Richard E. Hicks, Maersk Alabama Sailor, Sues Company Over Pirate Safety

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JUAN A. LOZANO | April 27, 2009 09:27 PM EST | AP

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Richard E. Hicks, the chief cook on board the Maersk Alabama, speaks after filing a lawsuit Monday, April 27, 2009 in Houston. Hicks, a crew member of the American-flagged cargo ship hijacked earlier this month by African pirates, sued the owner of the vessel on Monday, accusing the company of knowingly putting the sailors who were aboard in danger by ignoring risks and calls for safety improvements. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

HOUSTON — A member of the crew on the U.S.-flagged ship hijacked by African pirates sued the owner and another company Monday, accusing them of knowingly putting sailors in danger. Richard E. Hicks alleges in the suit that owner Maersk Line Limited and Waterman Steamship Corp., which provided the crew, ignored requests to improve safety measures for vessels sailing along the Somali coast.

Hicks was chief cook on the Maersk Alabama. Pirates held the ship's captain hostage for five days until the U.S. Navy rescued him.

Hicks' lawsuit seeks at least $75,000 in damages and improved safety.

Officials for Norfolk, Va.-based Maersk Line and Mobile, Ala.-based Waterman said their companies don't comment on pending litigation.

Hicks asked that the two companies improve safety for ships by providing armed security or allowing crew members to carry weapons, sending ships through safer routes, and placing such safety measures on ships as barbed wire that would prevent pirates from being able to board vessels.

"We've had safety meetings every month for the last three years and made suggestions of what should be done and they have been ignored," Hicks said. "I'm just trying to make sure this is a lot better for other seamen."

Hicks also asked the two companies pay at least $75,000 in damages, saying he doesn't know if he will ever work on a ship again.

"My family is not looking forward to me going back out to sea. But I'm not sure if I'm going back. I'm still nervous, leery. I might find something else to do, said Hicks, who has worked 32 years as a merchant seaman.

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"We think (the companies) should be more concerned about the personnel on their ships than the profits the companies make," said Terry Bryant, Hicks' attorney.

Both companies do business in Texas, which is why the suit was filed in Houston, he said.

Pirates took over the Alabama on April 8 before Capt. Richard Phillips surrendered himself in exchange for the safety of his 19-member crew. The captain was taken on a lifeboat and held hostage for five days before U.S. Navy SEAL snipers on the destroyer USS Bainbridge killed three of his captors and freed him.

Hicks said crew members have been trained on what to do if pirates or others threaten the ship.

"We need more than training," said the 53-year-old who lives in Royal Palm Beach, Fla., and has two grown sons. "I never thought nothing like this would ever happen."

Hicks said pirates had tried to board the ship two other times that week, but the Alabama had managed to outrun them. But on April 8, as Hicks was preparing food for the crew, the ship's alarm rang and the captain announced the ship was being boarded by pirates.

Hicks and the other crew members went to their designated safety room, which was the engine room, and they waited there for more than 12 hours in 125 degree heat.

"I didn't know if I was going to live or die," Hicks said.

The crew managed to take a pirate hostage, wounding him with an ice pick, and attempted to use him to get back Phillips. But the bandits fled the ship with Phillips as their captive, holding him in the lifeboat until the SEAL sharpshooters rescued him.

"He did a hell of a job saving us," Hicks said of Phillips.

But Bryant said the Maersk Line and Waterman share the blame for putting the crew at risk.

"We want to bring more attention to the shipping industry and the dangers in pirate-infested waters," he said.

HOUSTON — A member of the crew on the U.S.-flagged ship hijacked by African pirates sued the owner and another company Monday, accusing them of knowingly putting sailors in danger. Richard E. Hi...
HOUSTON — A member of the crew on the U.S.-flagged ship hijacked by African pirates sued the owner and another company Monday, accusing them of knowingly putting sailors in danger. Richard E. Hi...
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this guy should be run out of the country this sueing {because it make you feel bad} has got to come to a stop . that man is no diffrent than that captain that but his life on the line for that black SOB I think that Judge should throw it out of court and tell this guy to get a life we are all in HARD times and that extra presure on the country is not needed

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:25 AM on 04/28/2009

WHAT? Are you kidding me? Sue the company so WE don't have to pay? You want to think about that a little bit? Everytime someone sue's WE all pay. One way or the other, you think that company is going to just swallow that loss of money? Let's encourage more people into more lawsuits. Yeah, then we will ALL be rich.
And what's with this "sailor" he knew the risks, he gets paid well, he took the chance. I would like to know who talked this "sailor" into a lawsuit? This annoys the heck out of me. Don't take the job if you don't like the risks that come with it! And don't even try to tell me that this man did not know the risks involved with this job.... if the ship had gone down in a storm, who would be sue'd then? God?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:45 AM on 04/28/2009

Usually I am against this sort of thing, but in this case I say GOOD, MAYBE IT WILL GET SOMEONES ATTENTION WHO CARES MORE ABOUT THE CREWS THAN THE COMPANY LAWYERS. Besides, I don't want my tax money to have to pay for the security of these ships. These corporations makes huge profits, they should pay for there own security!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:23 PM on 04/27/2009
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