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Ex-U.S. soldier, two others convicted of murder-for-hire plot in Philippines

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Ex-U.S. soldier, two others convicted of murder-for-hire plot in Philippines

By Brendan Pierson

 

2018-04-19T145746Z_1_LYNXMPEE3I1C9_RTROPTP_3_USA-CRIME-RAMBO.JPG

Thai policemen escort Joseph Hunter, a former U.S. Army sergeant nicknamed Rambo, as he arrives at Don Mueang International Airport in Bangkok, Thailand on September 27, 2013. REUTERS/Chaiwat Subprasom/Files Photo

 

NEW YORK (Reuters) - A former U.S. Army sergeant and two other U.S. citizens were found guilty by a jury in Manhattan federal court on Wednesday of taking part in a plot to murder a woman in the Philippines for money, prosecutors said.

 

Ex-soldier Joseph Manuel Hunter, Adam Samia and Carl David Stillwell were convicted of charges including murder-for-hire, which carries a mandatory life sentence, according to the office of U.S. Attorney Geoffrey Berman in Manhattan.

 

"Obviously, we're disappointed, but respect the jury's verdict," said Robert Ray, a lawyer for Stillwell, adding he planned to appeal.

 

Lawyers for Hunter and Samia could not immediately be reached for comment.

 

Hunter, 52, is scheduled to be sentenced by U.S. District Judge Ronnie Abrams on Sep. 7. He is already serving a 20-year sentence after pleading guilty in 2015 to separate charges of conspiring to kill a federal drug agent and an informant.

 

Samia, 43, and Stillwell, 50, are scheduled to be sentenced by Abrams on Sep. 14. Samia is a self-described "personal protection/security industry" professional trained in tactics and weapons, while Stillwell's resume says he worked at a North Carolina firm that provides firearms training, according to court filings.

 

Prosecutors said Samia and Stillwell travelled to the Philippines and murdered a woman there in February 2012, and were each paid $35,000 by Hunter. The woman was shot multiple times in the face and left on a pile of garbage, prosecutors said.

 

The first charges against Hunter stemmed from a U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration sting operation that followed the arrest in Liberia in 2012 of Hunter's boss, Paul Le Roux, the Zimbabwe-born head of a multinational criminal organization.

 

Le Roux subsequently agreed to cooperate with authorities. He admitted to shipping drugs and weapons around the world and to having ordered various murders, and ordered a fake murder-for-hire operation to help authorities catch Hunter, according to court records.

 

(Reporting by Brendan Pierson in New York; Editing by Peter Cooney)

 
reuters_logo.jpg
-- © Copyright Reuters 2018-04-20
  • Popular Post

Send them to a Philippine prison to serve their sentence....

Isn't sending US assassins to the Philippines a bit like sending coals to Newcastle. 

3 hours ago, nausea said:

Isn't sending US assassins to the Philippines a bit like sending coals to Newcastle. 

Not if you want to use professionals.

they should have just worked for the cia

1 hour ago, AsiaHand said:

Not if you want to use professionals.

Professionals don’t get caught. 

Le Roux subsequently agreed to cooperate with authorities. He admitted to shipping drugs and weapons around the world and to having ordered various murders, and ordered a fake murder-for-hire operation to help authorities catch Hunter, according to court records.

 

Le Roux ordered a fake murder - for -hire operation? 

Paul Le Roux.JPG

9 hours ago, pgrahmm said:

Send them to a Philippine prison to serve their sentence....

I think you ignore than in Philippines jail there is "VIP cells" and "VIP statut".

Poster on another thread was waxing lyrically about what a great country the Philippines is.

Bewildering 

4 hours ago, Monkeyrobot said:

Professionals don’t get caught. 

They were only cought because the people that hired them (to protect their cowardly necks) turned them in.

7 hours ago, marco999 said:

I think you ignore than in Philippines jail there is "VIP cells" and "VIP statut".

Maybe - but still not a good place to be the foreigner that ordered/performed a hit on a Philippine citizen....

Money & access to it will run out - along with their "time", probably sooner than later....

13 hours ago, car720 said:

or selling snow to eskimos.   :cheesy::cheesy:

Ice to the Inuit, please. 

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