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Dozens Missing as Scuba Trip Ends in Flames and a Haunting Plea

Dozens Missing as Scuba Trip Ends in Flames and a Haunting Plea
Dozens Missing as Scuba Trip Ends in Flames and a Haunting Plea

Five men soaking wet and shivering in their underwear told the Hansens of a catastrophic fire that had ravaged their 75-foot commercial scuba diving vessel, the Conception, several hundred feet away.

The men, all crew members, had escaped one of California’s worst maritime disasters in decades, a fire that authorities said Monday appeared to have claimed dozens of lives. A total of 39 people were on board the Conception, and as of late Monday eight had been confirmed dead.

The desperation became clear to Bob Hansen when he stepped outside his cabin and saw the glow of the raging fire in the dark. In an interview, he said that he had seen the Conception completely engulfed in flames, “from stem to stern.”

“I could see the fire coming through holes on the side of the boat,” he said. “There were these explosions every few beats. You can’t prepare yourself for that. It was horrendous.”

In a haunting distress call apparently made from the Conception and recorded by a Ventura County marine radio channel, a man yells, “Mayday! Mayday! Mayday!” Through the distortion and crackle of the radio call, the man’s fear is apparent. “I can’t breathe!” he screams.

Rescue crews scoured the waters south of Santa Barbara and west of Los Angeles throughout the day Monday, hoping that they might find survivors from the Conception, which had been on a three-day holiday excursion to the Channel Islands, part of a national park encompassing rugged, pristine coves in the Pacific.

The remains of four victims were recovered by rescue teams Monday, according to Sheriff Bill Brown of Santa Barbara County, and an additional four had been located “on the ocean floor in close proximity to the vessel,” he said. There were six crew members aboard and 33 passengers.

As of Monday afternoon, Coast Guard boats were still conducting search and rescue operations.

A Coast Guard spokeswoman, Capt. Monica Rochester, said during a news conference late Monday that the search would continue through the night. But she said the crew members were the only known survivors from the Conception. “It’s a very tragic event, and we will search all the way through the night, into the morning,” she said. “But I think we should all be prepared to move into the worst outcome.”

Passengers on the Conception slept in a single room below deck that was tightly packed with bunk beds, according to a floor plan of the boat on the website of Truth Aquatics, the Santa Barbara-based company that operated the vessel. Narrow staircases from the sleeping quarters and showers led to the galley.

It remains unclear what started the fire. But Brown said that “you couldn’t have asked for a worse situation.”

“You have a vessel in the open sea that is in the middle of the night,” he said. “The sleeping compartment was on the bottom deck of the ship. They would have been sound asleep when this fire started.”

It was too early Monday to say whether negligence had played any role in the fire. “The vessel has been in full compliance,” Rochester said at a news conference. The boat was equipped with a fire suppression system in the engine room. The vessel also had an onboard, built-in barbecue, according to the website.

After picking up the mayday call at about 3:15 a.m., the Coast Guard dispatched two helicopter crews and several boats to the scene, where they were met by other law enforcement agencies.

At the time of the fire, the Conception was moored in Platts Harbor, north of Santa Cruz Island. At sunrise it was smoldering but still afloat, according to a photograph posted by the Santa Barbara Fire Department. It sank later that morning, around 20 yards from shore.

The Hansens’ account testified to the panic in the initial moments after the fire struck.

The crew members who escaped the fire had reached the couple’s boat on an inflatable tender boat.

The Hansens gave clothes to the crew members and helped dry them off. One appeared to have broken his leg, evidently during the escape, and was in tremendous pain. Two other members of the crew went back out toward the Conception to look for passengers who may have made it off the boat; they found no one.

“The fire was too big; there was absolutely nothing we could do,” Bob Hansen said. “You never anticipate something like this. We just felt so helpless.”

Recreational divers in California said Truth Aquatics had a good reputation and appeared careful about safety.

Bill Zhang, owner of Ocean One scuba, which has offered scuba trips on the Conception for the last three years, estimated that there were 15 to 20 diving boats in Southern California and said that the three owned by Truth Aquatics were the largest in the Los Angeles area.

“They are the biggest company in California — they should pass everything very easily,” Zhang, 35, said. He noted that there would have been two captains on board the Conception because it was on an overnight trip.

Commercial boats of the Conception’s size must pass Coast Guard inspection annually to renew their licenses.

Gary Pilecki, a Bay Area-based member of a club that has chartered annual lobster-fishing trips on Truth Aquatics boats since 1982, said that the company’s vessels were always clean and well maintained.

“They’re always doing something to it,” Pilecki, 65, said. “Every time I go by Santa Barbara, I stop and say hello to them, and they’re working on the boat. They’re replacing pipes and repairing things.

“It’s beyond me,” Pilecki said of the fire. “I’m surprised to hear about this.”

Along Santa Barbara Harbor on Monday, residents and visitors alike were speculating about the cause of the fire. Michael Gaffney, 62, who lives across the street from the harbor, said he had seen tourists from all over the country and even the world line up for the scuba trips. “It’s horrible,” he said. “If you’re trapped down below, there’s nowhere to go.”

Promotional materials for the tours hung throughout the dock, featuring photographs of the company’s three boats: Vision, Truth and Conception”in the middle. On Monday afternoon, Truth sat alone in the harbor.

Channel Islands Harbor in Oxnard, California, where the local Coast Guard unit is headquartered, was covered in fog Monday morning. Despite the tragedy offshore, business continued largely as usual along the harbor; out on the water were recreational boats, kayakers and paddle boarders.

Santa Cruz Island, in Santa Barbara County, is one of five islands in Channel Islands National Park, according to the website for the National Park Service, which owns and manages about a quarter of the island. The other three-quarters is owned and managed by the Nature Conservancy. California’s largest island, at about 96 square miles, Santa Cruz Island is about 20 miles from Ventura, the website said.

“Our hearts are with the families and loved ones affected by this tragic incident,” Gov. Gavin Newsom said on Twitter. “We are eternally grateful for our heroic emergency medical workers that are on site — working to ensure every individual is found.”

Authorities have not released the names or nationalities of the dead or missing.

This article originally appeared in

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