Sicily Yacht Sinking: Investigation Eyes 2 More Crew Members
As the investigation into the sinking of the superyacht off the coast of Sicily broadens, Italian prosecutors are now scrutinizing the actions of two other crew members in addition to the captain of the vessel.
On Wednesday, prosecutors placed crew members Tim Parker Eaton and Matthew Griffiths under investigation, according to The New York Times. Eaton was in charge of the yacht’s engine room, while Griffiths was on lookout duty the night the yacht sank.
AdvertisementWhen someone is placed under investigation in Italy, there is no guarantee that charges will follow.
The Bayesian, a 184-foot British-flagged yacht deemed unsinkable by its ship maker Perini Navi, went down in a storm off the coast of Sicily on Aug. 19, killing one crew member and six passengers, including British tech magnate Mike Lynch and his 18-year-old daughter, Hannah.
The yacht carried 22 people — 10 crew members and 12 guests who were there celebrating Lynch’s acquittal in June on all charges in a fraud case that followed the sale of his company Autonomy to Hewlett-Packard for $11 billion in 2011.
Fifteen of the 22 people aboard survived by escaping on a lifeboat and were rescued by the sailboat Sir Robert Baden Powell. It remains unclear how the Bayesian sank, especially as the nearby Baden Powell remained largely unscathed despite the storm.
AdvertisementAccording to The Associated Press, Giovanni Costantino, head of the Italian Sea Group, which owns Perini Navi, said the yacht’s sinking was likely caused by human error.
“The ship sank because it took on water. From where, the investigators will say,” he told Italian state media, per the AP.
Captain James Cutfield is facing a manslaughter inquiry to determine whether his actions caused the shipwreck, Cutfield’slawyer Giovanni Rizzuti told the Times on Tuesday. Prosecutors interviewed Cutfield this week, but he exercised his right to remain silent and is “very distressed,” according to Rizzuti.
This week, nine of the 10 crew members, including those under investigation, left Sicily, sources told the Times. In Italy, people under investigation are not prohibited from leaving the country.
Related
British Tech Entrepreneur Mike Lynch Missing After Yacht’s Sinking
Body Of British Tech Magnate Recovered From Wreckage Of Superyacht, Coast Guard Says
Five Bodies Recovered In Search After Superyacht Sinks Off Italian Coast
(責任編輯:Knowledge)
- Trump's Bizarre Flex On His Smarts Has Critics Howling
- Fans React To Katie Ledecky's Resounding Loss To Ariarne Titmus At Olympics
- Upgrade Your Home With 24 Practical Amazon Products
- This Highly
- Federal Judge Skeptical That Trump's Jan. 6 Case Should Be Postponed
- N.Korea celebrates Korean War armistice, stresses ties with Russia
- This Highly
- Critics Question JD Vance's 'Weird' Defense Of Wife Usha After White Supremacist Attacks
- The Funniest Tweets About Married Life (Aug. 27
- Trump Calls For US To Be ‘Crypto Capital Of The Planet’ In Appeal To Nashville Bitcoin Conference
- Fans Have One Word For Simone Biles As She Shrugs Off Injury In Paris Debut
- California's Largest Wildfire Just Exploded In Size
- Kamala Harris To Invite Voters To Chart A 'New Way Forward' As Democrats Conclude Their Convention
- 2 Best Friends Nab Team USA's First Medal At Paris Olympics
- Social Media Reacts To Nancy Mace Saying 'Kamala' Wrong
- 3 US military helicopters make emergency landing in western Japan
- Israel vows response to deadly soccer field strike it blames on Hezbollah
- Fans Have One Word For Simone Biles As She Shrugs Off Injury In Paris Debut
- Forest Park Police Investigate Train Shooting
- Chuck Schumer Dares Trump To Dump JD Vance As VP Pick