Oroville Mercury-Register

Judge tosses manslaught­er charge in Southern California boat fire that killed 34

- By Brian Melley

A Los Angeles federal judge threw out an indictment Friday charging a dive boat captain with manslaught­er in the deaths of 34 people in a 2019 fire aboard a vessel anchored off the Southern California coast.

The ruling came on the third anniversar­y of one of the deadliest maritime disasters in recent U.S. history when the Conception went down in flames Sept. 2, 2019, near an island off the coast of Santa Barbara. All 33 passengers and a crew member who were trapped in a bunk room below deck died.

Captain Jerry Boylan, 68, failed to follow safety rules, federal prosecutor­s said. He was accused of “misconduct, negligence and inattentio­n” by failing to train his crew, conduct fire drills and have a roving night watchman on the boat when the fire ignited.

But the indictment failed to specify that Boylan acted with gross negligence, which U.S. District Judge George Wu said was a required element to prove the crime of seaman’s manslaught­er and must be listed in the indictment.

Family members of seven of the victims said in a statement that they were stunned by the decision. They criticized Wu’s interpreta­tion of the law.

“This is an outrageous miscarriag­e of justice and quite a slap in the face to receive on the third anniversar­y of this disaster,” they wrote. “The captain accepted the responsibi­lity of ‘duty of care’ when he received his merchant mariner’s credential. He violated that duty and then was the first to abandon the vessel.”

Appeal sought

Prosecutor­s will seek approval from the Department of Justice to appeal the ruling, said Thom Mrozek, a spokespers­on for the U.S. attorney in Los Angeles. They can also seek a new indictment alleging gross negligence.

The judge scrubbed an Oct. 4 trial date.

Boylan and four other crew members, who had been sleeping on an upper deck and escaped from the burning boat, said the blaze prevented them from trying to reach those trapped below deck. Flames blocked a stairwell and a small hatch that were the only exits from below deck, officials said. All 34 perished from smoke inhalation.

The ruling is the second recent blow to prosecutor­s in the case.

Boylan originally was indicted on 34 counts of seaman’s manslaught­er with each carrying a possible prison term of 10 years if he was convicted. Defense lawyers sought to dismiss those charges because they argued the deaths were the result of a single incident and not separate crimes.

Before that issue could be argued in court, prosecutor­s got a supersedin­g indictment in July charging Boylan with only one count of seaman’s manslaught­er alleging his negligence caused all 34 deaths. If convicted, he would have faced a maximum of 10 years in prison.

The defense also argued that the single-count indictment should be thrown out because it did not allege Boylan acted with gross negligence, which they said was a required element of the crime.

Federal prosecutor­s countered that under the pre-Civil War statute, designed to hold steamboat captains and crew responsibl­e for maritime disasters, they only needed to show Boylan acted with simple negligence, a unique standard for a felony.

Prosecutor­s cited the language of the statute that says captains and other boat employees can face up to 10 years in prison for “misconduct, negligence, or inattentio­n to his duties on such (a) vessel (that) the life of any person is destroyed.”

Wu said the case law on the negligence standard was inconsiste­nt in appellate courts. Only a New Orleans appeals court had upheld the requiremen­t that prosecutor­s prove simple negligence to win a seaman’s manslaught­er conviction.

Kierstan Carlson, a Washington lawyer specializi­ng in the shipping industry, said a dearth of published opinions on the issue presents a big risk for anyone facing the charge until more circuit courts or the Supreme Court weigh in.

“When we speak to clients about potential exposure or risk under the statute, we warn them that simple negligence could be enough,” Carlson said.

Case comparison­s

Many seaman’s manslaught­er cases end in guilty pleas, which aren’t appealed, she said. Several other high-profile cases have been dismissed for other reasons without getting to the issue of negligence.

In the Deepwater Horizon oil rig explosion that killed 11 workers in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010, for example, several defendants had counts thrown out after courts said the charge didn’t apply to some workers on the platform.

In the case of a 2018 duck boat disaster near Branson, Missouri, that killed 16 passengers and a crew member, federal charges against the captain and two other employees were dismissed because a judge said federal prosecutor­s lacked “admiralty jurisdicti­on” on Table Rock Lake.

Robert Weisberg, a criminal law professor at Stanford University, said Wu’s ruling was sensible for relying on other appellate opinions that found gross negligence was a required element for the similar crime of involuntar­y manslaught­er, which is also the standard in California and many state courts.

He blamed Congress in part for writing the seaman’s manslaught­er law in an “ad hoc and inconsiste­nt” manner.

The two types of negligence are often viewed as whether someone should be slapped with civil damages or criminally punished for their behavior, Weisberg said.

Simple negligence would be if someone caused harm without ever considerin­g the risks they took. It would be gross negligence if they considered the possible consequenc­es but acted anyway. Gross negligence often incorporat­es an element of recklessne­ss.

If prosecutor­s appeal and lose, they could seek another indictment specifying that Boylan was grossly negligent but that will be a tougher burden to prove, Carlson said. They would have to show that his failures to train crew and post a night watch were much more severe.

“The government would have to show that the defendant was aware of the obligation to do those things, had an opportunit­y to do them and affirmativ­ely chose not to do so,” she said. “It’s just a deeper level of his failure to do so.”

 ?? VENTURA COUNTY FIRE DEPARTMENT, FILE ?? Firefighte­rs respond to a fire aboard the Conception dive boat in the Santa Barbara Channel off the coast of Southern California on Sept. 2, 2019.
VENTURA COUNTY FIRE DEPARTMENT, FILE Firefighte­rs respond to a fire aboard the Conception dive boat in the Santa Barbara Channel off the coast of Southern California on Sept. 2, 2019.

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