The Mercury News

Panel blames boat owner for deadly fire

The NTSB says lax oversight and inadequate regulation­s led to 34 deaths on the Conception

- Sy Stefanie iazio and Tom Krisher

LOS ANrlLlS >> The lack of oversight by a Southern California boat owner led to a fire that killed 34 people on a 2019 scuba diving excursion, the National Transporta­tion Safety Board ruled Tuesday.

The predawn fire aboard the Conception is one of California’s deadliest maritime disasters, prompting criminal and safety investigat­ions. The Sept. 2, 2019, tragedy killed 33 passengers, including many from the Bay Area, and one crew member on a Labor Day weekend expedition near an island off Santa Barbara.

The five-member board voted unanimousl­y to place the deadly fire’s blame with the Conception’s owner, Truth Aquatics Inc.

The NTSB board also said inadequate Coast Guard regulation­s contribute­d to the high death toll, such as a lack of a requiremen­t for smoke detectors in all accommodat­ion spaces and poor emergency escape arrangemen­ts. The board passed several recommenda­tions to suggest to the Coast Guard.

The NTSB does not have enforcemen­t powers and must submit its suggestion­s for safety enhancemen­ts to bodies like the Federal Aviation Administra­tion or the Coast Guard, which have repeatedly rejected some of the board’s safety recommenda­tions after other disasters.

“The Coast Guard will carefully consider the National Transporta­tion Safety Board’s recommenda­tions through a deliberate process, which will include review by all subject matter experts and senior leaders responsibl­e for implementi­ng the potential regulatory changes,” Lt. Cmdr. Scott McBride said in a statement.

Investigat­ors said that because the boat burned and sank, they couldn’t determine exactly what caused the fire. But they found that it began toward the back of the main deck salon area, where divers had plugged in phones, flashlight­s and other items with lithium-ion batteries that can spread flames quickly.

Investigat­ors told the NTSB that because some of the recovered bodies were wearing shoes, they believe the victims were awake and trying to escape before being overcome with smoke. Coroner reports list smoke inhalation as the cause of death for all.

The absence of the required roving patrol, investigat­ors said, delayed detection of the fire, allowing it to grow beyond the sixmember crew’s firefighti­ng capabiliti­es, hampering evacuation efforts and directly leading to the high number of fatalities.

Board member Jennifer Homendy, who traveled to Santa Bar

bara in 2019 and toured a sister ship of the Conception, blasted the captain, Jerry Boylan, and Truth Aquatics during the hearing. She said the tragedy shouldn’t be called an accident.

“I hate the term accident in this case because, in my opinion, it is not an accident if you fail to operate your company safely,” Homendy said.

Jeffrey Goodman, a lawyer representi­ng family members of nine victims, said the board’s conclusion­s confirmed that the disaster was “predictabl­e and preventabl­e.”

“Truth Aquatics routinely violated federal law by failing to have a roving night watch,” Goodman said in a statement. “Sadly, this is just one among the litany of safety failures that led to a culture of deviance at Truth Aquatics.”

Coast Guard records show the Conception passed all recent safety inspection­s. Its records also show that since 1991, no owner, operator or charterer has been issued a citation or fine for failure to post a roving patrol. Because of that,

NTSB investigat­ors believe the Coast Guard does not have an effective way to verify that boats are operating with watchmen.

Investigat­ors said that because the boat burned and sank, they couldn’t determine what caused the fire. But they found that it began toward the back of the main deck salon area, where divers had plugged in phones, f lashlights and other items with lithium-ion batteries that can spread flames quickly.

After the Conception fire, the Coast Guard issued a bulletin recommendi­ng a limit on the unsupervis­ed use of lithium-ion batteries and extensive use of power strips and extension cords.

“Some people may walk away and say, ‘ Well, I wish I knew what the ignition source was,’ ” Homendy said. “But the key here is that the focus should be on conditions were present that allowed the fire to go undetected and to grow to a point where it prevented the evacuation.”

Five crew members, including Boylan, were asleep in the upper deck when the fire broke out around 3 a.m. in the area above the only escape hatch to the bunkroom where the passengers and a single crewmember were sleeping. Boylan

and four other crewmen escaped by jumping into the water after making repeated attempts to try to save those below deck.

The size of the emergency hatch — 22 inches by 22 inches (56 centimeter­s) — met regulation­s, though safety board members criticized it as inadequate. Its location required passengers to climb to an upper bunk and then pull themselves through the opening.

“I don’t see how an average human with a life jacket on could get up through that hatch,” said board member Michael E. Graham, adding that it would be difficult to get up to and through the hatch “without being a contortion­ist.”

The families of 32 victims also have filed claims against the boat owners, Glen and Dana Fritzler and Truth Aquatics. In turn, the Fritzlers and the company have filed a legal claim to shield them from damages under a maritime law that limits liability for vessel owners. Court filings show they have offered to settle lawsuits with dozens of victims’ relatives.

Court documents say federal criminal charges against the boat’s captain are imminent, though that probe is separate from the NTSB’s proceeding­s.

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