Kidnapped McKinney Man Gets an Up-Close Look Into Nigeria's Oily Heart of Darkness

Larry Plake was just outside the control tower on his way to bed aboard the Cheyenne, an oil barge anchored six miles off the coast of Nigeria, when he heard the shots. A veteran rig worker for Houston-based oil and gas contractor Global Industries, Plake, a Texan through and through, had just finished his evening shift and was in a bad mood after dining on a subpar version of African-style barbecued spareribs. At first, the "pop pop pop" sounded like someone lighting a blowtorch. But the deafening sound of bullets ricocheting off steel and bursting through the metal sides of the ship was unmistakable. They were under attack.

Allison V. Smith
Plake (seated far right) talks to A Russian reporter who stumbled upon the hostages while writing a story about the Niger Delta region.
Courtesy of Larry Plake
Plake (seated far right) talks to A Russian reporter who stumbled upon the hostages while writing a story about the Niger Delta region.

Plake never fit the stereotype of an offshore oilman. At 37, he was slight, with wiry arms and a head of prematurely gray hair. He'd worked offshore much of his adult life and was one of the few men aboard who'd earned a pair of college degrees along the way. But he was a hard-working, cocky son of a bitch with a young face and a dry sense of humor—all of which made him popular and a natural leader with the crew.

Plake entered the control room to find barge foreman Kevin Faller and fellow crewmembers Mike Roussel and Chris Gay crouched below the windows. They seemed paralyzed, so Plake grabbed the CB radio and began calling for help. He had memorized the security protocol checklist and began going through the steps.

"We're taking hits," he radioed a nearby support vessel, there to help Plake and the crew build pipelines for Chevron. "Cut and run! Cut and run!"

Plake couldn't see a thing outside the tower. No one had seen the three speedboats approach in the night or the armed men climb aboard. He could barely make out the sound of footsteps heading toward him over the blare of machine-gun fire and explosions throughout the barge. Plake wanted to send out a flare, but was afraid he'd be shot if he opened a window.

Step two, thought Plake, as he radioed out to the armed security boat. Just as someone answered, a crowd of Nigerians with assault rifles kicked down the door and rushed into the control room.

The gunmen, dressed in red, white and black masks and camouflage pants, with chains of ammo draped across their bare chests, surrounded the four Americans. Someone jammed the point of a gun into the back of Plake's head, forcing his face into the floor. One of the men cracked Faller across the cheek with his fist.

"Stay down, stay down," Plake heard a man say in a deep voice. "We want your captain. Where is your captain?"

Refusing to give anyone up, Plake told the men that the captain should be waiting on the ship's deck. They shoved him and the others down a series of ladders and stairs toward the lifeboats as bullets whizzed by. No other crewmembers were in sight.

Of the Cheyenne's 11 armed guards, three had initially fought back but were wounded. The others, crewmembers later told Plake, tossed their guns overboard, tore off their security uniforms and scrambled to the belly of the ship to join the roughly 240 other crewmembers on board who had barricaded themselves inside their rooms. Only Plake, Roussel, Faller and Gay remained topside.

Minutes ticked by, and the gunmen were getting edgy. "Where is the captain?" they demanded over and over.

"Where is that damned security boat?" thought Plake.

Stalling for time, Plake insisted the captain should be there any moment. They waited as some of the attackers scavenged the ship for whatever they could snatch: cigarettes, ammo and binoculars. Plake didn't know that the security ship was anchored a mile and a half away and wouldn't get there for nearly another two hours.

"We can't find the captain," said a thick voice. "We're taking you."

They pushed the Americans toward the stern and then shoved them off the barge down into their speedboats. Plake and Faller were in one boat, Roussel and Gay in another. The speedboats peeled away from the barge, circling it while the kidnappers pumped more ammo into its sides. Then they raced after the ship that Plake had been able to warn over the radio.

Plake prayed that the guards aboard the support vessel wouldn't open fire on them. The chase, however, didn't last long, and Plake felt a moment of relief when the kidnappers stopped shooting and steered back toward shore.

The boats skimmed along the ocean's surface toward the mouth of a river heading inland. Fifteen Nigerians were piled onto three 18-foot-long fiberglass speedboats with V-shaped hulls. Giant twin 275-horsepower engines hung off the back of each boat.

"Maybe I should jump," thought Plake. But he couldn't bring himself to abandon his companions. Instead, he sat silently, wondering where they were going and what was going to happen once they got there.

The boats wound along the oil-slicked waterways deep into the jungle. The jostling vibration of the motors roaring at top speed through narrow creeks nearly drowned out all other sounds. Plake could barely hear the man holding a flashlight in the bow who barked directions to the driver.

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  • Sherrie Faller 08/06/2009 12:19:00 AM

    It is a shame that this writer only got ONE side of the story. Because of this, the others who Also suffered the same experience are now RELIVING IT again but in a much different rememberence of the facts to be. The superman persona expressed in this article made me ill. There are statements in this story that are NOT true, with some being distorted to embrance one man's rememberance and his "heroic acts." ha Maybe that is what this story was supposed to be. To the disadvantage of the other three men living this same experience, the events were incorrectly stated. Before writing such a story, information should be verified before being glorified. Information should have been gathered from all sides from the victims to arrive at the truth. I speak for the other three men who are now suffering great emotional trauma because of this bias, Get All the facts before hand, and maybe the exact experience could be told and not just one man being made out to be the hero.

  • Sherrie Faller 08/06/2009 12:19:00 AM

    It is a shame that this writer only got ONE side of the story. Because of this, the others who Also suffered the same experience are now RELIVING IT again but in a much different rememberence of the facts to be. The superman persona expressed in this article made me ill. There are statements in this story that are NOT true, with some being distorted to embrance one man's rememberance and his "heroic acts." ha Maybe that is what this story was supposed to be. To the disadvantage of the other three men living this same experience, the events were incorrectly stated. Before writing such a story, information should be verified before being glorified. Information should have been gathered from all sides from the victims to arrive at the truth. I speak for the other three men who are now suffering great emotional trauma because of this bias, Get All the facts before hand, and maybe the exact experience could be told and not just one man being made out to be the hero.

  • Dave 07/14/2009 10:54:00 PM

    If someone stole everything you had, then offered not to prosecute you for trying to take it back, would you accept the deal? I doubt it. As long as we look the other way while corrupt dictatorships do business with US companies, there will be people who hate us. I don't blame them.

  • Johnny Wishbone 07/11/2009 5:38:00 AM

    LOL, anyone dumb enough to deal with Nigerians gets what they deserve. RT www.anonymize.tk

  • charlie 07/09/2009 9:57:00 PM

    The yankee fuck that wrote the 1ST comment can suck on my redneck balls!!!

  • MD 07/09/2009 6:28:00 PM

    Excellent piece of journalism and one of the better cover stories the Observer has printed this year. Mr. & Mrs. Plake's ordeal is truly terrifying. Sad, however, because their story is neither the first nor the last of it's kind. Violence and extortion will unfortunately continue in that part of the world because of unscrupulous businesses that are willing to play ball with corrupt governments to make a buck. Thankfully, nothing like this could happen in South Dallas. The corrupt government there scared away most businesses, scrupulous or not, long ago.

  • chiedu ikedionwu 07/09/2009 4:47:00 AM

    Now i know why northerners(Americans) look down on southeners. You country bumkins must be so dumb to believe that 'Rambo' a movie i saw over 20 years ago is still a novelty for Africans. How did this racist bastard communicate with his kidnappers? Any one that has been to nigeria knows that if someone speaks any form of english, they probably know what a movie was. Give Nigerians some credit for intelligence. This trailer park trash thought he could overpower the 'kidnappers? what a joke!!!! They should have shot him if thwey knew he was. he ndid not want to use their razors? fine at least he wopuld not infect my people with hepatitis or leukemia(very rare in Africa). America may have elected a Half-black president, but racist trailer park trash still abound.

 

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