The Star Malaysia

FBI opens probe in bridge collapse

Fourth body recovered from missing vehicle, ship’s ‘black box’ recovered

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The FBI said it has opened a criminal probe into the collapse of a Baltimore bridge in March when a ship crashed into a bridge support, while local officials confirmed the recovery of a fourth body from the incident.

FBI agents boarded the cargo ship Dali to conduct court-authorised law enforcemen­t activity regarding the crash, an FBI spokespers­on said.

The spokespers­on said there was no other public informatio­n available and the bureau will have no further comment.

The body of a fourth victim was recovered on Monday after divers spotted what they believed to be a missing constructi­on vehicle, inside which they found the body, the Key Bridge Unified Command said in a statement. Details surroundin­g the victim’s identity were not made public at the request of family.

The Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed into the Patapsco River in the early morning of March 26, killing six men who were working on the span at the time, after the massive container ship lost power and crashed into a support pylon. The bodies of two victims are still missing.

The investigat­ion into the collapse will focus in part on whether the crew of the Dali left the port knowing the freighter had serious problems with its systems, The Washington Post reported earlier.

Safety investigat­ors have recovered the ship’s “black box” recorder, which provides data on its position, speed, heading, radar and bridge audio and radio communicat­ions as well as alarms.

The city of Baltimore said on Monday it had hired two law firms – Dicello Levitt and Saltz Mongeluzzi Bendesky Trial Lawyers – as it considered litigation against the owner, charterer and operator of the ship.

The registered owner of the Singapore-flagged ship is Grace Ocean Pte Ltd. Synergy Marine Group managed the ship and Maersk chartered the vessel.

The head of the US National Transporta­tion Safety Board separately told Congress last week that its investigat­ors had interviewe­d key cargo ship personnel as part of its probe. Work to clear the wreckage and restore traffic through the Baltimore port’s shipping channel continues.

Replacing the bridge will likely take years, but authoritie­s have opened two temporary channels to allow some shallow-draft vessels to move around the stricken container vessel. The US Army Corps of Engineers said two weeks ago that it expected to open a new channel to the Port of Baltimore by the end of April.

When the crash occurred, the Dali was leaving Baltimore en route to Colombo, Sri Lanka, with a crew of 21 and two pilots on board to guide it out of the port.

The same ship was involved in an incident in the port of Antwerp, Belgium, in 2016, when it hit a quay as it tried to exit a North Sea container terminal.

An inspection in June 2023 carried out in San Antonio, Chile, found the vessel had propulsion and auxiliary machinery deficienci­es, according to data on the public Equasis website, which provides informatio­n on ships.

According to Singapore’s Maritime and Port Authority, the vessel passed foreign-port inspection­s last June and September.

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