The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Johns Creek man’s family mourns after he is presumed lost at sea

Luke Renner, who had autism, was on a fivenight trip to Mexico.

- By Ernie Suggs esuggs@ajc.com AJC reporter Zachary Hansen contribute­d to this article.

Luke Renner loved milkshakes, nachos, guacamole and smoothies. He also loved swimming and the ocean.

It could explain why the 22-yearold Johns Creek man, who had autism, went overboard from a cruise ship Sunday night.

“His family believes he may have been under the mistaken assumption that he was going swimming,” Carnival Cruise Line said in a statement.

Renner was on a five-night group trip to Mexico organized by the Gwinnett County-based Wishes 4 Me Foundation, which works with disabled adults. Three chaperones were part of the group.

“Although we are devastated by his death, we are thankful he was there with people we loved and trusted when he died,” his family said in a statement. “We are confident Wishes 4 Me watched over him with the utmost care and we do not hold them in any way responsibl­e.”

Family spokesman Dan Curran said a private celebratio­n of Renner’s life will be held sometime after the holidays.

Renner’s is at least the fourth presumed death since mid-November involving someone going overboard a cruise ship.

The U.S. Coast Guard on Sunday called off the search for the body of 26-year-old Thomas McElhany, who was reported missing from the Carnival Victory on Dec. 14 near the Florida Keys. On Dec. 8, a 69-year-old woman from Holland went overboard the MSC Preziosa, bound for Fort De France, Martinique. On Nov. 22, a 27-year-old crew member on Royal Caribbean’s Adventure of the Seas disappeare­d from the ship on its way to Cozumel, Mexico.

None of the bodies recovered.

According to data compiled by Ross Klein, associate dean of graduate studies and research at Memorial University of New- has been foundland, 326 people (including passengers and crew members) went overboard from cruise ships internatio­nally from 2006 to 2017. The author of numerous books and articles about the cruise industry, Klein testified before the U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transporta­tion Access in 2013.

“The number of people going overboard from cruise ships is significan­t, between 20 and 25 a year since 2009,” he said during prepared comments. Nearly 17 percent of overboard incidents resulted with the person beingrescu­ed, and that happened most often when the person’s disappeara­nce was “observed and reported to officers who immediatel­y execute(d) rescue procedures,” he said.

In the case of Renner and the three other recent overboard deaths, hours elapsed before anyone noticed them missing.

“Luke is with Jesus now,” his family said in their statement. “He can express himself clearly, and be understood. No more seizures, no more meds. We can’t wait to talk to him. We truly believe he knows he was well loved.”

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 ??  ?? Luke Renner “is with Jesus now . ... He knows he was well loved,” his family says.
Luke Renner “is with Jesus now . ... He knows he was well loved,” his family says.

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