Online: | |
Visits: | |
Stories: |
Story Views | |
Now: | |
Last Hour: | |
Last 24 Hours: | |
Total: |
Jeffrey Reynolds, 44, (left) Mark Kennedy, 44, (right). The two former US Navy SEALS died of heroin overdoses.
By James Nye, Daily Mail – February 21, 2014
http://tinyurl.com/lf4nh8k
Two American security workers have been found dead after an apparent heroin overdose in the same cabin on the Maersk Alabama, the ship made famous by the Tom Hanks movie Captain Phillips in 2013.
Seychelles police identified them on Thursday as Jeffrey Reynolds and Mark Kennedy – both former Navy SEALs. The men, both 44, were found dead on Tuesday. Officials say they found needles and heroin inside cabin where the two ex-special forces soldiers were bunking.
According to CNN a government official, who spoke on condition of not being identified, said the presence of drug traces and paraphernalia ‘would suggest that their deaths were a result of drug overdose.’
Shipping firm, A.P. Moller-Maersk confirmed in a statement on Thursday that the two men were found dead on board the vessel in the afternoon of February 18 in Port of Victoria.
The Maersk Alabama was targeted by Somali pirates in an attempted hijacking off the east coast of Africa in 2009. The 2013 film Captain Phillips is based on the incident.
In their statement Maersk gave no details about how the two men had died. ‘The cause of the death for both men is part of the ongoing investigation, but it was not related to vessel operations or their duties as security personnel’.
However, officials later revealed that drugs are believed to have played a part.
Earlier on Thursday, police spokesman Jean Toussaint, noted that officials were awaiting autopsies and said, ‘As far as I know there is no evidence of physical trauma’ on either man’s body.
The Maersk Alabama has since left Port Victoria, the Seychelles capital, said Kevin Speers, a senior director for Maersk to CNN on Thursday.
The U.S. Coast Guard has said it also is investigating the deaths.
Reynolds and Kennedy worked for Trident Group, a Virginia-based maritime security services firm. The company’s president, Tom Rothrauff, confirmed to CNN the men were former Navy SEALs.
‘It’s bizarre. Of course, it’s a shock. They’re all great guys,’ Rothrauff said. ‘I’m absolutely clueless as to what happened.’
Kevin N. Speers, a senior director for Maersk Line, said in a statement their deaths were ‘not related to vessel operations or their duties as security personnel.’
The Maersk Alabama is a Norfolk, Va.-based container ship that provides feeder service to the east coast of Africa and employs security contractors to provide anti-piracy services.
The two men who were found dead worked for a Virginia Beach, Va.-based maritime security firm, The Trident Group.
On Thursday, the Navy confirmed that Kennedy belonged to the SEALs, an elite unit of the military’s special operations forces who are sometimes called upon to combat piracy.
In 2009, Navy SEALs aboard the USS Bainbridge shot and killed three of the pirates who were holding Captain Richard Phillips in a lifeboat, bringing the five-day hijacking standoff involving the Maersk Alabama to an end.
Hit movie: Tom Hanks in his starring role as Captain Philips in the 2013 Paul Greengrass movie which dramatized the hijacking of the Maersk Alabama in 2009 by Somalian pirates
The Captain Phillips movie starring Tom Hanks as Capt. Richard Phillips was released last year.
Kennedy, whose home of record with the Navy was Baton Rouge, Louisiana enlisted in 1995 and completed his final tour of duty in 2008, according to a summary of his record, sent in an email by Navy spokeswoman Lt. Lauryn Dempsey.
Kennedy was assigned to an East Coast-based SEAL team, according to the record. Virginia Beach serves as the home of the Navy’s East Coast SEAL teams.
Former military personnel frequently provide security on board ships sailing through the waters off Somalia to provide security against pirate attacks. Kennedy and Reynolds boarded the ship Jan. 29, Speers said.
The Alabama transports food aid to East Africa in support of the U.S. government’s ‘Food for Peace’ program, according to Maersk Line. Crew members also help support the Bee Hive Children’s Home in Mombasa, Kenya.
Several crew members who were aboard the ship when it was hijacked in 2009 are suing Maersk Line and Mobile, Ala.-based Waterman Steamship Corp.
Nine crew members in the lawsuit, filed in Alabama in 2012, say they suffered physical and emotional injuries after Somali pirates boarded. Some crew members were held at gunpoint with Phillips; others hid in an engine room.
]]>
< ![CDATA[
It’s easy to do a hair test to verify they had used drugs in the past. If they had not then they may have been forced. If you use loved family members as a tool to cause a “suicide” then it isn’t really suicide. If they never used before, chances are it was a “hit”.
Very sad and no one will know what happened except those that where in that room. I know though that many men who serve under the guise of Special Operatins are professionals, whose life do not have space for drugs. What gets me is that during this administration, there have been a lot of high profile deaths of operators.
I do not, and will never believe that either of these men, some of the best men to ever serve our great country (although going down very quickly), were found dead from such bizarre circumstances and even worse at a time when so many bizarre incidents of international importance have taken place. May God help those of us left with morals to find the real facts and bring those evil ones to justice, no matter what high level position in our federal government that they all may have.!.!.! May you Mark, and Jeffrey, rest in peace.