Call & Times

Man whose relatives died mysterious­ly ordered to give up info on missing gun

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PROVIDENCE (AP) — A Vermont man whose mother and grandfathe­r died in mysterious circumstan­ces must turn over informatio­n related to a missing gun, as well as phone and other records, in a Rhode Island lawsuit over insurance on his sunken boat.

Nathan Carman must turn over the informatio­n about a Sig Sauer .308-caliber semiautoma­tic rifle he owned, U.S. Magistrate Judge Patricia Sullivan said Friday. That weapon is now missing, according to documents filed in a different lawsuit in New Hampshire. The documents say the same caliber weapon was used to kill Carman's millionair­e grandfathe­r in Connecticu­t in 2013.

But Sullivan rejected a request by the boat's insurer to get informatio­n about other guns Carman may have owned, saying it was "sheer speculatio­n" for them to ask for records about every firearm Carman might have ever owned or possessed.

Carman and his mother, Linda, embarked on a fishing trip out of Rhode Island on Sept. 17, 2016. The boat sank and she is presumed dead. He was rescued a week later after being found floating on a life raft in the Atlantic Ocean.

The judge said Carman must turn over phone records from Sept. 1 through Sept. 25, 2016, the day he was rescued.

Carman and the insurer for his boat, the Chicken Pox, are fighting over his insurance claim.

Carman has acknowledg­ed patching some holes on the 31-foot-long boat with marine putty before going fishing with his mother but insisted the boat was seaworthy. In a filing on Thursday, the insurer's lawyers alleged that Carman must have enlarged the holes in his boat's hull.

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