The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Divers aim to reach capsized vessel in search for survivors

- By Stacey Plaisance, Kevin Mcgill and Jeff Martin

PORT FOURCHON, LA. >> Families anxiously awaited news of the 12 people missing from the capsized oilindustr­y vessel Thursday, while stormy weather delayed divers from reaching the ship to search for survivors.

Coast Guard Petty Officer 2nd Class Jonathan Lally said rescuers didn’t know whether any of the missing might be caught inside the lift boat that flipped Tuesday in hurricane-force winds and high seas off the Louisiana coast.

“There is the potential they are still there, but we don’t know,” Lally said early Thursday. “We’re still searching for 12 people because there are 12 still missing.”

The Coast Guard expected the divers to make it to the vessel Thursday, but wanted to make sure the rescuers won’t need rescuing, he said.

“With something like this, that is a vessel that is capsized with the potential of people trapped inside, there are a lot of dynamic aspects we have to look at,” Lally said.

Six people from the Seacor Power were rescued alive and one person’s body was recovered from the Gulf of Mexico as searchers scanned an area larger than the state of Rhode Island. The Lafourche Parish Coroner’s Office identified the person found dead as David Ledet, 63, of Thibodaux.

Part of the overturned ship’s hull and one of its legs were still visible, leaving most of the bulky vessel underwater, in the area 50 to 55 feet deep, according to the Coast Guard. Also called a jackup rig, it has three long legs designed to reach the sea floor and lift it out of water as an offshore platform.

Despite the widening search involving Coast Guard boats and aircraft, no other crew members have been spotted. “We had both air and surface assets out last night — nothing materially has changed,” U.S. Coast Guard Petty Officer Third Class John Michelli said around dawn Thursday.

Flood warning

Authoritie­s using all-terrain vehicles to search the shoreline near Port Fourchon, a major base for the U.S. oil and gas industry, paused for impending storms Thursday. The National Weather Service issued a flash-flood warning for the area as heavy rainfall pushed through.

Lafourche Parish President Archie P. Chaisson III said the sheriff’s office, harbor police and Homeland Security officers were looking for signs of life on the shore.

“There are some local guys that are on that vessel,” Chaisson said. “It’s a very tight community in that industry. Those crews are very tight. This crew had apparently been around for a while working together.”

Marion Cuyler, fiancée of crane operator Chaz Morales, was waiting with families of other missing workers at a Port Fourchon fire station Wednesday, near a landing site where helicopter­s were coming and going. She said she talked to her fiancé before he left Tuesday.

“He said that they were jacking down and they were about to head out, and I’m like, ‘The weather’s too bad. You need to come home.’ And he’s like, ‘I wish I could.’”

She said she hoped her fiancé made it to an air-locked part of the lift boat and was able to hold on until rescuers can reach him.

Previous problems

The vulnerabil­ities of lift boats in storms have been known for years, and federal authoritie­s have investigat­ed multiple deaths involving them.

In September 2011, large waves struck the hull of the Trinity II in the Gulf of Mexico, breaking one of its giant legs, and the stern collapsed into the water, the National Transporta­tion Safety Board wrote in its report. Four of the 10 people on board perished.

In July 1989, the lift boat AVCO V sank off the coast of Leeville, La., in storms associated with Hurricane Chantal. Waves shifted equipment on the deck, prompting the vessel to capsize and sink, the NTSB found. Ten of the 14 people on board died.

Coast Guard Capt. Will Watson said winds were 80 to 90 mph and waves rose 7 to 9 feet high when the Seacor Power overturned.

“That’s challengin­g under any circumstan­ce,” Watson said at a Wednesday news conference. “We don’t know the degree to which that contribute­d to what happened, but we do know those are challengin­g conditions to be out in the maritime environmen­t.”

The National Weather Service in New Orleans issued a special marine warning before 4 p.m. Tuesday that predicted steep waves and winds greater than 58 mph.

Weather service meteorolog­ist Phil Grigsby said the system was an offshore derecho, or straight-winds storm. “This was not a microburst — just a broad straight-line wind event that swept over a huge area,” Grigsby said.

He said the weather service’s nearest official gauge, at Grand Isle, showed about 30 minutes of 75 mph winds, followed by hours of winds over 50 mph.

 ?? MAX BECHERER — VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Darra Ann Morales shows a photo of her son Chaz Morales and his family on her phone as Chaz Jr., 10, comforts his grandmothe­r at their home in Slidell, La., on Wednesday. Chaz Morales is one of the crew members missing from the capsized vessel Seacor Power.
MAX BECHERER — VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Darra Ann Morales shows a photo of her son Chaz Morales and his family on her phone as Chaz Jr., 10, comforts his grandmothe­r at their home in Slidell, La., on Wednesday. Chaz Morales is one of the crew members missing from the capsized vessel Seacor Power.

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