San Antonio Express-News

Search for 9 from boat continues

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PORT FOURCHON, La. — For a sixth day, rescue crews returned Sunday to a capsized lift boat in the Gulf of Mexico off Louisiana, looking for nine crew members who have not been found, the Coast Guard said.

Officials have released little informatio­n about their continuous search in the murky seas surroundin­g the capsized Seacor Power lift boat some 8 miles off the coast since announcing divers found two bodies inside the ship Friday night.

Six people were rescued alive after the boat capsized Tuesday in a storm. Four bodies have been found — one Wednesday, one Thursday and two on Friday.

Families of the missing crew members haven’t given up that maybe they found an air pocket or are still alive.

“We have hope,” Marion Cuyler wrote in a text to a reporter.

Cuyler texted her fiance, crane operator Chaz Morales, that the weather appeared too bad to head out Tuesday. She said Morales texted her back that he wished he could stay ashore.

“We aren’t defeated. We will keep fighting,” Cuyler texted a reporter late Saturday.

Calm seas met rescuers for the first time since the bulky vessel flipped over Tuesday afternoon south of Port Fourchon, a major base for the U.S. oil and gas industry. It has three legs it can lower to the sea floor to lift it out of the water as a temporary platform.

Part of one of those legs poked out of the water Sunday.

A corner of the boat’s platform was above the surface with the orange-painted safety railing pointing back at the sea. Two boats were nearby, a large platform boat with equipment and a smaller boat tethered to the stricken vessel.

Divers are trying to get inside the capsized boat, which has part of its overturned hull and one of its legs above the water where the sea is 50 to 55 feet deep. Rescuers in the air and the water have been searching an area the size of Rhode Island for the remaining nine missing crew members.

“We are continuing to search,” Coast Guard Petty Officer John Michelli said Sunday morning. “We’ve basically been 24-7.”

Michelli referred questions about the diving operation to New Jersey-based Donjon Marine Co., which was contracted by boat-owner Seacor Power to lead the underwater search. A spokesman for the company referred questions back to Houston-based Seacor on Sunday morning, and the company didn’t respond.

The boat was on its way to a Talos Energy Inc. oil platform at the mouth of the Mississipp­i River when it was overtaken by a storm with winds 80 to 90 mph and waves 7 to 9 feet high, the Coast Guard has said.

Talos Energy said in a statement it was Seacor Marine’s decision to send the boat out Tuesday.

One of the bodies recovered Friday was Anthony Hartford, a 53-year-old ship cook. His wife said she got a 3 a.m. knock on the door telling her he was dead, the Times-picayune/new Orleans Advocate reported.

“It’s no feeling right now,” Janet Hartford said.

She said her husband brought flowers and cake to her workplace for her birthday on March 30. It was the last time she saw him.

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