Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Man whose relatives died mysterious­ly must give gun info

- By Michelle R. Smith

PROVIDENCE, R.I. » 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 semi-automatic 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.

“No wonder the boat sank and Carman’s mother died,” the filing said.

Carman’s lawyer said he would not address “unsupporte­d allegation­s” or engage in “litigation in the press” when asked about the assertions about the holes after Friday’s hearing.

 ?? MICHAEL DWYER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Nathan Carman arrives in a small boat at the U.S. Coast Guard station in Boston after spending a week at sea in a life raft before being rescued by a passing freighter.
MICHAEL DWYER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Nathan Carman arrives in a small boat at the U.S. Coast Guard station in Boston after spending a week at sea in a life raft before being rescued by a passing freighter.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States