JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) — A series of U.S. Coast Guard hearings will seek answers about why the 790-foot freighter El Faro sank near the Bahamas last fall, killing all 33 crew members in the worst U.S. commercial maritime disaster in decades. Five crew members, including the ship’s captain, were from Maine.

The hearings open Tuesday in Jacksonville as authorities address many questions, chief among them whether misconduct, negligence or shoddy safety inspections contributed to the El Faro’s demise.

The freighter set sail from Jacksonville on Sept. 29 en route to Puerto Rico as a powerful storm that became Hurricane Joaquin churned offshore. The ship’s captain attempted to outrun the storm, but lost engine power and control of the ship.

The storm overtook the aged vessel last Oct. 1; the wreckage was later found at 15,000 feet deep in the Atlantic Ocean, near the Bahamas.


Copy the Story Link

Comments are not available on this story.

filed under: