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Matthew Campbell - Dead in the Water: A True Story of Hijacking, Murder, and a Global Maritime Conspiracy

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Matthew Campbell Dead in the Water: A True Story of Hijacking, Murder, and a Global Maritime Conspiracy

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Shortlisted for the Financial Times Business Book of the Year Award
A triumph of investigative journalism. Tom Wright, New York Times bestselling coauthor of Billion Dollar Whale

Truly one of the most nail-biting, page-turning, terrifying true-crime books Ive ever read. Nick Bilton, New York Times bestselling author of American Kingpin
From award-winning journalists Matthew Campbell and Kit Chellel, the gripping, true-crime story of a notorious maritime hijacking at the heart of a massive conspiracyand the unsolved murder that threatened to unravel it all.
In July 2011, the oil tanker Brillante Virtuoso was drifting through the treacherous Gulf of Aden when a crew of pirates attacked and set her ablaze in a devastating explosion. But when David Mockett, a maritime surveyor working for Lloyds of London, inspected the damaged vessel, he was left with more questions than answers. How had the pirates gotten aboard so easily? And if they wanted to steal the ship and bargain for its return, then why did they destroy it? The questions didnt add upand Mockett would never answer them. Soon after his inspection, David Mockett was murdered.
Dead in the Water is a shocking expose of the criminal inner workings of international shipping, told through the lens of the Brillante hijacking and its aftermath. Through first-hand accounts of those who lived itfrom members of the ships crew and witnesses to the attacks, to the ex-London detectives turned private investigators seeking to solve Mocketts murder and bring justice to his familyaward-winning Bloomberg reporters Matthew Campbell and Kit Chellel piece together the astounding truth behind one of the most brazen financial frauds in history.
The ambitious culmination of more than four years of reporting, Dead in the Water uncovers an intricate web of conspiracy amidst the lawless, old-world industry at the backbone of our new global economy.

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Portfolio Penguin An imprint of Penguin Random House LLC - photo 1
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Portfolio / Penguin

An imprint of Penguin Random House LLC

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Copyright 2022 by Matthew Campbell and Kit Chellel Penguin supports copyright - photo 4

Copyright 2022 by Matthew Campbell and Kit Chellel

Penguin supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin to continue to publish books for every reader.

Portions of this book were previously published in different form as The Hijacking of the Brillante Virtuoso on bloomberg.com in 2017.

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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Names: Campbell, Matthew (Reporter), author. | Chellel, Kit, author.

Title: Dead in the water : a true story of hijacking, murder, and a global maritime conspiracy / Matthew Campbell and Kit Chellel.

Description: [New York] : Portfolio/Penguin, [2022] | Includes bibliographical references and index.

Identifiers: LCCN 2021050064 (print) | LCCN 2021050065 (ebook) | ISBN 9780593329238 (hardcover) | ISBN 9780593329245 (ebook)

Subjects: LCSH: Hijacking of ships. | Piracy. | Tankers.

Classification: LCC HV6433.785 .C36 2022 (print) | LCC HV6433.785 (ebook) | DDC 364.16/4dc23/eng/20211015

LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2021050064

LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2021050065

Cover design: Jennifer Heuer

Cover images: (ship) Joeygil / iStock / Getty Images Plus; (water) Algefoto / iStock / Getty Images Plus

Book design by Daniel Lagin, adapted for ebook by Estelle Malmed

pid_prh_6.0_139875639_c0_r0

For our families

CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION

The oceans make the modern economy possible, providing the most convenient and affordable means to move the things we buy, sell, build, burn, eat, wear, and throw away. On any given day, sneakers stitched together in Cambodian sweatshops are packed into forty-foot containers, then winched by dockside cranes into ships bound for Europe, where they will line the shelves of big-box stores. Oil sucked from a 150-million-year-old deposit beneath the Saudi desert travels the aquatic highway of the Suez Canal, ultimately filling the tanks of Ford sedans in New Jersey. Iron ore gouged from the red earth of Western Australia is loaded into cavernous bulk carriers and shipped to China, where its forged into the steel that frames Shanghai skyscrapers.

Without seaborne trade, there would be no smartphones, and no glass of red wine with dinner. Without tankers to distribute it cheaply and efficiently, there would be no economic way to extract much of the natural gas that heats our homes, nor the fuel that allows us to fly off on vacations and business trips. The evolution of the shipping business to enable this commerce is one of the most remarkable achievements of capitalism, a symphony of technical and financial innovations that have drastically reduced the cost, and increased the reliability, of long-distance trade.

Yet the industrys success has also, curiously, led it to become largely invisible. The worlds greatest citiesLondon, New York, Tokyowere once dominated by their ports, their streets crowded with the sailors and dockworkers who made them run. But as ever-larger vessels required ever-larger quays, and robotic cranes replaced longshoremens brawn, the ports moved away, to obscure locales like Felixstowe and Port Elizabeth. Eventually the sailors also receded from viewsome made obsolete by automation, the rest pushed out by cheaper, less demanding workers from developing countries. Even more than power lines or sewer pipes, ships slipped into the background of modern life, not so much taken for granted as barely noticed at all. As consumers, weve never before had access to such a bounty of goods, and weve never had to think so little about how they come into our possession.

The story told here centers on just one vessel, a rusting hulk of an oil tanker called the Brillante Virtuoso. It is the product of more than four years of reporting, drawing on tens of thousands of pages of court filings, witness testimonies, police records, military documents, emails, memos, and audio transcripts, as well as interviews with more than seventy-five people involved in the events concerned. No scenes or dialogue have been invented or embellished; all are based on the recollections or contemporaneous notes of direct participants, or drawn from the materials described above. Where the accuracy of an account is substantively disputed, the objections are described in the text or notes.

On its own, the Brillante was nothing special, just another useful cog in the machine of maritime trade. Yet for a decade, this unremarkable vessel has been fought over, picked apart in court, and investigated by police, naval forces, private detectives, and experts who make their living boarding ships to look for nearly invisible clues. And it still hasnt given up all its secrets. Mention its name in one of the worlds maritime hubs, and as often as not youll get a certain kind of reactionan arched eyebrow, perhaps, or a glance over a shoulder to see who might be listening. More than once during our research, we were warned of risks to our safety if we continued to investigate, and many of the sources we consulted asked not to be identified, fearing for their own well-being. Their anxiety was understandable. For years, the Brillante has been leaving a churn of ruined lives in its wake. At least one person involved has been murdered. Others have been threatened, kidnapped, or forced to flee their homes in terror.

This book is about the hidden system that powers international commerce, and, more particularly, about what can happen on its chaotic fringes. The shipping industry has the unique attribute of being utterly integrated with the world economy while existing apart from it, benefiting from its infrastructure while ignoring many of its rules. Its sometimes said that the seas are lawless, and thats true: far from shore, on a decrepit trawler or a juddering ore carrier, there are certainly no police, and often no consequences. But the most audacious crimes can occur where the maritime world intersects with the more orderly terrestrial oneenabled by the complexities of twenty-first-century finance and, perhaps most of all, the collective indifference of a global populace that wants what it wants, wants it now, and doesnt want to know the human cost.

CHAPTER 1
A LUCKY LAND

In the middle of a spring night in 2011, Cynthia Mockett woke to the sound of gunshots. The rattle of automatic rifle fire was something shed learned to tolerate over the years. But this sounded close, just outside her bedroom. Cynthia was sixty-four years old, a small, forceful woman with silvery hair and intense eyes. Her husband, David, was still asleep as she slid out of bed and crept over to the window. She could see the outlines of the old city of Aden laid out before her, its neat white buildings clinging to the rocky slopes of an extinct volcano, illuminated by the lights of the harbor beyond.

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