The Columbus Dispatch

1 dead, 12 still missing from capsized boat in Louisiana

- Stacey Plaisance, Kevin Mcgill and Jeff Martin

PORT FOURCHON, La. – The Coast Guard searched for 12 people missing off the coast of Louisiana on Wednesday after finding one crew member dead and pulling six survivors from rough seas when their commercial platform vessel capsized in hurricanef­orce winds.

Coast Guard Capt. Will Watson said winds were 80 to 90 mph and seas were 7 to 9 feet when the Seacor Power overturned. “It’s challengin­g under any circumstan­ce,” he said.

The bulky vessel with three long legs that can be lowered to the sea floor to make it an offshore platform flipped over Tuesday miles south of Port Fourchon. At one point, video showed the massive ship, 129 feet long at its beam, with one leg pointed awkwardly skyward as rescuers searched the heaving water.

One crew member was found dead on the surface of the water, Watson said. Asked about the prospects of the missing crew, he said: “We are hopeful. We can’t do this work if you’re not optimistic, if you’re not hopeful.”

Lafourche Parish President Archie Chaisson III said time is critical in the rescue effort because “we have the potential for some rough weather around lunchtime. The hope is that we can bring the other 12 home alive.”

The search involved at least four Coast Guard vessels, four private ones and Coast Guard airplanes based in Corpus Christi, Texas, and Mobile, Alabama. A Coast Guard helicopter also was being used.

Relatives of the missing crew members rushed to the port from their homes nearby, seeking any informatio­n they could get, Chaisson said.

“We continue to pray for the ... men who were on that vessel as well as their families,” Chaisson said.

The company that owns the ship, Houston-based Seacor Marine, set up a private hotline to share informatio­n with families of those onboard, Chaisson said. An employee who answered the phone Wednesday morning said he had no immediate informatio­n he could share.

The National Weather Service in New Orleans had advised of bad weather offshore, including a special marine warning issued before 4 p.m. Tuesday that predicted steep waves and winds greater than 50 knots (58 mph).

 ?? U.S. COAST GUARD CUTTER GLENN HARRIS VIA AP ?? A Coast Guard Station Grand Isle boatcrew heads toward a capsized 175-foot commercial lift boat Tuesday.
U.S. COAST GUARD CUTTER GLENN HARRIS VIA AP A Coast Guard Station Grand Isle boatcrew heads toward a capsized 175-foot commercial lift boat Tuesday.

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