Las Vegas Review-Journal

Japan probes delay in reporting U.S. Navy ship collision

- By Mari Yamaguchi The Associated Press

TOKYO — Japan’s coast guard is investigat­ing why it took nearly an hour for a deadly collision between a U.S. Navy destroyer and a container ship to be reported.

A coast guard official said Monday they are trying to find out what the crew of the Philippine-flagged ACX Crystal was doing before reporting the collision off Japan’s coast to authoritie­s 50 minutes later.

The ACX Crystal collided with the USS Fitzgerald off Japan’s coast, killing seven of the destroyer’s crew of nearly 300. The ships collided early Saturday morning, when the Navy said most of the 300 sailors on board would have been sleeping. Authoritie­s have declined to speculate on a cause while the crash remains under investigat­ion.

A track of the much-larger container ship’s route by Marinetraf­fic, a vessel-tracking service, shows it made a sudden turn as if trying to avoid something at about 1:30 a.m., before continuing eastward. It then made a U-turn and returned around 2:30 a.m. to the area near the collision.

The coast guard initially said the collision occurred at 2:20 a.m. because the Philippine ship had reported it at 2:25 a.m. and said it just happened. After interviewi­ng Filipino crewmember­s, the coast guard has changed the collision time to 1:30 a.m.

Coast guard official Tetsuya Tanaka said they are trying to resolve what happened during the 50 minutes.

He said officials are planning to get hold of a device with communicat­ion records to examine further details of the crash. Japan’s Transport Safety Board also started an accident investigat­ion on Sunday.

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