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Tourist bus wreck: ‘We missed it by 30 seconds’

Cruise ship passengers recall horror of fatal crash in Mexico

- By Anne Geggis | Staff writer See CRASH, 6A

For the Whittens of Jacksonvil­le, being a large family proved fateful: It stopped them from boarding the bus that flipped over along a winding Mexican road, killing 12 people.

Michelle Whitten was traveling with her husband and three kids Tuesday. Had they shown up to catch the bus seconds earlier, there still might have been five empty seats left for them to board, she said. Only four seats were left, so they grabbed the next bus.

“We missed it by 30 seconds,” Whitten said, shaking her head.

The Whittens were among thousands of Royal Caribbean’s Serenade of the Seas passengers who disembarke­d Friday morning at Port Everglades. A number of them saw the aftermath of the crash as they rode past in separate buses en route to visit ancient Mayan ruins.

“We saw bodies on the road,” Michelle Whitten’s husband, John, said. “There was blood everywhere.”

Others heard about the deadly crash when the news was announced on the cruise ship’s intercom.

Eleven tourists who died were from two

Caribbean cruises that had sailed from South Florida.

Ten passengers were on the Celebrity Equinox, which returns to the Port of Miami today. One was a passenger aboard the Serenade of the Seas, passengers said.

Pamela Presley, 48, and her husband, Glenn Wildenmann, 50, of Montreal, said they were puzzled Tuesday when they suddenly started getting messages from relatives in Canada. Then they heard the captain’s announceme­nt.

“At first, people were talking over what he was saying, like they always do, but then when we started to hear ‘fatalities’ and ‘accident,’ it went dead quiet,” Wildenmann said.

“I’ve never been in a place with so many people so quiet like that,” Presley said.

Royal Caribbean allotted passengers 30 minutes of free internet time to contact relatives and reassure them they were safe, Wildenmann said.

At an earlier stop on the cruise, the couple had taken a bus to a snorkeling excursion in Honduras, Presley said. That experience convinced them they didn’t need to take any more tours.

“The roads there have no lanes,” Wildenmann said. “They are narrow and treacherou­s.”

Dave and Victoria Simpson, of Avon Park in central Florida, took their honeymoon on the Serenade of the Seas and were on a bus from the same tour company when they passed by the wreck.

The driver of the ill-fated bus appeared to be at fault for speeding on the road, which had no guardrails or shoulder, a prosecutor in Mexico said.

Others disembarki­ng the Serenade of the Seas were contemplat­ing brushes with fate and why they hadn’t gotten on that bus.

Nita Burg, a retired psychologi­st who splits her time between Fort Myers and Kentucky, said she had planned to visit the Mayan ruins. But she wasn’t feeling well that morning, she said. Later that day, she and her traveling companion were at a bar around dinnertime having a drink when the news came.

“It’s an awful thing — it could happen to anyone,” she said. “The room went silent for quite a while. We left our drinks at the bar.”

Dining companions at their table had witnessed the crash’s aftermath, she said.

“They were traumatize­d,” she said.

The ship’s departure from the Mexican port was delayed by two hours the day of the crash, passengers said. After that, all the scheduled activities went on as usual, they said.

Burg said the news cast a pall over the proceeding­s, however. She loved the music on the cruise — topnotch performanc­es, she said — but when she sat to listen, tears began streaming down her face.

“There’s so much pain in the world,” she said. “And this could have been avoided.”

A Coconut Creek woman, Fanya Shamis, 78, her daughter, and her grandson, both from Lorton, Va., were among the dead passengers from the Celebrity Equinox, their family said. A tour guide also died in the crash.

 ?? AMY BETH BENNETT/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Michelle and John Whitten of Jacksonvil­le, along with their children, leave the Serenade of the Seas after the ship docked at Port Everglades on Friday.
AMY BETH BENNETT/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Michelle and John Whitten of Jacksonvil­le, along with their children, leave the Serenade of the Seas after the ship docked at Port Everglades on Friday.

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