Times Colonist

Seized superyacht shows up in Puget Sound

Vessel in Everett minus Russian oligarch owner

- PAUL ROBERTS

EVERETT, Washington — It’s not clear whether Russian oligarch Suleiman Kerimov had plans to visit Puget Sound this spring — the French Riviera is more the style of the U.S.-sanctioned mining and energy multibilli­onaire.

But on April 29, the Amadea, a 348-foot, $300 million US-plus superyacht said to be owned by Kerimov, arrived in the Port of Everett to have some work done at a local shipyard.

A sleek, white shark of a ship with a knifelike bow, raked profile and quarters for 16 guests and 36 crew, Amadea swanned past Everett’s industrial waterfront with a tug escort and all the made-for-TV glamour of an internatio­nal celebrity fugitive. Kerimov, of course, was not on board.

In 2022, Amadea (“God’s love” in Latin) was seized in Fiji at the request of U.S. authoritie­s who claim Kerimov has enabled Russian aggression in Ukraine and Syria. Money laundering and conspiracy were also alleged.

At the time, the seizure was hailed as a warning to “every corrupt Russian oligarch that they cannot hide — not even in the remotest part of the world,” as a deputy U.S. attorney general put it in a press statement.

But as any boat owner in this boat-focused community will tell you, seizing a superyacht is one thing. Maintainin­g its value as an asset is another — especially when the asset is the size of a ferry and equipped with a theatre, a gym, beauty salon, teak decks, 30-foot-long pool, helipad and twin 5,766-horsepower diesels.

“They’re saying it’s costing us $7 million a year to keep it up,” said Chris Petersen, a retired fisherman who runs a metal coatings shop on West Marine View Drive, a few blocks from the port and who, like many here, has been following the superyacht saga since April 29.

Indeed, fuel, maintenanc­e, insurance and salary for the crew of Amadea during its impoundmen­t in San Diego ran around $740,000 a month, according to federal court filings by the Marshals Service.

In February, the Justice Department told a federal court it intended to halt this “excessive … drain on the public” purse by auctioning off Amadea, which the government claims Kerimov acquired in 2021.

But selling off this excessive drain has been complicate­d.

There is litigation challengin­g Amadea’s seizure because the vessel allegedly wasn’t owned by Kerimov, but by another Russian oligarch, who is not sanctioned, according to court papers.

Another complicati­on, more relevant to Everett: Amadea’s insurance policy, according to court filings, requires service that can only be done by hauling the vessel out of the water — a job that appears to be slated for the dry dock facilities at Everett Ship Repair, on the port’s East Waterway.

Few details of the project have been shared. Port officials have referred all questions to Everett Ship Repair, whose vicepresid­ent of service sales, Lane Richards, politely declined to comment. But a Justice Department spokespers­on confirmed May 2 that Amadea was indeed “in Washington for standard dry dock maintenanc­e.”

And on May 1, the vessel in question could be seen berthed, like a slightly lost Imperial Starship, on the south side of Pier 3, adjacent to Everett Ship Repair’s dry dock and the Washington State Ferry Salish.

All the no-commenting has only added to the atmosphere of maritime intrigue and speculatio­n in a town ordinarily unperturbe­d by big, secrecy-shrouded ships, including those at the nearby Everett Naval Station.

Many here wonder why the U.S. government spent the money to bring Amadea all the way to Everett, when there are dry dock facilities in San Diego, San Francisco and Portland, Oregon; even Seattle is 5 nautical miles closer to San Diego.

Amadea’s fuel burn “is probably in the 8-to-10 gallons per mile range,” said Dennis Butterfiel­d, a retired car dealership manager and former boat owner, as he kept an eye on the Russian superyacht on May 1 from a viewpoint on Warren Avenue. “That’s the United States government at work, if you ask me.”

Butterfiel­d’s estimate was close: based on vessel specificat­ions featured on the yachting website, YachCharte­rFleet, the 4,400-ton Amadea burns roughly 11 gallons per mile at a cruising speed of 15 mph.

The Justice Department declined to justify Amadea’s four-day journey from San Diego to Everett.

Such secrecy would likely suit Kerimov, who Forbes once described as “one of the most private Russian billionair­es,” and who is also said to have close ties to the government of Russian President Vladimir Putin. The 58-year-old serves in the Russian Federation Senate, is reportedly worth nearly $11 billion and has owned villas on the French Riviera and elsewhere.

He may also have owned a rare Fabergé egg, according to accounts of the search of the Amadea after its seizure.

Beginning in 2017, Kerimov was listed by U.S. officials as one of a number of Russian oligarchs “who profit from the Russian government through corruption and its malign activity around the globe.”

In March 2022, after the FBI reportedly linked Kerimov to the Amadea, the vessel was seized under a program known as Task Force KleptoCapt­ure and eventually sailed to San Diego under an American flag.

But Amadea’s more recent trip likely had less to do with the vessel’s checkered lineage than with a shortage of West Coast dry dock capacity, especially for large vessels.

Unlike the East Coast and the Gulf Coast, ship repair infrastruc­ture on the West Coast is “is woefully undersized,” said Craig Hooper, a former naval ship building industry executive who writes and advises on security and defence issues.

In recent decades, several private shipyards with dry dock facilities have closed and building new capacity faces high costs and regulatory hurdles, Hooper said. As a result, “long transits to an open facility are relatively commonplac­e these days,” he added.

In the case of the Amadea, Hooper hypothesiz­ed, “the responsibl­e party may have put the job out for bid and an Everett yard was the available, lowest-cost option.”

According to court filings, Amadea’s dry dock work is expected to cost $5.6 million and take two months.

By that time, federal officials may have sorted Amadea’s other complicati­ons. Last fall, attorneys for Eduard Khudainato­v, the former head of state-owed oil company Rosneft, claimed Amadea isn’t owned by Kerimov, but by Khudainato­v. Attorneys argue that since Khudainato­v wasn’t under sanctions, the yacht was “not forfeitabl­e, as it neither constitute­s nor is derived from any unlawful activity.”

But federal prosecutor­s contend “that Khudainato­v is just a straw owner put forward to disguise Kerimov’s ownership of the vessel,” according to an April 19 filing in a federal court in New York, where the case is ongoing.

In the meantime, Everett will take some pleasure in the Amadea’s august presence.

Port of Everett officials, though tight lipped about the vessel’s particular­s, were clearly pleased by the message it sends of the port’s growing status as a maritime hub.

“Anything that puts Everett on the internatio­nal map is a good thing!” said Kate Anderson, port spokespers­on, in an email response to an inquiry about the Amadea.

 ?? DEAN RUTZ, SEATTLE TIMES ?? The $300-million US superyacht that American prosecutor­s say was owned by a sanctioned Russian oligarch is moored in the Port of Everett awaiting repair.
DEAN RUTZ, SEATTLE TIMES The $300-million US superyacht that American prosecutor­s say was owned by a sanctioned Russian oligarch is moored in the Port of Everett awaiting repair.

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