Brillante Virtuoso: Difference between revisions

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[[File:USS Philippine Sea rescues Brilliante Virtuoso crew.jpg|thumb|USS Philippine Sea rescues Brilliante Virtuoso crew.]]
[[File:USS Philippine Sea rescues Brilliante Virtuoso crew.jpg|thumb|USS Philippine Sea rescues Brilliante Virtuoso crew.]]
The '''Brilliante Virtuoso''' is a large oil tanker that was endangered by fire on July 6, 2011.<ref name=TheWireIssue29v12/>
The '''Brilliante Virtuoso''' was a large oil tanker that was endangered by fire on July 6, 2011.<ref name=TheWireIssue29v12/>
The crew reported they thought they were being attacked by [[Somalian pirates]].
The vessel was south of the port of [[Aden]].
Subsequently the vessel reported that the vessel was endangered by an uncontrollable fire, and they were
abandoning the ship.
Sailors from the [[USS Philippine Sea (CG-58)|USS ''Philippines Sea'']] were able to rescue
the crew.  They reported they found no sign of pirates.


The Brilliante Virtuoso can carry 144,000 tons of oil.<ref name=TheWireIssue29v12/>
The crew reported they thought they were being attacked by [[Somalian pirates]]. The vessel was south of the port of [[Aden]].
Subsequently the vessel reported that the vessel was endangered by an uncontrollable fire, and they were bandoning the ship.
 
Sailors from the [[USS Philippine Sea (CG-58)|USS ''Philippines Sea'']] were able to rescue the crew.  They reported they found no sign of pirates.
 
The Brilliante Virtuoso carried 144,000 tons of oil.<ref name=TheWireIssue29v12/>
 
The initial inquiries of [[David Mockett]], the first insurance investigator found evidence of insurance fraud.<ref name=Telegraph2012-06-28/>  He was subsequently killed by a car bomb, before he could finish his inquiry.
 
A British court of inquiry subsequently concluded that there had never been an attack, that the ship's owners falsely claimed there had been an attack, and had the ship set ablaze, in order to file a fraudulent insurance claim.<ref name=Lawsuit/>
 
The fire left the vessel too damaged to repair.<ref name=Lawsuit/>


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist|refs=  
{{Reflist|refs=  
<ref name=Telegraph2012-06-28>
{{cite news
| url        = https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/defence/9363580/Briton-killed-for-standing-up-to-pirate-fraud-gang.html
| title      = Briton killed for standing up to pirate fraud gang
| author    = Holly Watt
| date      = 2012-06-28
| work      = [[The Daily Telegraph]]
| location  = [[London]]
| issn      = 0307-1235
| oclc      = 49632006
| access-date= 2014-05-31
| url-access = subscription
| archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20120629003030/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/defence/9363580/Briton-killed-for-standing-up-to-pirate-fraud-gang.html
| archive-date= 2012-06-29
| url-status  = live
}}
</ref>
<ref name=Lawsuit>
{{Cite web
| url        = https://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2019/2599.html
| title      = Suez Fortune Investments Ltd & Anor v Talbot Underwriting Ltd & Ors (BRILLANTE VIRTUOSO) &#91;2019&#93; EWHC 2599 (Comm) (07 October 2019)
| website    = Bailii.org
}}
</ref>


{{cite news       
{{cite news       

Revision as of 00:12, 30 December 2023

USS Philippine Sea rescues Brilliante Virtuoso crew.

The Brilliante Virtuoso was a large oil tanker that was endangered by fire on July 6, 2011.[1]

The crew reported they thought they were being attacked by Somalian pirates. The vessel was south of the port of Aden. Subsequently the vessel reported that the vessel was endangered by an uncontrollable fire, and they were bandoning the ship.

Sailors from the USS Philippines Sea were able to rescue the crew. They reported they found no sign of pirates.

The Brilliante Virtuoso carried 144,000 tons of oil.[1]

The initial inquiries of David Mockett, the first insurance investigator found evidence of insurance fraud.[2] He was subsequently killed by a car bomb, before he could finish his inquiry.

A British court of inquiry subsequently concluded that there had never been an attack, that the ship's owners falsely claimed there had been an attack, and had the ship set ablaze, in order to file a fraudulent insurance claim.[3]

The fire left the vessel too damaged to repair.[3]

References