Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Company postpones plan to retrieve Titanic radio

- By Ben Finley

NORFOLK, Va. — The company that owns the salvage rights to the Titanic shipwreck has indefinite­ly delayed plans to retrieve and exhibit the vessel’s radio equipment because of the pandemic, according to a court filing made by the firm Friday.

RMS Titanic Inc. cited the “increasing difficulty associated with internatio­nal travel and logistics, and the associated health risks to the expedition team.”

The Atlanta-based company also said that it has gone nearly a year without its primary source of revenue after virus restrictio­ns closed exhibits of its vast collection of Titanic artifacts. Only some of the exhibition­s, which are scattered across the country, have reopened. But they’re seeing limited attendance.

The company maintained that it’s financiall­y secure. The firm said the radio expedition remains a top priority and will “take place as soon as reasonably practicabl­e.”

The company has argued that exhibiting the radio will help sustain the ship’s legacy while honoring passengers and crew. Known in 1912 as a Marconi wireless telegraph machine, the radio sent distress calls to nearby ships that helped save 700 people in lifeboats.

RMS Titanic Inc. filed its update with a U.S. District Court in Norfolk, Virginia, which presides over Titanic salvage matters. The company said it will continue to work on an expedition funding plan, which the admiralty court has required.

But even without the pandemic, the expedition has been far from guaranteed. The firm has been in an ongoing court battle with the U.S. government over whether the undertakin­g is legal.

Lawyers for the U.S. government have argued that the mission is barred under federal law and an internatio­nal agreement with Britain. The attorneys say the company must seek the government’s permission to remove the radio because the sunken vessel is a recognized memorial to the roughly 1,500 people who died.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States