.
Seychelles police
identified the bodies found Tuesday as Jeffrey Reynolds and Mark
Kennedy, both 44. They worked for Trident Group, a Virginia-based
maritime security services firm. Trident Group President Tom Rothrauff
said both were former Navy SEALs.
"It's bizarre. Of course, it's a shock. They're all great guys," Rothrauff said. "I'm absolutely clueless as to what happened."
Police said an autopsy
would be carried out early next week. But the Seychelles government
official, who spoke on condition of not being identified, said Thursday
that the presence of drug traces and paraphernalia "would suggest that
their deaths were a result of drug overdose."
A Seychelles police
statement said that despite media accounts of traces of drugs,
authorities have not released any reports suggesting the deaths were the
result of an overdose. The statement, however, did not deny that drugs were found or suggest an alternative cause of death.
The 500-foot Maersk
Alabama was the target of an attempted hijacking in the pirate-infested
waters off East Africa in 2009 -- an incident that inspired the 2013
film "Captain Phillips." The shipping giant Maersk, which hired the
Trident Group to guard its ships, said Thursday that Trident would be
conducting random drug tests of its employees.
"Based on our experience
with the contractor, this is an isolated incident," Maersk said. But it
said new drug tests would start immediately and the company's
shore-leave policy was under review. The Maersk Alabama has since left
the Seychelles capital of Port Victoria, the company said Thursday.
Police said the ship
arrived Sunday in the Seychelles, an archipelago in the Indian Ocean,
with a 24-man crew and had been expected to leave Tuesday. The bodies
were found by a colleague who had gone to check in on one of the men in a
cabin at about 4:30 p.m. Tuesday, Seychelles police said.
Lt. Cmdr. Jamie
Frederick, a U.S. Coast Guard spokesman, said the service was
investigating the deaths, as required by American law. But he said the
deaths "do not appear to be criminal in nature, related to vessel
operations, the material condition of the ship or their duties as
security personnel."
In April 2009, four
armed pirates attempted to hijack the Maersk Alabama 380 miles off
Somalia. After the crew sank the pirates' vessel and foiled their
efforts to take control of the container ship, the pirates took the
ship's captain, Richard Phillips, hostage on a lifeboat.
The incident ended three
days later when Navy sharpshooters killed three of the pirates and
captured the fourth. Phillips was unharmed.
Pirates attacked the ship again later that year, but armed security personnel fought them off. In March 2011, another attempt by pirates to board the ship was thwarted when security personnel fired warning shots.
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