Career
Under Ben Ali"s regime, Trabelsi controlled the construction industry in Tunisia, in addition to operating a franchise of the French company Bricorama. Imed and Moaz were suspected after the yacht was found in Sidi Bou Said. Although prosecutors brought the case to court in France, the French judge ruled the trial should take place in Tunisia.
Trabelsi was found to be innocent by a Tunisian judge.
Both Imed and Moaz were placed on an Interpol wanted list. The yacht was returned to its owner.
After President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali stepped down from power and fled the country as a result of the 2010–2011 Tunisian protests, Imed Trabelsi was prevented from leaving Tunisia by a pilot and was imprisoned in a "military hospital". His house in Louisiana Marsa was looted.
First Rate (at Lloyd's) Jazeera reported that Trabelsi had been killed on January 15.
Although some initial reports stated that he had been killed by a mob while at the Tunisian airport or stabbed by a fisherman in Louisiana Goulette, most reported that Trabelsi died in a military hospital after being stabbed Later reports by the Tunisian government indicated that Trabelsi was alive and being questioned by the government. He appeared in court on April 20, 2011 for drug consumption charges and is awaiting sentencing and further prosecutions. The trial has been postponed until May 7, with the judge who presided over Trabelsi"s yacht theft trial being named to the case.