Oct. 3, 2005

Boat Did Not Have Enough Crew

Investigators Search For Clues After Tour Boat Tragedy Kills 20

  • Video Michigan Town In Mourning

    The town of Trenton, Mich., was home to 14 of the passengers on the doomed lake cruise. The small community is now forced to live with the loss of so many loved ones. Trish Regan reports.

  • Video Update On N.Y. Boating Tragedy

    The National Transportation Safety Board is at the scene in Lake George, N.Y., to investigate how a tour boat capsized, killing 20 people. Michael Weber reports.

    • One of the survivors from a tour group whose boat capsized is loaded into an ambulance at her motel in Lake George, N.Y. Monday, Oct. 3, 2005.

      One of the survivors from a tour group whose boat capsized is loaded into an ambulance at her motel in Lake George, N.Y. Monday, Oct. 3, 2005.  (CBS/AP)

    • A search boat patrols the waters of Lake George, N.Y.

      A search boat patrols the waters of Lake George, N.Y.  (AP)

    •  (CBS)

    • A diver leaves the waters of Lake George after searching for the overturned tour boat Ethan Allen.

      A diver leaves the waters of Lake George after searching for the overturned tour boat Ethan Allen.  (AP)

    • Warren County Sheriff Larry Cleveland, left and New York State Trooper Capt. Donald Depass speak to reporters about the fatal tour boat accident.

      Warren County Sheriff Larry Cleveland, left and New York State Trooper Capt. Donald Depass speak to reporters about the fatal tour boat accident.  (AP)

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  • Photo Essay Tour Boat Tragedy

    Search efforts continue after a boat carrying senior citzens capsizes in New York state

(CBS/AP)  A tour boat that capsized on a New York lake, killing 20 people, did not have the required number of crew members aboard, and state regulators suspended licenses for all five vessels belonging to the company that operated the tour, officials said Monday.

The Ethan Allen, which flipped over Sunday in Lake George while carrying 47 elderly tourists, was required by state boating regulations to have two crew members, said Wendy Gibson, spokeswoman for the state Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic preservation. Any commercial boat that carries between 21-48 passengers must have two crew she said.

Authorities have said the only crew member aboard was the captain.

In searching for clues and details surrounding the tragedy, authorities said the boat's 47 passengers were sitting on long benches and slid sharply to one side of the vessel just before it flipped over.

Wayne Bennett, State Police superintendent, said that investigators do not know what initially caused the Ethan Allen to tip. But he said passengers either slid or were thrown to one side of the boat after it began lurching.

"And that, of course, would automatically mean an even bigger shift of weight," Bennett said.

Earlier in the day, Bennett said the seats were not secured to deck. But later, State Police said that was incorrect.

On Monday afternoon, crews using inflatable bags raised the sunken vessel 70 feet to the surface. They planned to pump it out and tow it to shore. NTSB investigators will then examine the wreck.

The captain of the boat told authorities it was hit by waves from at least one other vessel and turned over as he tried to steer out of them, authorities said earlier Monday. CBS News' Michael Weber reports there are eyewitness rumors that the wake of a larger tour boat caused the boat to capsize, but there was no immediate confirmation that another boat that could have kicked up waves was in the area.

The boat flipped so fast that none of the 47 passengers could put on a life jacket. People thrashed in the water, clung to the overturned boat and screamed "I can't swim!"

Passengers spilled into the murky water as the boat overturned. One woman trapped beneath the boat said she survived only after seeing daylight and swimming toward it. Eight people were hospitalized.

All of the passengers were Michigan residents on an East Coast leaf-peeping tour that included a one-hour boat ride around the south end of Lake George — just in time to see the first flashes of fall color in the surrounding Adirondack mountains.

Continued



©MMV, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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