October 6, 2008

Mysterious Disappearances On Cruise Ships

HungZai.com
October 6, 2008

The cruise industry says that more than 30 passengers have disappeared from ships in the past five years - and these figures exclude those known to have been suicides or drunken accidents.

When the QE2 docked at Southampton on January 2, the liner was one passenger short: a 62-year-old German woman was missing. She is just one of a growing list of people who have disappeared from cruise ships in mysterious circumstances. Some of these deaths may be suicides, writes Gwyn Topham, but others appear more sinister. And of course there are no police out on the ocean . . .

In the last days of the Vietnam war, Hue Pham and his wife Hue Tran spent two perilous weeks on a cramped container ship, adrift with no food and little water in the South China Sea. The couple survived this desperate flight from Vietnam, built a new life in America, and then, three decades later, decided to take a Caribbean cruise on a ship called the Carnival Destiny. This was the boat journey that they would not survive.

The facts of the couple's disappearance, as the Destiny sailed between Barbados and Aruba on May 12 2005, are few. After a fruitless on-board search, the ship eventually retraced its path, joined by the US coastguard. No trace of their bodies was ever found.

For the relatives, the deaths left a terrible, insoluble puzzle. Their son, Son Michael Pham, maintained that his parents had no reason to take their own lives and were in fact planning a trip back to Vietnam, and were looking forward to meeting relatives again. "Two American citizens with no personal or financial problems, no serious health problems, living the happiest time of their lives, both vanished without a trace or witness," he later told an inquiry.

The cruise had been a Mother's Day gift to the couple, and they were on board ship with their daughter and granddaughter. "I immediately flew down to California, went through their home, and tried to find one clue, something unusual. I could not," Son Michael says now.

Since then, with the help of two other bereaved families, Son Michael has helped establish a group called the International Cruise Victims. In the past weeks, he has been offering his help to yet another family, after the QE2 sailed into Southampton on January 2 this year one passenger short.

Officially, Hampshire police are still investigating how a 62-year-old German woman, so far identified only as Sabine L, disappeared from a new-year cruise aboard the QE2 somewhere off Madeira. Her family has launched its own website appealing for help (www.qe2missing.de). But the full truth of Sabine L's last moments on the luxury Cunard liner is unlikely ever to be firmly established - beyond the cold fact that she joins more than 30 passengers who, in the past four years, have mysteriously disappeared from cruise ships worldwide.

Last year the cruise industry reported that 24 passengers had disappeared between 2003 and last March. The information emerged after a US Congressional subcommittee found itself with an unlikely task: to examine the threat posed to citizens by booking a cruise holiday. Since then, at least 10 more passengers and two crew have been reported missing or overboard, including one Scottish pensioner lost in the Atlantic last November. These figures do not include known suicides and those who, for one or reason or another - a drunken argument, perhaps, or misplaced bravado - are known to have deliberately jumped. Of those who have gone mysteriously missing, some may have killed themselves; other incidents may be alcohol-related mishaps; but in at least one case, the death of a 52-year-old woman on the Island Escape in Italy, something more sinister may have gone on. The FBI is still investigating that case.

After hearing details of those who had gone missing on board ships, subcommittee chairman, Christopher Shays, a Republican congressman, warned of a "growing manifest of unexplained disappearances, unsolved crimes and brazen acts of lawlessness on the high seas". Like small cities, he said, cruise ships experienced crimes. "But city dwellers know the risks of urban life - and no one falls off a city never to be heard of again." Going on a cruise was, he said, perhaps "the perfect way to commit the perfect crime".

There was no evidence of foul play in the disappearance of "M", a 40-year-old woman, from Celebrity Cruise Line's Mercury. But then, there was precious little evidence at all - and what did emerge was largely due to the persistence of her father, Kendall Carver, a former company CEO, who spent tens of thousands of dollars on legal fees and private investigators in an attempt to discover the truth about her disappearance. (Carver has asked the Guardian not to use his daughter's name, to protect the privacy of other family members.) Carver says it was on the second day of the Mercury's cruise to Alaska in August 2004 that a cabin steward realised that M's room had not been slept in and reported her absence to his boss, who told him he would deal with it. Throughout the cruise, the steward continued to place chocolates on the pillow of the unused bed, as he was ordered to do, but no one saw M again. At the end of the cruise, when the ship docked in Vancouver and all passengers disembarked, M's belongings were packed away. No one notified the police or her family. It was only after her father filed a missing person's report that police discovered that she had disappeared from a cruise ship.

Kendall Carver's loss was, he says, made worse by a lack of cooperation from the cruise line. At one point, Celebrity Cruise Line issued a statement in which it called the death a horrible tragedy, and added that "regrettably, there is very little a cruise line, a resort or a hotel can do to prevent someone from committing suicide". As Carver points out, the case is still open and his daughter has not been declared dead by the family or the FBI - in his belief, suicide is neither the only nor the most likely explanation.

Celebrity Cruise Line, however, now says: "There is probably nothing we or any company could do that would make the parents feel the company had acted sensitively enough." Today, all the company's passengers pass a computerised checkout at the end of a cruise.

Whatever the truth of what happened, M's case starkly underlines a fact that cruise passengers, potentially thousands of miles from home, should be well aware of: out at sea, there are no police.

It is extremely difficult for any detective to piece together a murder case without a body, and chances of finding a passenger dumped into the ocean are slim indeed. And while all cruise ships employ security officers, they do not always seal off crime scenes, detain suspects and interview witnesses in the manner that might be expected of them.

Two cases in particular have gripped the US and Australia respectively: the disappearance of honeymooner George Smith [see below] and the death of mother of three Dianne Brimble. The story of Smith, presumed to have gone overboard from the superliner Brilliance of the Seas less than 10 days into his married life, was lapped up by US television networks. First there was the young, well-connected victim and his telegenic, grieving widow opening up on talkshows; then family rifts and media-friendly forensic investigators added to the drama. The details of Brimble's end, left drugged and naked to die on P&O Australia's Pacific Sky, emerged in the more low-key surroundings of a New South Wales coroner's court. But both cases have been marked by questions over how well initial investigations were handled, by angry allegations from families and rebuttals from cruise lines, and an increased public perception that something was seriously amiss.

Unlike many in the grim litany of victims' tales, Dianne Brimble did not disappear. Brimble, 42, from Brisbane, had saved for two years to go on a cruise with her sister and their daughters. But by the end of the first night of her holiday in September 2002, she was lying naked, drugged and dying on the floor of a cabin, ignored and ridiculed by the men who had left her there.

A toxicology report would later show that Brimble had died of an overdose of gamma-hydroxybutyrate, a party drug also known as fantasy, GHB, GBH or liquid ecstasy, and often described as a date-rape drug. Brimble, her family told Australian TV, didn't even like to take Panadol.

By the time police met the boat in the South Pacific island of Noumea to investigate, the male passengers had been back in to the cabin to tidy up. No one has been charged in relation to her death, and it took more than three years for the details of her story to emerge at the coroner's inquest, which reopens next month in Australia.

Eight men were identified as "persons of interest" in the investigation. Photographs retrieved from a digital camera would reveal that before her death at least one man had sex with Brimble; photographs were taken even when she was passed out naked on the floor.

The Brimble inquest highlighted a cruise culture far from old-fashioned ideas of shuffle-board, after-dinner dances and G&Ts at the captain's table. At one point an advert for P&O cruises was produced in court: a postcard showing a line of sunbathing women and bearing the slogan, "Seamen wanted". P&O's lawyers protested that the cruise line was not on trial. But the coroner ruled it was admiss- ible evidence; Brimble, she said, did not die in a vacuum.

If the behaviour of eight "persons of interest" had attracted complaints - a photo of one showed him running naked through the ship on the night of Brimble's death - ship security officers would reveal that finding drunk, naked people on deck was a relatively common occurrence.

It is just not deaths and disappearances that are a problem on cruise ships. According to crime statistics supplied to the Congressional hearings by 15 of the biggest lines, covering around 85% of cruise holidays worldwide, there were 178 reports of sexual assault on cruise ships between 2003 and 2005. FBI representatives testified to their belief that the figures were under-reported - and further documents recently obtained under court order by a Miami lawyer, James Walker, show that Royal Caribbean alone, which carries around 25% of cruise passengers, recorded more than 100 complaints of sexual assault and sexual battery within that time span.

Some British and American security officers claim that the real picture is even worse. Geoff Furlong, an ex-detective from Liverpool who worked for six years as a security officer for two cruise lines, says: "It doesn't matter what the class of ship is. Young women are particularly susceptible - particularly from crew members. They hunt in packs."

He claims often to have discovered crew targeting young female passengers. "Say I came across the situation: the guy would be up before the captain at the next port of call and thrown off the ship at his own expense, to repatriate him to Costa Rica, or wherever," he says. "That was all that happened - there was never any police involvement." If passengers complained, they were bought off, he says, "given champagne, free holidays, told about the consequences of going to court, how it would bring shame on their families". Such complaints, he says, would frequently not even be logged.

"The cruise companies just want it to go away," says Randy Jaques, an American security officer. He claims personally to have dealt with more than 50 complaints, and says hundreds of women have signed "Jane Doe agreements" - meaning they have reached an out-of-court settlement with the cruise lines and signed a confidentiality clause.

Passengers can find themselves in a complex legal situation, potentially under numerous jurisdictions when sailing abroad. With many cruise ships registered under flags of convenience with relatively slack tax and labour regimes, the relevant laws might be those of Panama, the Bahamas or Bermuda. Prosecuting, say, a sacked crew member who has returned to his own country brings a whole new dimension of complexity. Charles Lipcon, a Miami lawyer who has built a 30-year career on suing cruise lines, says his firm does not normally take on cases without a clear jurisdiction. "What I've seen over the years is that it's a hot potato for everyone, and nothing much gets done," he says.

In the US, Son Michael Pham's victim-support organisation has persuaded two members of congress to sponsor a bill, the Cruise Line Accurate Safety Statistics Act, to put more of an onus on cruise lines to prevent and report crimes at sea. James Walker believes that many are unreported, and points out that crew members are far more at risk than passengers. "You don't have young Filipino women who have been sexually abused calling in to the guest claims department," he says. In fact, convictions of either employees or passengers are virtually unheard of. "People call and say they are confident that the FBI can solve their crime," he says. "We say, 'Well, if it happens with this cruise line, it will be the first time in their history.'"

Cruise lines, meanwhile, have been at pains to stress that ships are inherently safe, self- contained environments. In the context of millions of passengers each year, the number of missing people and reported sexual assaults compares well with statistics on land, they say; crimes such as robbery are negligible.

William Giddons, director of the UK's Passenger Shipping Association, representing the cruise industry, says: "The occurrence is so rare, anything that happens on a cruise ship is news. Because we're such a high-profile industry, it's something we have to live with. Compare us with a resort or a hotel, where there is virtually no security at all.

"I can't sit here and tell you that all crimes are reported - but the rules are very strict that they should be. They certainly will be now, if [they weren't] in the past."

Changes are indeed being made. Drug- and terror-related concerns have seen airport-style security introduced at ports, complete with x-ray machines and sniffer dogs. The on-board culture on "fun ships" may be changing, too: in Australia, a beleaguered P&O has increased CCTV, stopped 24-hour drinking, and scrapped its notorious "schoolies cruises", which often saw unruly passengers expelled on South Pacific islands. Its ill-fated ship, the Pacific Sky - now linked to four premature passenger deaths through accidents and illness in as many years - has been sold off.

The industry still has some PR work to do, though: disappearances and assaults aside, it has been beset by a roll-call of blights in recent years. Last year one man died when fire swept through cabins on a Caribbean cruise, and passengers feared for their lives as another cruise ship blazed in the English Channel. Cunard's Queen Mary 2 was recently the scene of a very public passenger mutiny after propeller troubles cut every stop from the cruise itinerary. Other cruises have been hit by the norovirus: a highly contagious sickness with symptoms including diarrhoea, stomach cramps and violent projectile vomiting. Some older British people had to be stretchered off one ship when it returned to Hull, and at one point successive outbreaks of the virus confined the world's newest, biggest megaliner, the Freedom of the Seas, to port. In late 2005, the luxurious Seabourn Spirit even found itself having to face down pirates with rocket launchers.

The industry has also run into problems on environmental grounds. In Alaska, where only ships with advanced waste purification systems are allowed to sail, a referendum has led to the tightening of controls and a rise in taxes on cruise ships. Meanwhile, Californian ports, under the newly green leadership of Arnold Schwarzenegger, are forcing ships to reduce their fuel smoke emissions. More large fines have been levied on cruise ships for dumping untreated waste.

But despite it all, passengers continue to flock to the ships. The Passenger Shipping Association estimates that there was a 17% rise in Britons taking cruises last year - with 1.25m of us taking a trip - and predicts that 1.55m will be on board by 2008. Worldwide, the figure is expected to pass 15m people going on a cruise annually. Bigger ships with astonishing facilities are intermittently unveiled - and monster ships to dwarf today's megaliners are under construction. With these huge ships boasting theatres and shopping malls larger than those found in many towns, passengers need hardly know they are at sea at all. So long, of course, as they don't go overboard

Profile: George Smith, a young man who went missing on honeymoon

Young, handsome and wealthy, George Allen Smith IV, a 26-year-old from Connecticut, went missing on a honeymoon cruise in the Mediterranean with his new wife, Jennifer Hagel Smith.

After a lavish wedding in Rhode Island, the couple had fl own to Europe, and in Barcelona boarded Royal Caribbean's Brilliance of the Seas, a large resort ship that caters for the younger and more active end of the market.

On the seventh day of the cruise, July 5 2005, Smith was reported missing. The newlyweds had spent the previous evening in the bar and casino with acquaintances from the cruise, drinking heavily. Hagel Smith said she remembered nothing after leaving the bar, allegedly after rowing with her husband. At around 3.30am, Smith, intoxicated, was helped back to his cabin. His wife was not there.

The next morning, a passenger noticed a large bloodstain on a canopy below the Smiths' cabin, and called security. Jennifer was tracked down to the ship's spa, where she was having a massage. George was missing without a trace.

Turkish forensic investigators were called in, as was an FBI agent holidaying in the area. By evening, the bloodstain was cleaned away and the ship continued on its voyage. If anyone had been responsible for Smith's death, that person was on the cruise: in the words of the dead man's sister, Bree Smith, who is convinced that there was foul play, "the Brilliance of the Seas sailed off into the sunset with the murderers on board".

In June 2006, Smith's family filed a lawsuit against the cruise line. Hours later, Royal Caribbean announced that the widow, Jennifer Hagel Smith, separately from the family, had agreed to a settlement.

Hagel Smith told the press: "As many great peace and spiritual teachers have said, through great suffering comes great awareness." Details of the settlement were revealed last week: Hagel Smith received a payment worth one million dollars.

Profile: Annette Mizener, a mother who disappeared on a cruise she won as a prize

Annette Mizener, 37, from Wisconsin, was reported missing on the last night of a nine-day cruise to the Mexican Riviera on the Carnival Pride.

Both her parents and daughter were accompanying her on the cruise, which she had won as a prize in a competition. On the evening of her disappearance on December 4 2004, Mizener performed Britney Spears' Baby One More Time at a karaoke night with her daughter, then went to the casino. Later than evening she was due to meet her parents again for bingo. But she never made it.

Her parents, Wally and Heidi Knerler, were immediately concerned. When an announcement came over the Tannoy that her purse had been found, they rushed to find cruise staff . The damaged purse had been discovered near a railing on the lower deck.

The local coastguard led a fruitless search of more than 800km2 of water well into the next day. The FBI later investigated, but no explanation was ever forthcoming. A CCTV camera nearby had been obscured - covered up by a map of the ship.

Finally a judge declared Mizener offi cially dead, but the family - who rule out suicide and suspect foul play - still have no answers. Carnival have since agreed an out-of-court, confidential settlement with Mizener's husband, John.

Bookmark:      Bookmark Mysterious%20Disappearances%20On%20Cruise%20Ships at del.icio.us      Digg Mysterious%20Disappearances%20On%20Cruise%20Ships at Digg.com      Bookmark Mysterious%20Disappearances%20On%20Cruise%20Ships at Spurl.net      Bookmark Mysterious%20Disappearances%20On%20Cruise%20Ships at Simpy.com      Bookmark Mysterious%20Disappearances%20On%20Cruise%20Ships at NewsVine      Blink this Mysterious%20Disappearances%20On%20Cruise%20Ships at blinklist.com      Bookmark Mysterious%20Disappearances%20On%20Cruise%20Ships at Furl.net      Bookmark Mysterious%20Disappearances%20On%20Cruise%20Ships at reddit.com      Fark Mysterious%20Disappearances%20On%20Cruise%20Ships at Fark.com      Bookmark Mysterious%20Disappearances%20On%20Cruise%20Ships at Yahoo! MyWeb

July 1, 2007

Differing accounts delay Picton Castle probe

CTV News
Canadian Press

HALIFAX -- A Cook Islands safety probe into how Laura Gainey was swept off the tall ship Picton Castle was delayed partly because ship staff accounts of events differed with what appeared in a preliminary report, says the South Pacific nation's transport secretary.

The island nation halfway between New Zealand and Hawaii is conducting the inquiry because the training vessel, based in Lunenburg, N.S., is registered in the Cook Islands rather than Canada.

Aukino Tairea, the country's transport secretary, said in an interview that he expects to receive the report this week. He had originally expected it at the end of May.

The original investigation was conducted by retired naval captain Andrew Scheer, a consultant based in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., and was released in March to the Cook Islands ships registry.

Tairea then appointed a three-person review panel - including a New Zealand lawyer, a Cook Islands police inspector and a member of the island's ship registry - to go over its findings.

Asked if the panel had any problems with the initial report, Tairea replied, "It didn't quite provide the information that stacked up with some of the information provided by the ship, or the captain's stuff.

"The board found it difficult to understand the chain of events that have happened, and some of the processes on the vessel itself."

Scheer's office in Fort Lauderdale said all comment must come from the Cook Islands.

Tairea said he doesn't expect the marine board of inquiry he appointed will take much longer to supply the report.

"We're just as anxious to receive the report as anybody else. I'm going to force him (the inquiry chairman) to get the report out as soon as possible," he said in an interview last week.

He also noted that one member of the board of inquiry had been travelling to meetings of the International Maritime Organization, which had delayed the drafting of the final report.

Peter Lahay, the Canadian co-ordinator of the International Transport Worker's Federation, a trade union group that represents seafarers around the world, said the Transportation Safety Board of Canada and Transport Canada "should have taken some initiative" on the case.

"It should have been a Canadian investigation," he said. "It was a Canadian death, essentially a Canadian vessel. I think that's a strong enough connection for Canada to have had an investigation."

The safety board is supplying information to the Cook Islands to assist in its inquiry.

The Picton Castle accident happened last December about 880 kilometres southeast of Cape Cod, in seas with waves over seven metres and winds that gusted to more than 80 km-h.

After a three-day search for Gainey, the vessel continued its voyage to Grenada and spent the winter and spring travelling the Caribbean providing sail training to students and trainees.

The barque was also temporarily converted into a "pirate vessel" for producer Mark Burnett's latest reality series, Pirate Master.

Ken Potter, the manager of operations for the Transportation Safety Board of Canada, said Canadian authorities have the legal authority to conduct their own independent inquiry into such accidents, but chose not to in this case because international conventions dictate that the flag state should be the lead agency.

"We're not precluded from doing it," he said in an interview. "However, the flag state has the first right, and the first obligation to do so. In this circumstance it just seemed expeditious to allow the flag state to do it."

He said findings by the Canadian safety board legally require action by affected federal departments, but that isn't the case with the investigation done by the Cook Islands.

"Legislatively, if we make a recommendation to a minister, the minister is obliged to respond within 90 days to one of our recommendations," he said.

Asked if that applies to the probe into the Picton Castle, he responded: "Not on Canada."

"This, of course, was not a Canadian vessel."

The Transportation Safety Board is an independent agency with a mandate to identify safety deficiencies and report publicly on all of its findings.

Bookmark:      Bookmark Differing%20accounts%20delay%20Picton%20Castle%20probe at del.icio.us      Digg Differing%20accounts%20delay%20Picton%20Castle%20probe at Digg.com      Bookmark Differing%20accounts%20delay%20Picton%20Castle%20probe at Spurl.net      Bookmark Differing%20accounts%20delay%20Picton%20Castle%20probe at Simpy.com      Bookmark Differing%20accounts%20delay%20Picton%20Castle%20probe at NewsVine      Blink this Differing%20accounts%20delay%20Picton%20Castle%20probe at blinklist.com      Bookmark Differing%20accounts%20delay%20Picton%20Castle%20probe at Furl.net      Bookmark Differing%20accounts%20delay%20Picton%20Castle%20probe at reddit.com      Fark Differing%20accounts%20delay%20Picton%20Castle%20probe at Fark.com      Bookmark Differing%20accounts%20delay%20Picton%20Castle%20probe at Yahoo! MyWeb

May 2, 2007

Cruise crime victims seek industry help

Eight years after her 22-year-old son disappeared while vacationing aboard a Carnival Cruise Lines ship, Jean Scavone's hopes rise each time her phone rings.

"I'm waiting for Jimmy to say, 'Mom, it's me. I'm here,' " said the 58-year-old Connecticut resident. "I know my son is probably dead, but in my heart and soul I can't believe it because there is nothing that tells me he's gone. He didn't die; he vanished."

Saying Carnival gave her more grief than comfort, Scavone helped form a victims group last year that has been calling for changes in the cruise industry.

Today in Atlanta some of the group's members and cruise industry employees plan to work together with the hope that future victims will find the support that Scavone said she did not have.

Carnival, Royal Caribbean and Celebrity Cruises are co-sponsoring the Sixth Annual Family Assistance Foundation Symposium, an event founded largely to help survivors of airline disasters.

"I hope it's not a public relations move," said Kendall Carver, the president of International Cruise Victims, the group made up mostly of people who have suffered cruise ship tragedies.

Carver, whose daughter went missing while on a 2004 cruise, and other members of the group will be the first cruise ship victims to speak at the annual event that brings together survivors and responders of tragic events. The symposium's organizer said bringing the victims and cruise industry employees together is a crucial part of helping future victims.

Joint appearances before three congressional subcommittee hearings, including one last month, have been tense. While the victim's group members say new laws are urgently needed, cruise officials maintain the industry has an enviable safety record.

How safe the estimated 10.6 million annual cruise vacationers that leave from U.S. ports is difficult to verify. No government agency publicly tracks crime or overboard incidents that occur on cruise ships, and the industry considers crime statistics "proprietary business information."

Legislation was presented last year that would have required more stringent crime-reporting standards for cruise lines. Another version could be proposed in Congress again this year.

Carolyn Coarsey, co-founder and president of the Atlanta-based nonprofit group hosting the Atlanta symposium, said she has trained some 2,000 cruise ship employees in the past year on how to handle tragic events. Within the last three months, Royal Caribbean International and its subsidiary Celebrity Cruises have joined the organization. Carnival, Princess Cruises and Holland America Line are in the process of joining.

"They want to know how to do better, and they're realizing the need," said Coarsey, whose foundation formed after a 1996 law required airlines to do more for survivors.

Lynn White, a vice president with Royal Caribbean and Celebrity, said her company started a three-person guest care team a year ago and Coarsey's group was instrumental in training that department.

Carver, the victim's group leader, said it is good that the cruise industry is working to treat people more compassionately, but legislation will be key to a long-term solution.

Still, Carver and other victims said they also felt compelled to meet with the cruise company employees this week.

"I can't stand up on a soap box and scream that I'm a victim and not take part in the process to make things better," said Virginia resident Kimberly Dean Edwards, 42, who is still engaged in a civil suit with Royal Caribbean after she said she was forcibly fondled in a woman's restroom aboard Royal Caribbean's Majesty of the Sea in October 2004.

Carver, Edwards and others have agreed to participate in training videos that will be shown to cruise company employees.

"I hope by hearing my story, they will be touched in a way that they will say, 'This stops now. We will not re-victimize another person,' " Edwards said.

By M.C. MOEWE, Staff Writer
Daytona Beach News Journal Online

Bookmark:      Bookmark Cruise%20crime%20victims%20seek%20industry%20help%20 at del.icio.us      Digg Cruise%20crime%20victims%20seek%20industry%20help%20 at Digg.com      Bookmark Cruise%20crime%20victims%20seek%20industry%20help%20 at Spurl.net      Bookmark Cruise%20crime%20victims%20seek%20industry%20help%20 at Simpy.com      Bookmark Cruise%20crime%20victims%20seek%20industry%20help%20 at NewsVine      Blink this Cruise%20crime%20victims%20seek%20industry%20help%20 at blinklist.com      Bookmark Cruise%20crime%20victims%20seek%20industry%20help%20 at Furl.net      Bookmark Cruise%20crime%20victims%20seek%20industry%20help%20 at reddit.com      Fark Cruise%20crime%20victims%20seek%20industry%20help%20 at Fark.com      Bookmark Cruise%20crime%20victims%20seek%20industry%20help%20 at Yahoo! MyWeb

November 15, 2006

Another Passenger Disappearance - Ferry Boat

Search called off for missing ferry couple
By David Sapsted
Telegraph.co.uk

A major search was called off this afternoon for a couple who disappeared from a cross-Channel ferry in the early hours of this morning.

Coastguards admitted that they did not know if the man and woman, who were travelling on a Brussels-bound coach aboard the P&O ferry Pride of Kent, had fallen overboard or had simply got on the wrong coach when the ship arrived in Calais from Dover at about 2am.

After a search of the ship failed to find any trace of them, French and British coastguards launched a major air and sea search involving four lifeboats, a plane, a rescue tug, two helicopters and a French frigate. Shipping using the Channel was also put on alert for the couple.

Conditions in the area were said to be choppy but visibility was good. However, at lunchtime, French and British authorities agree to call off the search.

“If they had fallen from the ferry and were still on the surface, they would have been found by now,” said a Coastguard spokesman. ”It is possible that the bodies have sunk but it also possible that they got off at Calais after boarding the wrong coach or, even, getting a ride from someone in a car. Inquiries are continuing at both terminals.

"If they have fallen from the height of the ferry, the bodies might well sink and may not surface until days later. We cannot rule anything out from a tragic accident to suicide to a simple misunderstanding.”

The alarm was raised when the Anglia International coach driver realised that the couple, who were travelling without luggage, were missing when he went to disembark at Calais.

Andy Roberts, of Dover Coastguard, said that there reports of the couple being seen on board the ferry shortly after it set sail from Dover.

Bookmark:      Bookmark Another%20Passenger%20Disappearance%20-%20Ferry%20Boat at del.icio.us      Digg Another%20Passenger%20Disappearance%20-%20Ferry%20Boat at Digg.com      Bookmark Another%20Passenger%20Disappearance%20-%20Ferry%20Boat at Spurl.net      Bookmark Another%20Passenger%20Disappearance%20-%20Ferry%20Boat at Simpy.com      Bookmark Another%20Passenger%20Disappearance%20-%20Ferry%20Boat at NewsVine      Blink this Another%20Passenger%20Disappearance%20-%20Ferry%20Boat at blinklist.com      Bookmark Another%20Passenger%20Disappearance%20-%20Ferry%20Boat at Furl.net      Bookmark Another%20Passenger%20Disappearance%20-%20Ferry%20Boat at reddit.com      Fark Another%20Passenger%20Disappearance%20-%20Ferry%20Boat at Fark.com      Bookmark Another%20Passenger%20Disappearance%20-%20Ferry%20Boat at Yahoo! MyWeb

October 15, 2006

Deam Trips Turn Tragic on Montel Williams

Montel Williams is airing a show on Monday (10/16/063) called Dream Trips Turn Tragic. The show will include an interview with one of our maritime law firm's cruise ship sexual assault clients. The show will also interview familty members of passengers that have disappeared on cruise ships.

We will try to get a copy of the show to post on this blog after it has aired. Check your local listings to see what time Montel Williams is on in your area and watch it on Monday.

Here's the summary on the show about cruise ship vacations turning tragic:

When most people get ready to take their dream vacation, they plan what to pack, what to do and where to go, but they rarely plan on how to stay safe. We’ll meet people who say they were on their dream trips when tragedy struck…and their lives will never be the same. We’ll meet Laurie, who says she was raped on a cruise ship while on vacation. We’ll also meet Melinda and Duane, whose relaxing holiday turned into a terrifying adventure when they were targeted by thieves. They were on vacation driving down the coast in Costa Rica, when they ran into a gang of gun-toting bandits on the highway. They were shot at until they were able to finally find safety in a small town restaurant. We’ll talk to Sue, Ron, and Katie, a family left with many unanswered questions after their son (Katie's brother) Daniel went missing from a cruise ship. Daniel was on his first week-long vacation with his friends when he became sick one night while alone on the ship's deck. He was leaning over the railing of the cruise ship and suddenly fell overboard. Kimberly Dean-Edwards, a legislative board member for International Cruise Victims will also join us to talk about her work with Congress to try and get a bill passed that will hold cruise lines more accountable for crimes and missing person cases at sea. We’ll also meet Sandee and her two children, Ryan and Krysta. While on a family vacation in Florida, Sandee’s then 13-year-old son Ryan, got caught up in rough water in the Gulf of Mexico. Her husband Larry and another man on the beach raced into the water to save him. Ryan managed to get to shore safely but Larry was still caught in the riptide. Sandee arrived at the water’s edge to find beachgoers attempting to drag Larry to safety. Unfortunately, Larry drowned trying to save his son’s life.

Bookmark:      Bookmark Deam%20Trips%20Turn%20Tragic%20on%20Montel%20Williams at del.icio.us      Digg Deam%20Trips%20Turn%20Tragic%20on%20Montel%20Williams at Digg.com      Bookmark Deam%20Trips%20Turn%20Tragic%20on%20Montel%20Williams at Spurl.net      Bookmark Deam%20Trips%20Turn%20Tragic%20on%20Montel%20Williams at Simpy.com      Bookmark Deam%20Trips%20Turn%20Tragic%20on%20Montel%20Williams at NewsVine      Blink this Deam%20Trips%20Turn%20Tragic%20on%20Montel%20Williams at blinklist.com      Bookmark Deam%20Trips%20Turn%20Tragic%20on%20Montel%20Williams at Furl.net      Bookmark Deam%20Trips%20Turn%20Tragic%20on%20Montel%20Williams at reddit.com      Fark Deam%20Trips%20Turn%20Tragic%20on%20Montel%20Williams at Fark.com      Bookmark Deam%20Trips%20Turn%20Tragic%20on%20Montel%20Williams at Yahoo! MyWeb

September 11, 2006

Cruise Passenger Disappears from Cruise Ship

Another cruise passenger disappearance to report. It is very important that people realize that they must be careful on a ship and that it is not a totally secure enviorment. More on the latest cruise passenger disappearance to come....

Bookmark:      Bookmark Cruise%20Passenger%20Disappears%20from%20Cruise%20Ship at del.icio.us      Digg Cruise%20Passenger%20Disappears%20from%20Cruise%20Ship at Digg.com      Bookmark Cruise%20Passenger%20Disappears%20from%20Cruise%20Ship at Spurl.net      Bookmark Cruise%20Passenger%20Disappears%20from%20Cruise%20Ship at Simpy.com      Bookmark Cruise%20Passenger%20Disappears%20from%20Cruise%20Ship at NewsVine      Blink this Cruise%20Passenger%20Disappears%20from%20Cruise%20Ship at blinklist.com      Bookmark Cruise%20Passenger%20Disappears%20from%20Cruise%20Ship at Furl.net      Bookmark Cruise%20Passenger%20Disappears%20from%20Cruise%20Ship at reddit.com      Fark Cruise%20Passenger%20Disappears%20from%20Cruise%20Ship at Fark.com      Bookmark Cruise%20Passenger%20Disappears%20from%20Cruise%20Ship at Yahoo! MyWeb

January 25, 2006

53 Cases of Persons Overboard since 1995

CruiseJunkie has compiled a detailed list of 53 persons that have gone overboard from cruise ships since 1995. The list was compiled from media sources as well as private correspondence with Ross Klein, the CruiseJunkie author. Overboards include everything from suicide, to possible murder (investigations ongoing) to people that have just disappeared from the cruise ship so are presumed to have gone overboard.

View the detailed list of persons overboard since 1995 on the Cruise Junkie web site.

Bookmark:      Bookmark 53%20Cases%20of%20Persons%20Overboard%20since%201995 at del.icio.us      Digg 53%20Cases%20of%20Persons%20Overboard%20since%201995 at Digg.com      Bookmark 53%20Cases%20of%20Persons%20Overboard%20since%201995 at Spurl.net      Bookmark 53%20Cases%20of%20Persons%20Overboard%20since%201995 at Simpy.com      Bookmark 53%20Cases%20of%20Persons%20Overboard%20since%201995 at NewsVine      Blink this 53%20Cases%20of%20Persons%20Overboard%20since%201995 at blinklist.com      Bookmark 53%20Cases%20of%20Persons%20Overboard%20since%201995 at Furl.net      Bookmark 53%20Cases%20of%20Persons%20Overboard%20since%201995 at reddit.com      Fark 53%20Cases%20of%20Persons%20Overboard%20since%201995 at Fark.com      Bookmark 53%20Cases%20of%20Persons%20Overboard%20since%201995 at Yahoo! MyWeb

December 14, 2005

Congress Eyes Cruise Ship Dangers

ABC News brings cruise passenger disappearances to mainstream news. The word is finally getting out that something needs to be done to make cruise ships safer for passengers and crew. Finally a major news station is also catching on to this story bringing into the mainstream.

At LMA we have created a new blog section dedicated to Cruise Passenger Disappearances, as well as a new practice area on our web site dedicated to this area. We will be adding more info to the web site including a listing of people that have gone overboard. Regarding the cruise passenger disappearances blog, check back or sign up for the feed for regular updates on this evolving hot topic. Hopefully within the next year or two we can be dedicating this section to the reforms that the cruise lines will have been forced to make.

Read ABC's story below:

About a dozen people have gone missing on cruises in the last 2 years

Lawmakers are set this morning to investigate the potential dangers to vacationers cruising the high seas.

Two congressional committees will hold a joint hearing focusing on cruise-ship disappearances and crimes. The hearing comes on the heels of another cruise-ship disappearance in recent months, this one aboard Royal Caribbean's Jewel of the Sea, which returned to Florida on Sunday with one less passenger than when it departed.

Source: ABC News

Bookmark:      Bookmark Congress%20Eyes%20Cruise%20Ship%20Dangers at del.icio.us      Digg Congress%20Eyes%20Cruise%20Ship%20Dangers at Digg.com      Bookmark Congress%20Eyes%20Cruise%20Ship%20Dangers at Spurl.net      Bookmark Congress%20Eyes%20Cruise%20Ship%20Dangers at Simpy.com      Bookmark Congress%20Eyes%20Cruise%20Ship%20Dangers at NewsVine      Blink this Congress%20Eyes%20Cruise%20Ship%20Dangers at blinklist.com      Bookmark Congress%20Eyes%20Cruise%20Ship%20Dangers at Furl.net      Bookmark Congress%20Eyes%20Cruise%20Ship%20Dangers at reddit.com      Fark Congress%20Eyes%20Cruise%20Ship%20Dangers at Fark.com      Bookmark Congress%20Eyes%20Cruise%20Ship%20Dangers at Yahoo! MyWeb

November 23, 2005

Kin of woman missing on cruise sue Carnival

Lipcon, Margulies & Alsina, P.A. is in the news regarding cruise passenger disappearance. Our firm is hired to represent the family of Annette Mizener. Read the news story below.

The family of a Wisconsin woman who disappeared from a cruise ship sued Carnival Corp. for $15,000 on Monday, claiming the crew's failure to monitor a surveillance camera delayed search-and-rescue efforts.

The surveillance camera in the area where Annette Mizener's purse was found had been covered, preventing the crew from seeing her go overboard, according to the civil lawsuit filed in Miami.

''Had they checked on it immediately when it was covered, they would have known she was overboard,'' said Charles Lipcon, a Miami attorney representing Mizener's family. ``There was a long delay due to a failure to monitor the camera, or check why it didn't show a picture.''

Mizener, 37, disappeared from the Carnival Pride on Dec. 4 during a weeklong cruise in Mexico with her parents and 17-year-old daughter.

Source: The Miami Herald November 22, 2005

Bookmark:      Bookmark Kin%20of%20woman%20missing%20on%20cruise%20sue%20Carnival at del.icio.us      Digg Kin%20of%20woman%20missing%20on%20cruise%20sue%20Carnival at Digg.com      Bookmark Kin%20of%20woman%20missing%20on%20cruise%20sue%20Carnival at Spurl.net      Bookmark Kin%20of%20woman%20missing%20on%20cruise%20sue%20Carnival at Simpy.com      Bookmark Kin%20of%20woman%20missing%20on%20cruise%20sue%20Carnival at NewsVine      Blink this Kin%20of%20woman%20missing%20on%20cruise%20sue%20Carnival at blinklist.com      Bookmark Kin%20of%20woman%20missing%20on%20cruise%20sue%20Carnival at Furl.net      Bookmark Kin%20of%20woman%20missing%20on%20cruise%20sue%20Carnival at reddit.com      Fark Kin%20of%20woman%20missing%20on%20cruise%20sue%20Carnival at Fark.com      Bookmark Kin%20of%20woman%20missing%20on%20cruise%20sue%20Carnival at Yahoo! MyWeb

November 22, 2005

Carnival Cruises Sued by Family of Wisconsin Woman who Disappeared

USA Today wrote a story about missing cruise passenger Annette Mizener. Charles Lipcon is representing the Miznener family.

An excerpt from the story is below:

The family of a Wisconsin woman who disappeared from a cruise ship sued Carnival Corp. on Monday, claiming the crew's failure to monitor a surveillance camera delayed search and rescue efforts. The surveillance camera in the area where Annette Mizener's purse was found had been covered, preventing the crew from seeing her go overboard, according to the civil lawsuit filed in Miami.

"Had they checked on it immediately when it was covered, they would have known she was overboard," said Charles Lipcon, a Miami attorney representing Mizener's family. "There was a long delay due to a failure to monitor the camera, or check why it didn't show a picture."

Source: USA Today

Read the entire article on the USA Today web site.

Learn more about cruise passenger disappearances and the law regarding search and rescue.

Bookmark:      Bookmark Carnival%20Cruises%20Sued%20by%20Family%20of%20Wisconsin%20Woman%20who%20Disappeared at del.icio.us      Digg Carnival%20Cruises%20Sued%20by%20Family%20of%20Wisconsin%20Woman%20who%20Disappeared at Digg.com      Bookmark Carnival%20Cruises%20Sued%20by%20Family%20of%20Wisconsin%20Woman%20who%20Disappeared at Spurl.net      Bookmark Carnival%20Cruises%20Sued%20by%20Family%20of%20Wisconsin%20Woman%20who%20Disappeared at Simpy.com      Bookmark Carnival%20Cruises%20Sued%20by%20Family%20of%20Wisconsin%20Woman%20who%20Disappeared at NewsVine      Blink this Carnival%20Cruises%20Sued%20by%20Family%20of%20Wisconsin%20Woman%20who%20Disappeared at blinklist.com      Bookmark Carnival%20Cruises%20Sued%20by%20Family%20of%20Wisconsin%20Woman%20who%20Disappeared at Furl.net      Bookmark Carnival%20Cruises%20Sued%20by%20Family%20of%20Wisconsin%20Woman%20who%20Disappeared at reddit.com      Fark Carnival%20Cruises%20Sued%20by%20Family%20of%20Wisconsin%20Woman%20who%20Disappeared at Fark.com      Bookmark Carnival%20Cruises%20Sued%20by%20Family%20of%20Wisconsin%20Woman%20who%20Disappeared at Yahoo! MyWeb

November 10, 2005

Congressional Investigation Ordered on Missing Cruise Passenger George Smith

We all remember hearing about missing cruise passenger George Smith, who went on a cruise for his honeymoon, never to be seen again. George Smith was never found and his family it seems may never know what really happened to him. Finally, last month, Congress ordered an investigation into his disappearance and MSNBC has been airing specials on this as well as on other cruise ship crimes.

View the most recent clip from MSNBC's Scarborough Country, which features maritime attorney Charles R. Lipcon discussing the congressional investigations ordered on missing cruise passenger George Smith.

Bookmark:      Bookmark Congressional%20Investigation%20Ordered%20on%20Missing%20Cruise%20Passenger%20George%20Smith at del.icio.us      Digg Congressional%20Investigation%20Ordered%20on%20Missing%20Cruise%20Passenger%20George%20Smith at Digg.com      Bookmark Congressional%20Investigation%20Ordered%20on%20Missing%20Cruise%20Passenger%20George%20Smith at Spurl.net      Bookmark Congressional%20Investigation%20Ordered%20on%20Missing%20Cruise%20Passenger%20George%20Smith at Simpy.com      Bookmark Congressional%20Investigation%20Ordered%20on%20Missing%20Cruise%20Passenger%20George%20Smith at NewsVine      Blink this Congressional%20Investigation%20Ordered%20on%20Missing%20Cruise%20Passenger%20George%20Smith at blinklist.com      Bookmark Congressional%20Investigation%20Ordered%20on%20Missing%20Cruise%20Passenger%20George%20Smith at Furl.net      Bookmark Congressional%20Investigation%20Ordered%20on%20Missing%20Cruise%20Passenger%20George%20Smith at reddit.com      Fark Congressional%20Investigation%20Ordered%20on%20Missing%20Cruise%20Passenger%20George%20Smith at Fark.com      Bookmark Congressional%20Investigation%20Ordered%20on%20Missing%20Cruise%20Passenger%20George%20Smith at Yahoo! MyWeb