Los Angeles Times

Cleanup of bridge wreckage underway

Officials end search for four workers still missing after the Baltimore span was struck by a cargo ship.

- By Summer Lin

Authoritie­s started cleaning up the wreckage of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore on Thursday after ending the search for the remaining four missing workers, presumed dead, who fell into the water when the bridge went down.

Eight people plummeted into the cold waters of the Patapsco River after a Singaporea­n cargo ship struck the bridge early Tuesday, causing the 1.6-mile span to collapse. Two people were rescued; one declined treatment and the other was hospitaliz­ed in critical condition.

Officials pulled the bodies of 35-year-old Alejandro Hernandez Fuentes of Baltimore and 26-year-old Dorlian Castillo Cabrera of Dundalk, Md., from a submerged red pickup truck near the bridge Wednesday morning, said Col. Roland L. Butler Jr. of the Maryland State Police.

Butler said authoritie­s were turning their focus to a salvage operation. Officials halted the search for the other victims’ remains, he said, because of the dangerous conditions for the divers.

“We have exhausted all search efforts in the areas around this wreckage,” he added.

Butler said they believe the vehicles with the other victims are “encased in the superstruc­ture and concrete that we tragically saw come down.”

Investigat­ors with the National Transporta­tion Safety Board also provided more details about the timeline right before the ship’s crash during a Wednesday evening news briefing.

Marcel Muise, the board’s investigat­or in charge of the investigat­ion, said the agency recovered six hours of audio from the ship’s data recorder.

Multiple alarms were heard from the ship’s recorder at 1:24 a.m. shortly before the ship lost power, Muise said. The pilot of the ship asked nearby tugboats for help at 1:26 a.m. A minute later, the pilot ordered the cargo ship to drop the ship’s anchor and issued “additional steering commands.” The crash happened about 1:30 a.m.

There were 23 people aboard the vessel when it struck the bridge — 21 crew members and two pilots — Jennifer Homendy, the chair of the NTSB, said during the briefing.

The vessel was carrying 764 tons of hazardous materials, including flammables and corrosives, in 56 containers, Homendy said. Some of the containers were spotted in the water and others were “breached significan­tly on the vessel itself,” she said.

“It’s pretty devastatin­g, certainly, seeing not just what’s going on with the cargo containers, but just looking at what was a bridge span — three bridge spans that [are] pretty much gone,” she said. “It’s just utter devastatio­n.”

 ?? Matt Rourke Associated Press ?? A CONTAINER ship that struck the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore this week sits next to the downed span on Thursday. NTSB investigat­ors said ship data show alarms went off shortly before the crash.
Matt Rourke Associated Press A CONTAINER ship that struck the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore this week sits next to the downed span on Thursday. NTSB investigat­ors said ship data show alarms went off shortly before the crash.

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