Baltimore Sun

Crew says several tries made to save 34 killed in boat fire

- By Stefanie Dazio and Julie Watson

LOS ANGELES — The crew of a scuba diving boat that sank off the coast of Southern California made several attempts to rescue the 34 people who were trapped by fire below decks and died, federal authoritie­s said Thursday.

All those lost in the Labor Day tragedy aboard the Conception were sleeping in a bunkroom below the main deck when fire broke out around 3 a.m. The captain and four crew members above survived, but none have spoken publicly about what happened.

The crew members told investigat­ors in “very lengthy, detailed, comprehens­ive interviews” what Jennifer Homendy, a member of the National Transporta­tion Safety Board, called “a harrowing story of the moments before the fire erupted on the vessel.”

One said he awoke to a noise and saw flames “erupting” from the ship’s galley below, Homendy said. He tried to get down a ladder, but flames had already engulfed it.

Crew members then jumped from the ship’s bridge to its main deck — one breaking a leg in the effort — and tried to get through the double doors of the galley, under which the ship’s 33 passengers and a 26-year-old crew member slept.

With the galley’s doors on fire, they then went around to the front of the vessel to try and get through windows but couldn’t.

“At that point, due to heat, flames and smoke, the crew had to jump from the boat,” Homendy said.

Two members jumped overboard and swam to the back of the vessel to retrieve a skiff and rescue the remaining crew. They steered the skiff to a boat anchored nearby and called for help and then returned to the Conception to see if they could rescue any survivors. None were found.

The 34 victims died after flames above deck blocked the one stairway and the hatch leading from sleeping bunks to the upper decks and gave those below virtually no chance of getting out, authoritie­s have said.

One victim’s body remained missing Thursday as federal investigat­ors continued to interview the crew of the Conception.

Authoritie­s said they are examining potential ignition sources of a deadly fire on the scuba diving boat, i ncluding electronic­s aboard the vessel. Investigat­ors know photograph­y equipment, batteries and other electronic­s were stored and plugged in on the Conception.

“We are not ruling anything out at this point,” she said.

Homendy also said she had inspected a vessel similar to the Conception and was concerned about the accessibil­ity of its emergency exit hatch and possible difficulti­es getting to safety.

The Conception had been in full compliance with Coast Guard regulation­s, officials said.

Also Thursday, the owners of the dive boat filed a lawsuit to avoid liability in the case.

Truth Aquatics Inc., which owned the Conception, filed the lawsuit in U.S. District Court under a pre-Civil War provision of maritime law that allows it to limit its liability. The lawsuit argues the company and owners Glen and Dana Fritzler made the boat seaworthy and the craft was properly manned and equipped.

The federal investigat­ion continued as divers resumed a search for the last victim who remained missing. Divers have pulled 33 bodies from the seabed and the charred wreckage of the sunken, overturned boat.

Officials said they expected to interview the captain Thursday.

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