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View of the US federal court house on June 4, 2013 in Norfolk, Virginia, where three Somali pirates are on trial/AFP

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US jury sentences Somali pirates to life

View of the US federal court house on June 4, 2013 in Norfolk, Virginia, where three Somali pirates are on trial/AFP

View of the US federal court house on June 4, 2013 in Norfolk, Virginia, where three Somali pirates are on trial/AFP

WASHINGTON, August 2 – Three convicted Somali pirates escaped the death penalty Friday when a US jury sentenced them to life in prison for the high-seas murder of four Americans in the Indian Ocean.

Federal prosecutors had sought the death penalty for Ahmed Muse Salad, 25, Abukar Osman Beyle, 20, and Shani Nurani Shiekh Abrar, 29, for the February 2011 shooting deaths aboard a 58 foot (17.7 meter) yacht.

The boat’s owners Scott Adam, 70, and Jean Adam, 66, both retirees from the Los Angeles suburb of Marina del Rey, had set off from New Zealand to fulfill a lifelong dream of sailing around the world.

Their friends Bob Riggle, 67, and Phyllis Macay of Seattle had joined them for the ill-fated Indian Ocean leg.

They were the first Americans killed in a dramatic outbreak of Somali based maritime piracy off the Horn of Africa that has since waned significantly in the face of stepped up international naval patrols.

After two days of deliberation in Norfolk, Virginia home to the US Navy’s Atlantic fleet the jury of seven women and five men on Friday returned a sentence of life imprisonment, court sources said.

“Four Americans were taken hostage, terrorized and then murdered,” said Neil MacBride, the US district attorney for eastern Virginia, in a statement.

“Life in prison is reserved for those who commit heinous crimes, and the jury today decided the execution of four innocent Americans on the high seas meets that high bar.”

Salad’s lawyer Michael Nachmanoff told AFP the jurors were unanimous in their decision.

“We’re very grateful they spared the lives of our clients,” he said, adding that the three men would serve their time in the federal prison system without parole.

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