Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

TITANIC SALVAGE SETBACKS

Pandemic imperils plans to retrieve radio

- BY BEN FINLEY

NORFOLK, Va. — Fallout from the coronaviru­s pandemic is threatenin­g a company’s plans to retrieve and exhibit the radio that had broadcast distress calls from the sinking Titanic, according to a court filing made by the firm.

The company, RMS Titanic Inc., said last week that its revenues plummeted after coronaviru­s restrictio­ns closed its exhibits of Titanic artifacts, causing the firm to seek funding through its parent company. Some of the exhibition­s, which are scattered across the country, are still closed, while others that have reopened are seeing limited attendance.

RMS Titanic Inc. recently missed a deadline with a federal admiralty court in Virginia to submit a funding plan for the radio expedition. The company left open the possibilit­y that it may no longer seek the court’s approval for the undertakin­g if a plan isn’t submitted in the coming weeks.

The company’s update, filed with a U.S. District Court in Norfolk, was made in the midst of an ongoing court battle with the United States over whether the expedition is legal.

Lawyers for the U.S. government have argued that the mission is barred under federal law and an internatio­nal agreement with Britain. The attorneys say the company must seek the government’s permission to remove the radio because the sunken vessel is a recognized memorial to the roughly 1,500 people who died.

The luxury ocean liner was traveling from England to New York in 1912 when it struck an iceberg and sank. It was discovered in 1985 about 2.4 miles below the surface of the North Atlantic.

RMS Titanic Inc. owns the salvage rights and oversees a collection of items recovered from the wreck as the court-recognized steward of the artifacts. They include silverware, china and gold coins as well as the Titanic’s whistles and a piece of its hull.

Exhibiting the radio will help sustain the ship’s legacy while honoring passengers and crew, the company has argued. Known in 1912 as a Marconi wireless telegraph machine, the radio sent distress calls to nearby ships that helped save 700 people in lifeboats.

The U.S. government’s effort to stop the expedition is pending in the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals in Richmond. But the company’s funding woes appear to pose a more immediate threat.

“The pandemic and resulting government­al restrictio­ns forced the company to temporaril­y close its exhibition­s to the public, effectivel­y shutting off its primary source of revenue for six months,” RMS Titanic Inc. wrote in the Jan. 11 filing.

The Atlanta-based company said only a few of its exhibits, including one in Las Vegas and another in Orlando, have reopened. They’re operating at diminished capacity and revenues “remain very low.”

The company said it received more than $700,000 through the Paycheck Protection Program. And it expects to get $3 million in funding through its parent company, Premier Acquisitio­n Holdings LLC.

A federal admiralty judge in Norfolk had approved the planned expedition in May. But the approval was conditione­d on the firm submitting a plan detailing costs and funding for the operation and conservati­on of the recovered equipment.

RMS Titanic said in Monday’s filing that it’s still trying to finalize that plan despite missing a Jan. 10 deadline. It said the plan “will depend on a complicate­d, multi-faceted commercial transactio­n between RMST, an internatio­nal production company, and deep-sea salvage experts.”

The company said it hopes to submit a plan by Jan. 29. But if it’s unable to, the firm said it would withdraw its original motion seeking the court’s permission to retrieve the radio.

 ?? AP ?? The Titanic leaves Southampto­n, England on its maiden voyage on April 10, 1912.
AP The Titanic leaves Southampto­n, England on its maiden voyage on April 10, 1912.

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