The Day

Hearing held on lawsuit over boat’s sinking

- By MICHELLE R. SMITH

Providence — Lawyers for a man suspected of killing his millionair­e grandfathe­r in 2013 met with a judge Monday in a lawsuit over the sinking of his boat with his mother onboard.

Nathan Carman’s boat sank last year during a fishing trip with his mother. He was rescued after a week on a life raft, but his mother was never found and is now presumed dead. Since then, Carman has been at the center of a number of legal matters. He has denied any involvemen­t in his grandfathe­r’s killing and has said he didn’t sabotage the boat.

Carman’s insurance company is refusing to pay an $85,000 claim for the boat, saying that Carman made “incomplete, improper, and faulty repairs” to the vessel the day before it sank and that he knew it was “unseaworth­y.”

Lawyers for Carman and his insurer met Monday behind closed doors with a federal magistrate judge in Rhode Island to discuss the case. Carman, who lives in Vernon, Vt., was not seen at the courthouse, and both sides declined to comment

A court filing Monday showed the judge issued a pretrial order that sets deadlines for discovery and other pretrial matters for Carman and his insurer.

David Farrell, a lawyer for the insurer, told the court in a filing last week that he anticipate­d that Carman’s “criminal wrongdoing” and “illegality” will bar his insurance claim.

Farrell wrote that Carman’s actions regarding his mother’s death and his grandfathe­r’s homicide, “potentiall­y similarly motivated by” Carman’s possible multimilli­on-dollar inheritanc­e, are all within the scope of what the insurer might explore as it assembles evidence in the case.

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