The Sentinel-Record

Coast Guard, Ripley Entertainm­ent criticized in boat crash

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LIBERTY, Mo. — A duck boat sinking on a Missouri lake that killed 17 people two summers ago likely would not have happened if the U.S.

Coast Guard had followed recommenda­tions to improve the safety of such tourist attraction­s, federal safety regulators said Tuesday.

The National Transporta­tion Safety Board released the findings of its investigat­ion into the

July 2018 tragedy, when a Ride the Ducks vehicle sank during a severe and sudden storm on Table Rock Lake near Branson.

If the Coast Guard had followed recommenda­tions for small passenger boats that the NTSB made after a similar boat sank in Arkansas in 1999, killing 13 people, the Missouri boat “likely would not have sunk,” said Brian Young, an NTSB accident investigat­or.

Young also said the agency’s staff believes Ride the Ducks should have suspended water operations that day because of the severe weather forecast.

Among the files released Tuesday was a letter the NTSB received from the Coast Guard agreeing that canopies and side curtains should be removed from amphibious tour vehicles known as stretch duck boats.

NTSB Chairman Robert Sumwalt said at a telephone news conference that although the Coast Guard’s recommenda­tions don’t have the force of a regulation, he’s “very optimistic” the agency is committed to improving small passenger boat safety. Duck boats should not be allowed to operate again until the recommenda­tions are fully implemente­d, he said.

The NTSB said one prob- able cause of the accident included the decision by Ripley Entertainm­ent Inc., which purchased the Ride the Ducks attraction in 2017, to operate the lake tours despite a severe thundersto­rm warning. The vessel flooded through an air intake hatch on the bow that was not weather tight.

It also blamed the Coast Guard’s failure to require sufficient buoyancy in amphibious vehicles, and its failure to address emergency exits on such vehicles with fixed canopies that contribute­d to the sinking and loss of life. The findings echoed an NTSB report released in November.

The April 15 letter from Daniel Abel, vice admiral of the Coast Guard, said the Guard agreed with an NTSB recommenda­tion to remove canopies, side curtains and associated framing from the duck boats to improve passengers’ chances of escape during emergencie­s.

The Coast Guard has issued a Marine Safety Informatio­n Bulletin, the first step in the process.

Ripley Entertainm­ent has settled 31 lawsuits filed by survivors or relatives of those who died. The dead included nine members of one family from Indianapol­is. Other victims were from Missouri, Illinois and Arkansas.

Spokeswoma­n Suzanne Smagala-Potts said Ripley Entertainm­ent would review the NTSB report and that Ride the Ducks fully cooperated with the federal investigat­ion.

“We remain dedicated to working with the community of Branson, and continuing our support of all those who were impacted by the accident,” Smagala-Potts said.

Missouri State Highway Patrol investigat­ors interviewe­d duck boat Capt. Scott McKee the day after the accident. McKee said he took the boat into the water because radar indicated the storm was far away, but it quickly turned from calm to turbulent.

NTSB members were unable to interview McKee because of ongoing criminal investigat­ions. McKee, of Verona, is charged with 17 counts of misconduct, negligence or inattentio­n to duty. Two Ripley executives are also charged with misconduct and neglect.

Marcel Muise, marine accident investigat­or, told board members that it appeared McKee didn’t have the informatio­n he needed to make a proper decision about going onto the lake. He noted that the lake was clear when McKee arrived, and the three other duck boats on the water indicated there was no cause for concern.

Some NTSB board members were skeptical, saying the National Weather Service issued the storm report in plenty of time to stop the boat from going in the water.

Ripley suspended operations of the boats after the accident and it remains unclear if they will ever return to the lake.

Robert Mongeluzzi, whose firm represents nearly two dozen people who were aboard the boat, commended the NTSB findings and said it supports the victims’ calls to prevent duck boats from ever being used again.

“Duck boats are death traps which, when flooded, become sinking coffins,” Mongeluzzi said. “The Coast Guard and duck boat industry have the blood of these Branson victims on their hands for continuing to ignore the warnings. Hopefully this time, they will listen.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? DUCK BOAT: In this July 23, 2018, file photo, a duck boat that sank in Table Rock Lake in Branson, Mo., is raised after it went down the evening of July 19 after a thundersto­rm generated near-hurricane strength winds. The National Transporta­tion Safety Board will hold a virtual meeting Tuesday, April 27, 2020, to announce the results of an investigat­ion into the tragedy that killed 17 of the 31 people on board.
The Associated Press DUCK BOAT: In this July 23, 2018, file photo, a duck boat that sank in Table Rock Lake in Branson, Mo., is raised after it went down the evening of July 19 after a thundersto­rm generated near-hurricane strength winds. The National Transporta­tion Safety Board will hold a virtual meeting Tuesday, April 27, 2020, to announce the results of an investigat­ion into the tragedy that killed 17 of the 31 people on board.

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