The Mercury News

Truth Aquatics suspends all tours

Deadly blaze killed 34 people in September

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LOS ANGELES » The owner of a scuba diving boat company announced Tuesday a voluntary indefinite suspension of its fleet in the wake of a boat fire off the Southern California coast that killed 34 people.

Truth Aquatics Inc. posted on its Facebook page that the company will “dedicate our entire efforts to make our boats models of new regulation­s” in collaborat­ion with the Coast Guard and the National Transporta­tion Safety Board.

Federal authoritie­s are investigat­ing the Sept. 2 fire aboard the Conception in ongoing criminal and safety inquiries. Investigat­ors concluded their examinatio­n of the vessel Friday in Port Hueneme, a naval base northwest of Los Angeles, without determinin­g the blaze’s cause. However, pieces of the boat have been sent to labs for additional testing as officials pore through hundreds of documents seized from Truth Aquatics’ office in Santa Barbara.

While NTSB member Jennifer Homendy has expressed concern about the Conception’s escape hatch, Coast Guard records show the boat passed its two most recent inspection­s with no safety violations. Authoritie­s have said, however, all six crew members were asleep when the pre-dawn fire started — even though Coast Guard regulation­s require a “roving” night watch.

Thirty-three passengers and one crew member were trapped below deck and died during the three-day scuba diving excursion of the Channel Islands. Several of the victims were from the Bay Area and Santa Cruz County.

The company’s Facebook post states customers have been requesting tours since the fire and the owners appreciate the support. The company’s two other boats have not returned to sea since the disaster last month.

Meanwhile, the owners, the Fritzler family, preemptive­ly filed a federal lawsuit under a pre-Civil War maritime law that shields boat owners from monetary damages in a disaster at sea. Separately, Ryan Sims, a cook on the vessel who broke his leg trying to escape the flames, claimed in his own lawsuit that the boat was unseaworth­y and operated in an unsafe manner.

Members of the diving community have rallied around Truth Aquatics and the Fritzlers. Some have created a private Facebook group called “We Support Truth Aquatics,” which has nearly 200 members, and a GoFundMe fundraiser has accumulate­d more than $18,000 to aid the company’s crew members who are now out of work due to the suspension of the fleet.

The Divers Alert Network has separately raised more than $197,000 for the families of the victims.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This photo shows the burned hull of the scuba dive boat Conception as it’s brought to the surface by a salvage team off Santa Cruz Island in September.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS This photo shows the burned hull of the scuba dive boat Conception as it’s brought to the surface by a salvage team off Santa Cruz Island in September.

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