Screenshot of video showing drug trafficking boat before being struck by US forces US President Donald Trump's social media
Crime & Piracy

Lawsuit alleges US strike killed civilians near Venezuelan waters

Reuters

Family members of two men killed in a US missile strike against a drug boat near Venezuela filed a wrongful death lawsuit on Tuesday, alleging the pair were murdered in a "manifestly unlawful" military campaign targeting civilian vessels.

Civil rights lawyers filed the lawsuit in Boston's federal court, marking the first court challenge to one of the 36 US missile strikes on vessels in the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean authorised by President Donald Trump's administration that have killed more than 120 people since September.

Family members of Chad Joseph and Rishi Samaroo—two Trinidadian men who were among six killed during an October 14 strike—in the lawsuit say the two men did fishing and farm work in Venezuela and had been returning to their homes in Las Cuevas, Trinidad when they were attacked.

"These are lawless killings in cold blood; killings for sport and killings for theatre, which is why we need a court of law to proclaim what is true and constrain what is lawless," Baher Azmy, a lawyer for the plaintiffs at the Center for Constitutional Rights, said in a statement. 

The administration has rejected such characterisations, maintaining that the operations were lawful and aimed at disrupting drug-smuggling routes long used by violent criminal groups.

His group and the American Civil Liberties Union filed the novel lawsuit under the Death on the High Seas Act, a maritime law that allows family members to sue for wrongful deaths occurring on the high seas, and the Alien Tort Statute, a 1789 law that allows foreign citizens to sue in US courts for violations of international law.

The lawsuit was filed by Lenore Burnley, Joseph's mother, and Sallycar Korasingh, Samaroo's sister, and seeks only damages from the US Government for the two deaths, not an injunction that would prevent further strikes.

But the case could provide an avenue for a court to assess whether the October 14 strike was legal.

The Pentagon did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The Trump administration has framed the attacks carried out under US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth's direction as a war with drug cartels, saying they were armed groups.

It has said its attacks comply with international rules known as the law of war or the law of armed conflict. But the attacks have drawn scrutiny from Democrats and some Republicans in Congress, which has not authorised attacks on the drug cartels.

Tuesday's lawsuit argues that the killing of Joseph and Samaroo outside of an armed conflict, while they were not taking part in military hostilities against the US amounted to murder and should be deemed a wrongful death on the high seas and an extrajudicial killing under international law. 

Washington has maintained that the strikes formed part of a broader counter-narcotics campaign authorised under existing security authorities.

(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston, Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi, Aurora Ellis, Baird Maritime)