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US official advocated months ago for sinking alleged drug boats, witnesses say

Emil Bove’s remarks are seen as a precursor of the US militaristic approach toward suspected drug vessels

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An alleged drug boat before it was destroyed in a US strike in the eastern Pacific in October. Photo: US Secretary of Defence Pete Hegseth’s X account via AFP
Reuters

Months before the US military began launching air strikes against suspected drug vessels, former Justice Department acting deputy attorney general Emil Bove told employees the government should just “sink the boats” rather than prosecute the people on board, three witnesses told Reuters.

Bove made similar remarks on at least three separate occasions between November 2024 and February 2025 when the topic of maritime drug cases was broached, the witnesses said. All three were granted anonymity to detail internal Justice Department discussions. NPR first reported the news on Monday.

The witnesses now view Bove’s remarks as a harbinger of the unprecedented militaristic approach the Trump administration is taking by bombing suspected drug vessels, rather than the traditional response of seizing the ships, confiscating the drugs and arresting those on board.

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Reuters could not determine whether Bove, who left the department in early September to begin serving as a judge for the US Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, was directly involved in discussions with the Pentagon about the plans to strike suspected drug vessels.

Emil Bove. Photo: TNS
Emil Bove. Photo: TNS

Bove declined to comment through a court spokesperson. A Justice Department spokesperson played down the recollections of the witnesses, calling them “disgruntled”, but did not dispute their account.

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