Arab Times

US jury finds Somali man not guilty in piracy case

Verdict not reached on two lesser charges

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WASHINGTON, Nov 27, (AP): A US jury Tuesday found a Somali man who acted as a negotiator for pirates aboard a hijacked ship not guilty of piracy, but had not yet reached a verdict on two lesser charges.

Ali Mohamed Ali, 51, who would have faced a mandatory life sentence if convicted of piracy, smiled and embraced one of his lawyers after the verdict was announced. He then removed his glasses and dabbed his eyes. Afriend in the courtroom sobbed. Ali has been held in a city jail for more than 2-1/2 years.

US District Judge Ellen Huvelle told the jurors, who began deliberati­ons last Wednesday, to continue deliberati­ng on two remaining charges of hostage-taking and conspiracy to commit hostagetak­ing. Both of those charges carry potential, but not mandatory life sentences, and Ali is unlikely to receive a life sentence even if the jury convicts him on those charges.

Ali negotiated a ransom for Somali pirates during a 2008 pirate takeover of a Danish merchant ship in the Gulf of Aden. At the time of his 2011 arrest, he was the education minister in Somaliland, a breakaway region of Somalia, but he has spent most of his adult life in the United States.

Pirates seized the M/V CEC Future in November 2008, and Ali boarded the boat a couple of days later. An English speaker, he communicat­ed the demands of the pirates with officials from Clipper Group, the ship’s owner. The pirates initially demanded a $7 million ransom, but settled for $1.7 million at the end of the more than two-monthlong siege.

The key issue in the trial was whether Ali was an advocate for the pirates or just a translator doing the best he could in a situation not of his own making. Jurors heard Ali talking on recorded phone calls with a negotiator, and also with Clipper Group’s chief executive, Per Gullestrup. At one point, Ali declares, “I am the negotiator” and demands that all calls go through him. But the calls also show a friendly, conversati­onal banter, with Gullestrup dropping Ali’s name the way one does with a longtime acquaintan­ce, and Gullestrup testified that he built up a level of trust with Ali.

Ali’s lawyers sought to paint him as a friend of the US government. Keith Barwick, an agent for US Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, testified that 10 years ago Ali approached him with informatio­n about a company he was working for in the US The government put the business under investigat­ion, and Ali became a confidenti­al informant. The company had been selling counterfei­t products, such as purses and watches, and Ali’s work helped lead to 10 conviction­s and over $1 million in seized merchandis­e and money.

 ??  ?? A file photo taken on April 3, 2012 shows Malian military junta leader captain Amadou Sanogo speaking at the Kati military camp near Bamako. Sanogo, who led a March 2012 coup in Mali, was detained on Nov 27, for questionin­g by a judge investigat­ing...
A file photo taken on April 3, 2012 shows Malian military junta leader captain Amadou Sanogo speaking at the Kati military camp near Bamako. Sanogo, who led a March 2012 coup in Mali, was detained on Nov 27, for questionin­g by a judge investigat­ing...

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