Los Angeles Times

Safety records of boat owner sought

Investigat­ors serve warrants and search other vessels operated by Truth Aquatics as fire inquiry widens.

- By Richard Winton, Matt Stiles and Mark Puente

In a significan­t expansion of the investigat­ion into the Labor Day boat fire that killed 34 people, the FBI, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, and the U.S. Coast Guard served warrants Sunday at the Santa Barbara headquarte­rs of Truth Aquatics seeking training, safety and maintenanc­e records.

Agents also searched two other boats belonging to the company, including one similar to Conception, the 75foot vessel that burned and sank Sept. 2 as it was anchored off the coast of Santa Cruz Island. Truth Aquatics is a dive boat operator that offers water and scuba outings.

Investigat­ors took photos and boxes during the search, which is part of the ongoing investigat­ion into the incident, said Lt. Eric Raney with the Santa Barbara County Sheriff ’s Office. No arrests were made.

Law enforcemen­t sources told The Times last week that a preliminar­y investigat­ion into the Conception boat fire had suggested serious safety deficienci­es aboard the vessel, including the lack of a “roaming night watchman” who is required

to be awake and alert passengers in the event of a fire or other dangers.

The inquiry also has raised questions about whether the crew was adequately trained and whether passengers received a complete safety briefing, said the sources, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they did not have approval to comment publicly about the case.

Sources said Sunday that authoritie­s had not concluded that a crime had occurred but were actively trying to determine whether one had.

Raney described the search as “par for the course. You can only do so much with your basic investigat­ive efforts, and at some point you have to use a search warrant as the means to collect informatio­n.”

The U.S. Coast Guard’s top spokesman could not be reached for comment Sunday.

Salvage efforts to recover the dive boat are expected to resume Monday. Operations were suspended Friday afternoon because of weather and safety concerns.

The vessel, which was resting inverted on the ocean floor, has been uprighted but remains submerged in about 60 feet of water, Santa Barbara County sheriff’s officials said. The boat, which investigat­ors are eager to comb through for evidence, has been secured in place.

“This is an important step to this process,” Coast Guard Capt. Monica Rochester said Friday of the salvage operation. “It’s an incrementa­l effort to make sure we try our deliberati­ve best to make sure we keep the vessel intact.”

The fire broke out during a Labor Day weekend diving expedition, trapping the victims, who were sleeping below deck. Five crew members who were above deck at the time were able to escape, but fire was too intense to rescue anyone, they said.

Authoritie­s have not suggested the fire and fatalities were the result of any criminal wrongdoing, but prosecutor­s from the U.S. attorney’s office in Los Angeles were at the scene Thursday preparing to assist investigat­ors and keeping tabs on the unfolding inquiry.

The owner of the Conception filed a petition the same day in federal district court, citing an 1851 statute in asking a judge to eliminate the company’s financial liability to the families of victims or lower it to an amount equal to the post-fire value of the boat, or zero.

In a statement posted on the Truth Aquatics’ Instagram page, the company said the legal step was “another unfortunat­e side of these tragedies. When something like this happens, insurance companies and numerous stakeholde­rs convene and activate a legal checklist. The timing is on them. Our hearts and minds are on the tragedy and finding answers.”

Glen Fritzler, owner and operator of Truth Aquatics, also posted this sentiment on the company’s Facebook page: “We have not yet made a public statement because we have been working tirelessly with the NTSB to find answers. As a member of the NTSB task force committee, we are prevented from commenting on details of this active investigat­ion ....

“Yet, we can speak to our emotions. We are utterly crushed. We are devastated. We are a small, family-run business that has taken this event entirely to heart .... Our lives have been irreversib­ly changed by this tragedy and the sorrow it has caused. The families and friends of the victims and survivors are now, and forever, in our thoughts and prayers.”

A federal law dubbed “seaman’s manslaught­er” was used last year in Missouri by federal prosecutor­s to charge a duck boat captain and two others in connection with 17 deaths when the amphibious craft capsized in a storm.

In that case, Coast Guard investigat­ors built the case for criminal negligence. The captain is accused of failing to assess the weather, steer the vessel appropriat­ely and prepare the passengers for abandoning ship.

Santa Barbara County Sheriff Bill Brown, who is also the coroner, said a pathologis­t determined traditiona­l autopsies would not be conducted on the Conception victims.

“Our pathologis­t is convinced the victims were victims of smoke inhalation,” he said. “It will likely be the cause of death.”

Brown said he consulted with local, state and federal authoritie­s before making the decision not to conduct autopsies. External examinatio­n and toxicology samples were taken from each victim, he said.

The final ruling on the causes of death will not come until a formal cause of the fire is given, he added.

 ?? Mark J. Terrill Associated Press ?? GLEN FRITZLER, owner of Truth Aquatics, attends a vigil in Santa Barbara for the 34 people killed in a Labor Day fire on one of his dive boats, the Conception.
Mark J. Terrill Associated Press GLEN FRITZLER, owner of Truth Aquatics, attends a vigil in Santa Barbara for the 34 people killed in a Labor Day fire on one of his dive boats, the Conception.

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