The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Branson mourns for 17 killed in sinking of duck boat

- By Margaret Stafford

BRANSON, MO. » The country-and-western tourist town of Branson, Missouri, mourned Friday for more than a dozen sightseers who were killed when a duck boat capsized and sank in stormy weather in the deadliest such accident in almost two decades.

Divers found four more bodies in Table Rock Lake, bringing the death toll to 17, including nine people from the same family and the crew member who was driving the amphibious boat. In their initial assessment, authoritie­s blamed thundersto­rms and winds that approached hurricane strength. A full investigat­ion was underway.

“Branson is a city full of smiles,” Mayor Karen Best said. “We have so much fun here. But today we are grieving and crying.”

Trisha Ayers was among the mourners who stopped to pay their respects at a parked car that was covered with flowers because it was believed to belong to a dead tourist.

Ayers said she understood how the boat got caught on the lake because the weather on Thursday changed in 10 minutes from sunshine to galeforce winds that bent traffic signs.

“I hope it won’t tarnish Branson,” she said with tears in her eyes. “About 80 percent of our income comes from tourists. We love them.”

The risk of heavy weather was apparent hours before the boat left shore.

The weather service station in Springfiel­d, about 40 miles (64 kilometers) north of Branson, issued a severe thundersto­rm watch for its immediate area Thursday, saying conditions were ripe for winds of 70 mph. It followed up at 6:32 p.m. with a severe thundersto­rm warning for three counties that included Branson and the lake. The warning mentioned both locations. The boat went down about 40 minutes later, shortly after 7 p.m.

“When we issue a warning, it means take action,” meteorolog­ist Kelsey Angle said.

Suzanne Smagala with Ripley Entertainm­ent, which owns Ride the Ducks in Branson, said the company was assisting authoritie­s. She said this was the company’s only accident in more than 40 years of operation.

The boat was carrying 29 passengers and two crew members on a pleasure cruise, and everyone aboard had been accounted for by midday Friday. Seven of the 14 survivors were hurt when the vessel went down. At least two were hospitaliz­ed in critical condition. The captain survived, authoritie­s said.

Brayden Malaske, of Harrah, Oklahoma, was on vacation with family when he boarded a replica 19thcentur­y paddle wheeler known as the Branson Belle on the same lake just before the storm hit.

At the time, he said, the lake seemed calm, and no one was worried about the weather.

“But it suddenly got very dark,” he recalled.

In a short video taken by Malaske from a dock, the duck boat can be seen wallowing through the choppy, wind-whipped lake, with water only inches from its windows. Dark, rolling waves crash over its front end. The footage ends before the boat capsizes.

Later, people on Malaske’s boat saw a duck boat passenger “hanging on for dear life” to the paddle wheel of the Belle, he said.

The mayor identified the crew member driving the boat as Bob Williams, known informally as “Captain Bob.”

“He was at a great ambassador for Branson,” Best said. “He was at every event. He knew everyone. He was always promoting Branson.”

Authoritie­s had not publicly identified the dead but said they included a 1-yearold child.

Named for their ability to travel on land and in water, duck boats have been involved in other serious accidents in the past, including the deaths of more than 40 people since 1999.

Five college students were killed in 2015 in Seattle when a duck boat collided with a bus. Thirteen people died in 1999 when a boat sank near Hot Springs, Arkansas.

“Duck boats are death traps,” said Andrew Duffy, an attorney whose Philadelph­ia law firm handled litigation related to two fatal duck boat accidents there. “They’re not fit for water or land because they are half car and half boat.”

Safety advocates have sought improvemen­ts and complained that too many agencies regulate the boats with varying safety requiremen­ts.

The boats were originally designed for the military, specifical­ly to transport troops and supplies in World War II. They were later modified for use as sightseein­g vehicles.

Passengers on a nearby boat described the chaos on the lake as the winds picked up and the water turned rough.

“Debris was flying everywhere,” Allison Lester said in an interview Friday with ABC’s “Good Morning America.”

Lester’s boyfriend, Trent Behr, said they saw a woman in the water and helped to pull her into the boat. He said he was about to start CPR when an EMT arrived and took over.

Stone County Sheriff Doug Rader urged anyone with video or photos of the accident to contact authoritie­s.

Divers quickly located the vessel, which came to rest on its wheels on the lakebed, and authoritie­s planned to recover it later Friday.

The boat sank in 40 feet (12 meters) of water and then rolled on its wheels into a deeper area with 80 feet (25 meters) of water. Investigat­ors had no informatio­n about whether passengers were wearing life jackets or whether they were stowed onboard, the sheriff said.

The Coast Guard and the National Transporta­tion Safety Board planned to help with the investigat­ion.

Branson, about 200 miles (320 kilometers) southeast of Kansas City, is a country-themed tourist mecca built on a reputation for patriotic and religious-themed shows in numerous theaters.

Table Rock Lake, east of Branson, was created in the late 1950s when the Corps of Army Engineers built a dam across the White River to provide hydroelect­ric power to the Ozarks.

Associated Press writers Jim Salter in St. Louis; Heather Hollingswo­rth in Kansas City, Missouri; and John Hanna in Topeka, Kansas; and AP researcher Rhonda Shafner in New York contribute­d to this report.

For the latest updates on this story: https://bit. ly/2NwoQVz .

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 ?? CHARLIE RIEDEL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People pray outside Ride the Ducks, an amphibious tour operator involved in a boating accident on Table Rock Lake, Friday in Branson, Mo.
CHARLIE RIEDEL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS People pray outside Ride the Ducks, an amphibious tour operator involved in a boating accident on Table Rock Lake, Friday in Branson, Mo.

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