Washington — The households of two Trinidadian males who have been killed in a U.S. missile strike on a ship within the Caribbean in October sued the Trump administration in federal court docket, arguing the “premeditated and intentional killings lack any believable authorized justification.”
Chad Joseph and Rishi Samaroo have been among the many six passengers who have been killed when the boat they have been touring in was destroyed by a U.S. missile on Oct. 14, 2025, in keeping with a 23-page grievance filed within the U.S. District Court docket for the District of Massachusetts on Tuesday. Joseph’s mom and Samaroo’s sister filed the swimsuit on behalf of their households, naming the U.S. as a defendant.
The October strike was a part of the Trump administration’s marketing campaign towards alleged drug-trafficking boats within the Caribbean and jap Pacific, principally focusing on boats coming from Venezuela. The administration has carried out at the least 35 strikes since September, most lately final week. The assaults have killed greater than 100 folks.
President Trump posted footage of the Oct. 14 strike on Fact Social on the time, writing that intelligence confirmed the boat “was trafficking narcotics, was related to illicit narcoterrorist networks, and was transiting alongside a identified [designated terrorist organization] route.” He mentioned “six male narcoterrorists” have been killed.
President Trump / Fact Social
The lawsuit mentioned Joseph and Samaroo lived in Trinidad and Tobago and had traveled to Venezuela to fish and work on farms. They have been returning to their properties in Trinidad and Tobago on the boat that was struck, in keeping with the grievance.
Joseph was 26 years outdated and had a spouse and three kids in Trinidad and Tobago, the lawsuit mentioned. The grievance mentioned he referred to as his spouse two days earlier than his loss of life and mentioned he had discovered transport again dwelling. His household by no means heard from him once more, the grievance mentioned.
Samaroo was 41 years outdated and had been imprisoned from 2009 to 2024 “for his participation in a murder,” the swimsuit mentioned. In August 2025, he referred to as his sister and instructed her he was in Venezuela engaged on a farm. Two days earlier than the boat strike, he instructed his household that he can be catching a journey dwelling and can be again in Trinidad in a few days, in keeping with the lawsuit. That was the final time they heard from him.
The lawsuit says that “Mr. Joseph and Mr. Samaroo weren’t members of, or affiliated with, drug cartels.” The administration has justified the marketing campaign by stating that the strikes are focusing on drug-running cartel boats.
“The Trinidadian authorities has publicly said that ‘the federal government has no data linking Joseph or Samaroo to unlawful actions,’ and that it had ‘no data of the victims of U.S. strikes being in possession of unlawful medication, weapons, or small arms,'” in keeping with the grievance.
The lawsuit is in search of compensation for the 2 males’s households underneath two federal legal guidelines often called the Demise on the Excessive Seas Act and the Alien Tort Statute. The households are represented by the American Civil Liberties Union and the Middle for Constitutional Rights.
The lawsuit is at the least the second authorized motion taken by the household of these killed within the Trump administration’s boat strikes. In December, the family of 42-year-old Alejandro Carranza Medina filed a grievance towards the U.S. with the Inter-American Fee on Human Rights, saying Medina was not concerned in drug trafficking and had been fishing when his boat was destroyed.
