Broccoletti, said he believes
Shibin is college educated and speaks three languages, English, Somali and
Italian.

Pirates have increased attacks off Africa's eastern coast despite an
international flotilla of warships dedicated to stopping the assaults.

U.S. naval forces were tracking the Americans' captured yacht with unmanned
aerial vehicles and four warships, and negotiations were under way when the
pirates fired a rocket-propelled grenade.

Special forces boarded the vessel and found the Americans had been shot,
according to the military. Pirates have blamed the deaths of the American
hostages on the U.S. Navy, saying the pirates felt under attack.

It was the first time U.S. citizens have been killed in the pirate attacks
that have plagued the Gulf of Aden and the Indian Ocean in recent years. The
pirates are typically motivated by the potential for millions of dollars in
ransom money.

The Adams, who were retired, had been sailing full-time on their 58-foot
yacht and delivering Bibles around the world. The indictment accuses at
least three of the indicted men of shooting and killing the four Americans
without provocation.

 
<http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5h4EgKa7MqczR69asBLj1GwTCw
Tlw?docId=0bea748dacec4acc8fb53dc65d83ff35> 




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