Manslaughter probe into British tycoon’s superyacht disaster
Mike Lynch and six others died after their at-anchor vessel sank in the Mediterranean Sea on Monday
Authorities in Italy have opened a manslaughter investigation into the sinking of a yacht off the coast of Sicily earlier this week, in which seven people died, including British tech mogul Mike Lynch and his teenage daughter.
The probe was announced on Saturday by the local prosecutor’s office in the Palermo metropolitan area on the island.
A case has been opened “against unknown persons for negligent shipwreck and manslaughter,” the prosecutor in charge of the investigation, Raffaele Cammarano, told a press conference, as quoted by Italian newspaper Corriere Della Sera.
The 56-meter-long British-flagged superyacht named ‘Bayesian,’ which had 22 people aboard, had been moored less than a kilometer off the coast of Sicily on Monday when it was hit by what is believed to be a tornado or waterspout.
The bodies of all the seven victims, including that of Lynch, one of the UK’s best-known tech entrepreneurs, and his 18-year-old daughter Hannah, have been recovered. Fifteen people survived, including Lynch’s wife and the yacht’s captain, and they have all been questioned.
The investigation is focusing on “why the crew saved themselves by climbing into the lifeboat while the other guests were in the hull” asleep, Prosecutor Cammarano said. He wondered why the crew did not see the storm coming and added that the yacht was hit by gusts of wind with speeds of 100 kilometers per hour.
“There are many possibilities for culpability. It could be just the captain. It could be the whole crew. It could be the guard,” CNN quoted the head of the public prosecutor’s office Ambrogio Cartosio as saying.
The wreck is said to be lying apparently intact on its side at a depth of 50 meters.
The bodies were found “on the side of the vessel that faces the surface,” said the commander of the local Fire Department Girolamo Bentivoglio, who also took part in the press conference.
The victims “were all looking [to be saved] in the last air bubbles,” he added.
Lynch, 59, had invited friends to join him on the yacht to celebrate his acquittal in June in a US fraud trial, Reuters noted. Lynch’s lawyer Chris Morvillo, and Morgan Stanley banker Jonathan Bloomer, who had appeared as a character witness in the case, were among those who died in the wreck.
According to Reuters, the sinking has puzzled naval marine experts, who say a high-end boat like the Bayesian should have withstood the storm and in any case should not have sunk as quickly as it did.
The Lynch family issued a statement thanking the Italian coastguard and emergency services, and requesting privacy be respected “at this time of unspeakable grief.”
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