Offshoreonly.com

Offshoreonly.com (https://www.offshoreonly.com/forums/)
-   General Boating Discussion (https://www.offshoreonly.com/forums/general-boating-discussion-51/)
-   -   6 Missing S FL boaters (https://www.offshoreonly.com/forums/general-boating-discussion/169485-6-missing-s-fl-boaters.html)

T2x 07-24-2008 02:57 PM


Originally Posted by Donman (Post 2633913)
That`s what`s wrong with the system --- instead of using $10 worth of lethal drugs, we`d rather feed, clothe and house this scum bag for the next 40 years or so . . .

Yes but Barack Obama is going to bring about change and tear down walls....so the guy will probably be out in only 2 to 5.

T2x

baddogz28 07-24-2008 03:11 PM

Fu,ckin scum. :( Glad their crappy alibi unraveled though.


RIP Crew of Joe Cool.

37SR 07-24-2008 03:11 PM

Extradite him back to Arkansas to serve time for the theft charges, he won't make it through the night. We have a good way of dealing with these child molesting & murdering demons. He'll try to escape from the yard, we'll turn the huntin' dogs loose on him, once they have chewed him up and ripped some flesh from the bone, it will be time to drag him through the southern swamps and let those open wounds fill up with some nasty infections. After the fire ants have continued the chewing and the flies have laid there eggs in the open wounds, the maggots will go internal chewing up his internals for him to die while being strapped spread eagle between two pines in the middle of the forest 50 miles from any civilization.

T2x 07-24-2008 03:47 PM


Originally Posted by 37SR (Post 2633982)
Extradite him back to Arkansas to serve time for the theft charges, he won't make it through the night. We have a good way of dealing with these child molesting & murdering demons. He'll try to escape from the yard, we'll turn the huntin' dogs loose on him, once they have chewed him up and ripped some flesh from the bone, it will be time to drag him through the southern swamps and let those open wounds fill up with some nasty infections. After the fire ants have continued the chewing and the flies have laid there eggs in the open wounds, the maggots will go internal chewing up his internals for him to die while being strapped spread eagle between two pines in the middle of the forest 50 miles from any civilization.

Did they make the movie "Deliverance" somewhere near you?

I lived in Arkansas for a couple of years and I must have missed that county.:D:D:D

T2x

fastseat 07-24-2008 05:29 PM

Hang them high

DollaBill 07-24-2008 05:32 PM


Originally Posted by 37SR (Post 2633982)
Extradite him back to Arkansas to serve time for the theft charges, he won't make it through the night. We have a good way of dealing with these child molesting & murdering demons. He'll try to escape from the yard, we'll turn the huntin' dogs loose on him, once they have chewed him up and ripped some flesh from the bone, it will be time to drag him through the southern swamps and let those open wounds fill up with some nasty infections. After the fire ants have continued the chewing and the flies have laid there eggs in the open wounds, the maggots will go internal chewing up his internals for him to die while being strapped spread eagle between two pines in the middle of the forest 50 miles from any civilization.

I like your style

AIR TIME 07-24-2008 07:59 PM


Originally Posted by Donman (Post 2633917)
You can tell I`m from Texas, huh ? :evilb:

it should be a eye for a eye take them phuckers out in the ocean ,chum a lil cut there skin throw them in with a ring to hang on to and film them getting eaten by sharks, and play it on cnn for future pirates and thugs to watch what is going to happen to them for now on:mad::angry-smiley-038:, we let these punks off way to easy:mad:

AIR TIME 07-24-2008 08:01 PM


Originally Posted by 37SR (Post 2633982)
Extradite him back to Arkansas to serve time for the theft charges, he won't make it through the night. We have a good way of dealing with these child molesting & murdering demons. He'll try to escape from the yard, we'll turn the huntin' dogs loose on him, once they have chewed him up and ripped some flesh from the bone, it will be time to drag him through the southern swamps and let those open wounds fill up with some nasty infections. After the fire ants have continued the chewing and the flies have laid there eggs in the open wounds, the maggots will go internal chewing up his internals for him to die while being strapped spread eagle between two pines in the middle of the forest 50 miles from any civilization.

That would be so nice:D if it could happen.:evilb:

DollaBill 07-24-2008 08:17 PM


Originally Posted by AIR TIME (Post 2634220)
it should be a eye for a eye take them phuckers out in the ocean ,chum a lil cut there skin throw them in with a ring to hang on to and film them getting eaten by sharks, and play it on cnn for future pirates and thugs to watch what is going to happen to them for now on:mad::angry-smiley-038:, we let these punks off way to easy:mad:

can be done. filming gets a little dicey though ;)

BOBCATMATHEWS 09-15-2008 11:43 AM

"Joe Cool" Murder Case Underway In Miami
MIAMI (CBS News) ― A case of murder on the high seas is about to be played out in a Miami Dade courtroom as jury selection got underway Monday for the trial of one of two men accused of killing the captain and crew of the Miami charter boat Joe Cool.

Guillermo Zarabozo, 20, has pleaded not guilty to charges of murder, kidnapping, robbery and several violations of maritime law. He and co-defendant Kirby Archer, 36, are accused of the murders of charter boat captain Jake Branam, his wife Kelly, and crew members Scott Gamble and Samuel Kairy.

The two men originally hired the Joe Cool to go to the Bahamas, and then tried to divert it to Cuba. When the crew refused, they were shot, killed and dumped overboard. The bodies were never recovered.

Zarabozo and Archer were found floating in a life raft. They originally told investigators that they were attacked by pirates.

In July Archer, a robbery fugitive from Strawberry, Arkansas, accepted a plea deal from prosecutors and admitted to participating in the murders of the Joe Cool crew. He said he shot and killed the Branams, but it was Zarabozo who killed Gamble and Kairy. In exchange for his guilty plea, he will not face the death penalty. Archer will be sentenced October, 2nd.

During his trial Zarabozo is expected to testify that Archer committed all the murders and that he wasn't aware of the Cuba hijacking plot. At a hearing in August, Zarabozo said he also went along with the story about an attack by pirates because he feared Archer would kill him as well.

Last month, U.S. District Judge Paul Huck ruled that lie detector test results for Zarabozo would not be admissible at trial. The ruling was a blow to Zarabozo's defense attorneys who said the results would back up their client's claim that he did not kill anyone. He faces life in prison if convicted.

satisfactionII 09-15-2008 01:18 PM

my first read of this thread. I am pissed and think the two scum deserve the Arkansas treatment followed up by the chum, cut, shark treatment. :mad:

jhiguy377 09-15-2008 04:37 PM


Originally Posted by T2x (Post 2633964)
Yes but Barack Obama is going to bring about change and tear down walls....so the guy will probably be out in only 2 to 5.

T2x

Rich,
What makes you think that he'd even have to do any time at all under the "new enlightened system"? - Jeff

scarab kv 09-16-2008 07:17 PM

:mad:A sad sad story. Our belated prayers to the families of Joe Cool!

As for those two...tie some bloody bait around thier waists and use them for trolling in shark infested waters

BOBCATMATHEWS 09-16-2008 08:42 PM

Joe Cool victims possibly alive when dumped overboard
Posted on Tue, Sep. 16, 2008
reprint print email
Facebook Digg del.icio.us AIM
By LUISA YANEZ
[email protected]

Two of the victims of the mayhem aboard the Joe Cool a year ago were wounded and bleeding but still alive when they were dumped overboard in the Florida Straits.

The horrific revelations of the final minutes of boat captain Jake Branam, 27, and his wife, Kelley, 30, of Miami Beach came Tuesday during the second day of testimony in the murder trial of Guillermo Zarabozo, one of two men accused in the deaths of the Branams and two other crew members of the Joe Cool, a sport fishing vessel.

Under questioning by federal prosecutors, FBI Special Agent David Nuñez said Zarabozo told him a ''hard-to-believe'' story about how the Joe Cool, on a charter to Bimini, was hijacked by gunmen who killed all aboard except Zarabozo, 20, of Hialeah and his alleged accomplice, Kirby Archer, 36, of Arkansas.

Archer has already pleaded guilty, and is awaiting sentencing.

Zarabozo said the hijackers then ordered him at gunpoint to dispose of the bodies of the Branams and crew members Scott Gamble, 35, and Samuel Kairy, 27. The victims' bodies were never recovered. Zarabozo said he followed the orders out of fear of his own life.

''Mr. Zarabozo told me the captain was still alive when he threw him overboard,'' Nuñez said, causing some jurors to shift in their seats in a Miami federal courtroom.

Asked what Zarabozo's demeanor was when he retold the end of someone's life, Nuñez said: ''He was stoic. He acted calm and cool, just like he is now,'' Nuñez said, motioning toward Zarabozo at the defense table.

Zarabozo is on trial for first-degree murder, kidnapping and robbery on the high seas. Zarabozo, who maintaines his innocence in the killings, faces life in prison if convicted. Nuñez, stationed in the Miami FBI office, testified that on Sept. 24, 2007, he had been assigned to fly out to a U.S. Coast Guard cutter in the Florida Straits to interview Zarabozo and Archer, who had been found drifting away from the ghostly Joe Cool in a life raft.

The pair first claimed the Cuban hijackers had eventually abandoned the 47-foot Joe Cool after it had run out of fuel, leaving them stranded on the boat.

Zarabozo told Nuñez the pirates told him as they jumped onto another vessel, ''You're on your own.'' Zarabozo said he believed his life had been spared because ''he was Cuban, like them,'' Nuñez said, and that he had vouched for Archer.

Archer gave similar gruesome details of a hijacking, then the killings on the Joe Cool, Nuñez said, but in his version, Kelley Branam was the one still alive when Zarabozo hurled her overboard.

Nuñez said Archer behaved oddly when he told how the mother of two had been shot by the hijackers after becoming hysterical. She had just witnessed her husband being shot on the boat's fly deck.

''Archer began nervously laughing,'' Nuñez said under cross-examination by Michael Caruso, one of Zarabozo's attorneys.

''I asked him if he thought that was funny,'' Nuñez said. ``He just kept laughing.''

Painting Archer as the bad guy is paramount to Zarabozo's defense. They claims the real killer of the Joe Cool crew was Archer, a man on the run from the law and wanting to get to Cuba, where he had been stationed at Guantánamo Naval Base during his years in the U.S. Army.

Zarabozo's public defenders have told jurors that Zarabozo was a naive and gullible teen taken in by Archer, who they described as a ``predator.''

They say Archer, wanted in Arkansas for stealing $92,000 from the Wal-Mart store where he worked, had filled Zarabozo's head with ideas that they would be working on high-security missions. They say it was his idea to charter the Joe Cool for $4,000, then hijack it. Zarabozo, they say, thought they were on a mission.

The trial is expected to last two weeks.


Join the discussion

BOBCATMATHEWS 09-30-2008 08:52 PM

latest on this pos

Jury convicts defendant in Joe Cool murder case

By Vanessa Blum | Sun-Sentinel.com
6:34 PM EDT, September 30, 2008

<i>Joe Cool</i> victims

The victims aboard the Joe Cool were (left to right): Jake Branam, his wife, Kelly Branam, crewmembers Scott Gamble and Samuel Kairy.

A South Florida man supplied a gun used in last year's quadruple murder on board the Joe Cool charter vessel, a federal jury decided Tuesday after four days of contentious deliberations.

The jury convicted Guillermo Zarabozo, 20, on four counts of causing death through the use of a firearm, but could not agree on 12 other charges, including first-degree murder.

U.S. District Judge Paul Huck declared a mistrial on those charges.

Zarabozo, a former Hialeah security guard, looked straight ahead as he heard the verdict, which carries a possible life sentence.

Related links

*
Four people killed on board the Joe Cool charter vessel Photos
*
Complete coverage of the Joe Cool boating mystery

Defense lawyers could challenge the verdict's consistency since jurors did not convict Zarabozo of actually taking part in the killings.

Attorney Anthony Natale told Huck the panel might have concluded Zarabozo was automatically guilty of the firearms charges because his gun was used in the murders.

Last week, the jury asked if he should be found guilty of those counts even if he didn't know a crime would occur. On Monday, the jury sent two notes indicating they were sharply divided over evidence in the case.

Prosecutors accused Zarabozo of murdering the Joe Cool crew with a second man, Kirby Archer, 36, as part of a botched plan to hijack the 47-foot boat and flee to Cuba.

They sought to convict Zarabozo on four counts of first-degree murder for the killings of Capt. Jake Branam, 27; his wife Kelley, 30; his half brother Scott Gamble, 36; and first mate Samuel Kairy, 27. The victims' bodies were never found.

But defense lawyers insisted Archer, an Arkansas fugitive, killed all four victims and duped Zarabozo into coming on the Joe Cool by promising him a security job in Bimini.

Zarabozo testified that he was in the boat's bathroom when Archer snatched his 9 mm Glock and opened fire on the crew.

Archer, who pleaded guilty in July to first-degree murder and conspiracy, did not testify at trial.

If Zarabozo is retried, he will face charges of conspiracy; murder; hijacking; kidnapping; robbery; and performing an act of violence at sea

omerta one 10-04-2008 03:51 PM

Two Jurors Wish They Could Take Back �Joe Cool� Verdict
Friday, October 03, 2008

AP

MIAMI — A jury has convicted a man of four lesser charges in the hijacking and slayings of four people last year aboard a Miami charter boat. A mistrial was declared on 12 other charges, which included kidnapping and murder.

Jurors reached their verdict late Thursday against Guillermo Zarabozo. They spent three days deliberating after a weeklong trial. Zarabozo was found guilty on four charges of causing death through use of a firearm.

Prosecutors say they will meet and decide whether to retry the case on the other 12 charges.

Prosecutors said Zarabozo and 36-year-old Kirby Archer booked the "Joe Cool" for a phony trip to the Bahamas but intended to hijack it to Cuba. The boat's captain, his wife and two crew members were killed and dumped into the ocean.

29Firefox 10-05-2008 03:17 AM

"causing death with a fire arm" but not "murder"??? What mental hospital did they get the jury from?:drink:

AB From Windsor 10-05-2008 09:01 AM

That is just unbelievable, some bleeding hearts on the jury. They should of just sat back for a few minutes and think about, what horror/ terror was going on in that boat to the victim's by these pieces of **** and that is being nice.

BOBCATMATHEWS 10-08-2008 04:15 PM

Joe Cool" Auction Postponed
Murdered Captain's Family In Bitter Feud
Reporting
Gary Nelson
E-mail
MIAMI (CBS4) ― A Miami judge has postponed the auction of the Miami charter boat Joe Cool, more than a year after its Captain, his wife and two crewmembers were killed by a pair of pirates who had tried to hijack the fishing boat to Cuba.

The court-ordered sale of the 47 foot Buddy Davis vessel comes after a months long, bitter court battle among members of the murdered captain's family.

During the proceedings Wednesday in the chambers of Circuit Judge Ronald Friedman, the broker in charge of the auction requested the postponement so that the vessel could be put on display for potential buyers. All parties involved in the auction would then have to agree to the time and place.

Joe Harry Branam, Sr., grandfather of the slain captain, Jake Branam, forced the sale of the Joe Cool to recoup losses he says he suffered through co-signing on the loan that Jake got to buy the sport fishing boat for approximately $250,000.

He argued that any proceeds from the auction would be given to Jake and his wife Kelly's children.

The sport fisherman-type yacht, which has two staterooms and two bathrooms, was expected to sell at auction for a fraction of its original purchase price.

A friend of Joe Branam, Sr. told CBS4 reporter Gary Nelson the boat is essentially being sold for salvage value. Depending on the sale price, the Branam child may never see a dime of the proceeds.

"The FBI and Coast Guard tore it apart," the family friend said, explaining that "tens of thousands of dollars" worth of equipment and furnishings were removed from the boat as part of the investigation into the quadruple murder of Jake Branam, his wife Kelly and crewmembers Scott Campbell and Sammy Cary.

The forced sale of the Joe Cool was opposed by Jake Branam's uncle, Jeff Branam and other family members who claimed they had an interest in the boat after financing much of Jake Branam's charter operation.

But Joe Branam, Sr. "held the note" on the vessel, the family friend told CBS4's Nelson.

"He continued to make the payments on the boat," she said, some $2,800 a month, and had personally provided collateral for the loan from Banco Popular with a certificate of deposit.

The Branam family has been largely estranged since Joe Sr.'s divorce from his wife, Jeannette, Jake Branam's grandmother, eleven years ago.

Jeannette Branam and her son, Jeff, had battled the family's patriarch for custody of the murdered couple's two children, Taylor, who was three years old at the time of the murders, and her brother, Morgan, who was seven months.

After a court battle that raged for months, the judge awarded custody of the children to Kelly Branam's sister in Michigan.

Amid familial vitriol, Captain Jake Branam also suffered personal tragedy the year before the Joe Cool murders when his father, Joe Branam, Jr., died of a massive heart attack at the age of fifty.

In Miami federal court this year, Arkansas drifter, Kirby Archer plead guilty to piracy and murder charges in the Joe Cool hijacking. A jury found co-defendant Guillermo Zarabozo of Hialeah guilty of firearms violations, but was unable to reach verdicts on piracy and murder counts. He is to be retried.

THEJOKER 10-08-2008 04:20 PM

That blows. What a tragedy and they had to tear the boat to pieces , nice.

throttleup 10-14-2008 04:22 PM

"Man sentenced to life in 'Joe Cool' boat slayings "

http://www.baynews9.com/content/36/2...14/391911.html


Julie

Xchoke03 10-14-2008 05:18 PM

Not good enuff. Those SOB's should be torn to pieces, sewn back together and torn apart again.

I will never understand our justice system. These pieces of garbage should be left in a room with the families of the loved ones. Let them decide.


Thanks for the update J !!!

LostinBoston 11-05-2008 11:37 AM

Judge overturns weapons conviction

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,447305,00.html

Jupiter Sunsation 05-06-2009 08:06 PM

Both killers got life+++
 
Joe Cool killer gets life sentence, plus 85 years
The Associated Press
1:34 PM EDT, May 6, 2009

Guillermo Zarabozo (U.S. Attorney's Office, S-S / September 24, 2008)


MIAMI - A judge sentenced a former security guard today to five consecutive life prison sentences plus 85 years for taking part in the 2007 hijacking of the Joe Cool charter boat and killings at sea of its captain, his wife and two crew members.

A life sentence was mandatory following the conviction of Guillermo Zarabozo, 21, on 16 charges in February. But U.S. District Judge Paul Huck sided with prosecutors who wanted a more severe sentence, even if stringing together multiple life terms was essentially symbolic.

Zarabozo testified at his trial that he did not kill anyone, instead blaming the hijacking and murders on his confederate Kirby Archer. Archer, 37, pleaded guilty and is also serving five life terms. Zarabozo repeated his claims in court today.

"When I got onto that boat, I didn't know what Archer was going to do," Zarabozo told the judge. "I had no intention of hurting anybody."

Four people killed on board the Joe Cool charter vessel Photos
Complete coverage of the Joe Cool boating mystery Huck, however, called Zarabozo's statements and testimony "largely a fabrication" clearly contradicted by the evidence and Zarabozo's decision to bring a gun and other weapons board.

"It was so obviously not true," Huck said.

Prosecutors said Zarabozo wished for a life of adventure and got involved because Archer claimed connections with the CIA and made promises of a lucrative career filled with undercover excitement.

Zarabozo, a security guard who once aspired to a police career, was convicted in February of kidnapping, murder and other charges. Trial testimony showed that he and Archer paid $4,000 cash to hire the Joe Cool in September 2007 for a purported trip to Bimini, Bahamas, then fatally shot all four people and tried to make it to Cuba.

The plot failed when the boat ran out of gas a few miles from Cuban waters.

Killed were boat captain Jake Branam, 27; his wife, Kelley Branam, 30; crew members Scott Gamble, 35, and Samuel Kairy, 27. The Branams left two small children now being cared for by relatives.

Friends and family members of the victims and Zarabozo packed the courtroom. Maria Gagliardo, partner of Jake Branam's grandfather Joe Harry Branam Sr., read two lengthy statements that repeatedly called Zarabozo a "monster" who had wrecked the families.

"Life for you will be long and unpleasant and you will die a convicted murderer," she said. "You are a coward. You chose to take innocent lives."

Zarabozo's mother, Francisca Alfonso, repeated her son's claims of innocence but also expressed sympathy for the victim's families.

"There have been two families that have been destroyed. I feel their pain," she said.

When Zarabozo and Archer were first rescued floating in the Joe Cool life raft, they claimed the boat had been set upon by Cuban pirates who had committed the slayings.

But investigators believed otherwise, and pieced together a case based on circumstantial evidence such as the discovery of shell casings that matched a 9mm handgun owned by Zarabozo.

Archer, a former military policeman who had been stationed at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, was a fugitive from Arkansas when he hired the boat. He was under investigation for child molestation and was wanted for stealing $92,000 from a Wal-Mart where he had been a manager.

Zarabozo's first trial ended in a mistrial when jurors failed to agree on verdicts on the most serious counts but convicted him on underlying weapons charges. Huck threw out the weapons verdicts and ordered a second trial, finding the jury was confused by faulty instructions on the law.

Dirty Bird 05-06-2009 09:06 PM

One of the saddest stories. Life sentences still don't do justice to such a horrific crime. On the other hand, at least our justice system prevailed and put these two away. This tragedy still bothers me.

bcfountain 05-07-2009 08:05 AM

life sentance
 
its always sad to hear of good people losing there lifes but whats really sad is our tax dollars will be used to feed,cloth,and keep these scum-bags alive.not to mention the constant reminder to the famlies of there loss.a bullet in the head would have been so much cheaper and better for all.


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 07:08 PM.


Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.