Relatives of two Trinidadian nationals killed in a U.S. military operation have initiated legal proceedings against the American government, alleging unlawful execution during a counter-narcotics mission. The lawsuit was formally lodged in Boston’s federal court by legal representatives acting on behalf of the families of Chad Joseph and Rishi Samaroo, who perished alongside four others when their vessel was struck off the Venezuelan coastline on October 14.
Legal counsel for the plaintiffs characterized the incident as ‘lawless killings in cold blood; killings for sport and killings for theatre,’ challenging the official narrative of a justified narcotics interception. The operation forms part of an expanded maritime campaign under the Trump administration, which has conducted at least 36 vessel engagements across the Caribbean and Eastern Pacific since September, resulting in over 120 fatalities. Officials have defended these actions as targeting ‘narco-terrorists’ responsible for trafficking lethal substances into the United States.
The legal submission invokes the Death on the High Seas Act, a statute permitting foreign nationals to seek redress in U.S. courts for maritime wrongful deaths allegedly violating international law. Claimants include Joseph’s mother, Sallycar Korasingh, and Samaroo’s sister, who maintain both men were agricultural and fishing laborers returning to Trinidad and Tobago when their boat was destroyed. Korasingh asserted that had authorities suspected criminal activity, proper protocol would entail ‘arrest, charge, and detention—not execution.’
Central to the lawsuit is the argument that the deceased were not engaged in military hostilities against the United States, thereby rendering the lethal force unlawful under international armed conflict regulations. The Pentagon has yet to issue any formal response to the allegations.
This case emerges alongside another legal challenge brought before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights by relatives of a Colombian man killed in a separate U.S. maritime strike, signaling growing international scrutiny over Washington’s intensified drug interdiction tactics in regional waters.
