Orlando Sentinel

Orlando man among 33 aboard missing cargo ship El Faro

- By Curt Anderson and Tony Winton Associated Press

An Orlando man’s family is grieving after the Coast Guard announced it was suspending the search for the El Faro cargo ship that authoritie­s believe sank during Hurricane Joaquin last week.

German Solar-Cortes, whose family lives in the Conway area, was one of 33 people aboard the missing vessel.

On Wednesday night, his niece told members of the media the family did not want to speak.

The news came after the Coast Guard searched for El Faro for a week, scouring 183,000 square nautical miles near the Bahamas.

“My deepest condolence­s go to the families, loved ones, and friends of the El Faro crew,” said Rear Adm. Scott Buschman, commander of the Coast Guard 7th District based in Miami.

The crew aboard El Faro included 17 other Florida residents: Louis Champa of Palm Coast;

Roosevelt Clark, Brookie Davis, Frank Hamm, Carey Hatch, Jack Jackson, Jackie Jones Jr., Lonnie Jordan, James Porter, Theodore Quammie, Lashawn Rivera, and Anthony Thomas of Jacksonvil­le; Keith Griffin of Fort Myers; Joe Hargrove of Orange Park; Roan Lightfoot of Jacksonvil­le Beach; Howard Schoenly of Cape Coral; and Mariette Wright of St. Augustine.

It also included Sylvester Crawford Jr. of Lawrencevi­lle, Ga.; Michael Davidson of Windham, Maine; Michael Hollandof North Wilton, Maine; Mitchell Kuflik of Brooklyn, N.Y.; Jeffrey Mathias of Kingston, Mass.; Dylan Meklin of Rockland, Maine; Richard Pusatere of Virginia Beach, Va.; Danielle Randolph of Rockland, Mass.; Jeremie Riehm of Camden, Del.; and Steven Shultz of Roan Mountain, Tenn.

The crew also had five Polish nationals: Piotr Krause, Marcin Nita, Jan Podgorski, Andrzej Truszkowsk­i, and Rafal Zdobych.

‘They did all they could’

Investigat­ors have now turned their attention to finding the vessel’s data recorder 3 miles down at the bottom of the sea.

The intensive search by air and sea turned up one unidentifi­ed body in a survival suit and a heavily damaged lifeboat but no sign of survivors from the 790-foot El Faro, which was last heard from nearly from a week ago as it was being tossed around in rough seas.

“Any decision to suspend a search is painful,” Coast Guard Capt. Mark Fedor said. “They did all they could.”

Even before the announceme­nt, hopes of finding anyone alive were fading.

“The ship went down. And there’s no questionin­g the outcome of that. The ship has gone down, took everybody with it. There’s really no speculatio­n to be made,” said Mary Shevory, mother of crew member Mariette Wright.

Robert Green, father of LaShawn Rivera, held out hope despite the Coast Guard decision: “Miracles do happen, and it’s God’s way only. I’m prayerful, hopeful and still optimistic.”

President Barack Obama promised the “full support of the U.S. government” as officials investigat­e the sinking of the cargo ship. In a statement issued Wednesday evening, Obama said the families of the crew members lost at sea deserve answers, and those who work at sea must be kept safe.

The El Faro went down in 15,000 feet of water east of the Bahamas last Thursday after losing propulsion while attempting to outrun Joaquin along the ship’s regular route from Jacksonvil­le to Puerto Rico, according to ship owner Tote Maritime and the Coast Guard.

The captain reported the ship was listing and taking on water through an open hatch. Then transmissi­ons ceased.

Data recorder sought

The key to the mystery of what caused the ship to stall and sink may be in the voyage data recorder, similar to the “black box” on an airliner. The device, presumably pinging away in the blackness and crushing pressure on the sea floor, has a battery life of 30 days after it hits the water.

Assuming the device can be located, the National Transporta­tion Safety Board will work with the Coast Guard, Navy and other agencies to devise a way to bring it up, probably using a remote-controlled, unmanned submersibl­e capable of diving great depths.

Among the questions raised in the wake of the tragedy: What caused the ship to lose power? Did pressure to deliver the cargo on time play a role in the captain’s decision to press ahead? Was the ship’s advanced age — more than 40 years old — a factor? And was the mechanical trouble caused by work that was being done in the engine room at the time?

The recorder, required for all large ships since 2002, would contain radio communicat­ions, command discussion­s on the bridge, the ship’s speed and heading, the condition of its hull, wind speed and radar readings. Generally the recorders retain informatio­n from the 12 hours before they enter the water.

“We want to find every bit of informatio­n that we possibly can,” NTSB vice chair Bella Dinh-Zarr said. “We will be here as long as it takes.”

The ship left Jacksonvil­le on Sept. 29 while Joaquin was still a tropical storm. Joaquin quickly developed into a powerful Category 4 hurricane, but Tote officials say its captain, Michael Davidson, had an acceptable plan to bypass the storm that would have worked had the ship not lost power amid 140 mph winds and 50-foot waves.

The NTSB said a key part of the investigat­ion is learning how to prevent similar tragedies. Family members said they hope so, too.

“I am hoping other companies will take a good look at when they’re going to ship out, when they’re going to set sail,” Shevory said. “And not do it with a storm coming that can potentiall­y become a hurricane.”

Orlando Sentinel reporter Gal Tziperman Lotan contribute­d to this report.

 ?? ROBERT F. BUKATY/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Maine Maritime Academy students attend a vigil for missing El Faro crew members.
ROBERT F. BUKATY/ASSOCIATED PRESS Maine Maritime Academy students attend a vigil for missing El Faro crew members.
 ?? BOB MACK/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? NTSB Vice Chairman T. Bella Dinh-Zarr speaks before the search was suspended.
BOB MACK/ASSOCIATED PRESS NTSB Vice Chairman T. Bella Dinh-Zarr speaks before the search was suspended.

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