December 13, 2011

Woman Accidently Falls to Her Death from the Queen Mary

The 26-year-old woman who died Monday night—after allegedly losing her balance and falling from the fourth-floor gangway on the Queen Mary into the cold waters below—has now been identified as Kelly Ryann Dorrell of Long Beach, CA. Dorrell was working toward her teaching certificate and planned to teach elementary school in Long Beach.

Several witnesses observed the incident, which is still under investigation, although all reports so far point to this as an accident. Police verified that Dorrell had been drinking prior to the incident, apparently participating with her boyfriend in a pub crawl on Monday night. A bar aboard the permanently docked Queen Mary served as one of the pub crawl’s stops.

Witnesses say that Dorrell and her unidentified, 40-yr old boyfriend were engaged in a 10-min argument just prior to her fall. She was overheard saying she didn’t want to be with him anymore and then she climbed onto a 4’ high railing, where she lost her footing. The boyfriend had a grasp of her after she slipped but couldn’t hold onto her.

Dorrell fell 75 ft. into the shallow, 60-degree water around 8:00 pm. Long Beach Fire department spokesman Steve Yamamoto said four different people—a fireman, two police officers and Ms. Dorrell’s companion—all jumped in to rescue her, most suffering hypothermia from the chilling sea water on the parking lot side of the ship. A fifth person employed by the Queen Mary visitor attraction also tried to rescue her.

Ms. Dorrel was declared dead at the hospital. Pratt says officials have ruled out suicide as a possible cause of death.

This unfortunate incident illustrates the serious consequences that can result when drinking on cruise ships gets out of control. The maritime attorneys at Lipcon, Margulies Alsina and Winkleman, P.A. have extensive experience in this area.

August 1, 2011

Los Angeles Teacher Pleads Guilty to Murder

Exactly two years ago, Shirley McGill died of strangulation and blunt force injury to the head and torso while aboard a Carnival Cruise ship. On a cruise to Cabo San Lucas with her husband, Robert McGill, for his birthday, the mysterious murder has been solved as a heated argument that escalated in McGill killing his wife of five years.

McGill told authorities that he had "killed his wife in the bathroom of their cabin with his bare hands." He also stated that he "deliberately and intentionally" committed murder aboard the cruise ship. He is now facing a maximum sentence of life in prison, with court sentencing set for November 8. McGill, who seems remorseless following his cruise ship crime, has yet to give motive for the murder.

April 7, 2011

Teen Arrested For Abusing Child On The Cruise Ship

Gautier teen arrested for abusing a minor on the Carnival Cruise ship Elation.

MOBILE, AL - The U.S. Attorney's office in Mobile has arrested 19 year old Dylan Cole Bloodsworth of Gautier, Mississippi for abusing a minor. The incident happened in international waters onboard the Carnival Cruise Ship Elation.

FBI agents of the Mobile Division and Jackson, Division, pascagoula, arrested Bloodsworth without incident. Bloodsworth was transported to the Souther District of of Alabama Federal Courthouse in Mobile, Alabama.

The United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Alabama will prosecute this matter, which was investigated by the FBI, Mobile Division.

Originally Posted at: www.wkrg.com

March 17, 2011

After recent violent crimes, cruise lines remove Mazatlan from ports-of-call

They hoped that it wouldn't happen, but the worst-case scenario has become reality for the port of Mazatlan with the departure of both Holland America Lines and Princess Cruises for the remainder of the winter/early spring cruise travel season. After the departure of Disney Cruises, Norwegian Cruise Lines and Carnival Cruises after cruise passengers were mugged and robbed near the pier in the Pacific Coast resort city, Mazatlan officials were hopeful that their commitment to improved security would keep at least some of the cruise lines in town for the season. But recent murders including that of two men in a popular hotel parking lot in broad daylight sealed the fate of the cruise ship arrivals for the remainder of this season.

For more than two decades Mazatlan has been one of the most popular Mexican vacation destinations for Minnesotans. Less expensive than other resort areas like Puerto Vallarta and Cancun, Mazatlan is also more laid-back while offering the same beautiful daily sunsets over the Pacific Ocean. While it doesn't necessarily attract the high-end all-inclusive vacationer, it is visited annually by thousands of Minnesotans and other Upper Midwest travelers. Both Sun Country Airlines and Delta Air Lines offer seasonal non-stops from the Twin Cities to Mazatlan with several flights weekly from each carrier.

The financial impact of losing the cruise ship visits is huge for Mazatlan. Shops and restaurants close to the pier and in the main tourist zone rely heavily on the visits by several thousand weekly travelers. Not only that, but the companies that operate a wide array of excursions for cruise passengers will undoubtedly be hit very hard.

Originally Posted at: www.examiner.com

January 27, 2011

Cruise ships canceling Mazatlan stop, citing crime

Some cruise ship companies are canceling stops in the Mexican Pacific port of Mazatlan and others are considering it due to crime against tourists.

Disney Wonder has dropped calls to Mazatlan from its seven-night Mexican Riviera tour and replaced them with an additional stop in Cabo San Lucas on the Baja California peninsula.

"Safety is very important to us and we believe this change is necessary to provide the best family vacation experience for our guests," Company spokeswoman Christi Erwin Donnan said in an e-mail Wednesday.

Cruise line officials did not provide details on the crime or saying whether its passengers had been the target.

A person who answered the phone at the Mazatlan port authority office said nobody was available for comment Wednesday afternoon.

Holland America Line replaced a Jan. 26 Mazatlan port call with one in the Pacific port of Manzanillo.

"The revision to the itinerary was made in response to recent incidents of violence in Mazatlan," the company said in a statement.

Carnival Cruise spokesman Tim Gallagher said the company is deciding whether its ship the Spirit will make a Feb. 2 stop in Mazatlan.

He said there will be a meeting between cruise line security people and Mazatlan authorities next week about recent crimes against cruise tourists in Mazatlan.

"There have been some recent security incidents that that have made cruise lines concerned about the safety of their guests," Gallagher said.

Mazatlan officials had touted Disney's decision last year to resume stops at the port as a sign of growing confidence in the city. The Disney Wonder had planned 27 port calls in Mazatlan in 2011, according to the Mazatlan port authority web site.

Mazatlan has continued to thrive as a tourist destination despite drug-gang violence in other parts of Sinaloa state, where it is located. The state is the cradle of several Mexican cartels and has one of the highest homicide rates in the country.

The industry magazine Seatrade Insider quoted Mazatlan Port Director Alfonso Gil Diaz as saying the incidents causing concern were minor, such as one passenger whose necklace was snatched.

"Mazatlan is very, very safe," the magazine quoted Gil Diaz as saying. "It's a shame because last year we had 526,000 passengers with no incidents ... This year there were three very minor things outside the terminal."

Mexico's all-important tourism industry has been surprisingly resilient in the face of drug gang violence that has claimed nearly 35,000 lives in the past four years.

Tourism revenue was up 7.1 percent in the first 10 months of 2010, compared to the same months of 2009, with visitors spending $9.8 billion, according to the Mexican Tourism Ministry. The resort of Cancun in the Yucatan peninsula and Puerto Vallarta on the Pacific coast, for instance, have been largely untouched by the violence.

But cruise ship industry officials say headlines about beheadings and massacres are taking a toll.

Carnival's 2,500-passenger Spirit is moving from San Diego to Australia by 2012 because of economic woes and increasing fears over traveling to Mexico. However, the company has said that if it looks like the market in southern California is rebounding by the time the Spirit moves to Australia, it will be replaced in San Diego with another ship.

Carnival also has two year-round ships docked in Long Beach that will continue their itineraries to Ensenada, Puerto Vallarta and Cabo San Lucas.

Gallagher said Carnival Cruise ships still sail full, but the decline in business to Mexico is shown in the drop in cruise prices to fill the ships.

"In the bigger picture, crime overall in Mexico has had an impact on business from southern California because drug crime happens a lot in border communities and that gets a lot of coverage," Gallagher said. "While it may not be happening in Puerto Vallarta, Americans see stories on crime in Mexico and that influences their travel decisions."

Another blow to the cruise ship industry in Mexico came Nov. 8 when the Carnival Splendor caught fire off Baja California, leaving about 4,000 passengers stranded. The ship was towed to San Diego after the engine-room fire cut off power.


Originally Posted at: www.google.com/hostednews

November 29, 2010

Brimble death prompted safety reforms on ships, says P&O

US-STYLE legislation requiring rape kits on board, peepholes in cabin doors and a central crime register could be implemented in reforms of the cruise ship industry, P&O has said.

The cruise operator is expected to tell the inquest into the death of Dianne Brimble today it has already instituted a wide range of reforms to ensure the problems that occurred would not happen again.

Mrs Brimble's former husband, Mark Brimble, is expected to support calls for legislation.
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The inquest is due to hear submissions on cruise industry reform before the coroner, Jacqueline Milledge, hands down her recommendations tomorrow. Among the recommendations foreshadowed last week is a call for federal police officers to accompany every cruise from Australia.

In the year to June the cruise company carried 183,000 passengers and reported 24 criminal and non-criminal allegations to the NSW Water Police.

The US reforms, which also require security cameras, anti-viral drugs against sexually transmitted diseases, higher safety railings on decks, and strict security training, were signed into law in July. The reforms also provide for penalties in case of breaches.

With small modifications, nearly all the US reforms' components could be implemented in Australia, the P&O spokeswoman, Sandy Olsen, said.

P&O had already improved its procedures for managing the scene of a suspicious death or alleged crime, ensured adequate training of staff and clear chains of command, she said. Each of P&O's ships has had 300 cameras installed in communal areas to verify complaints. Counsel assisting the inquest, Ron Hoenig, suggested last week the cameras be constantly monitored.

The inquest had shown P&O ''did not do enough to provide comprehensive and structured support to Mrs Brimble's family'', including her daughter and sister, Ms Olsen said. The company had introduced passenger care and welfare programs, she said.

After the inquest, which started in 2006, highlighted problems with excessive behaviour linked to alcohol consumption, P&O had also developed zero tolerance of bad behaviour and introduced procedures for the responsible service of alcohol, she said.

International protocols in the Asia-Pacific region have also clarified the responsibilities of law enforcement agencies since Mrs Brimble died on board a P&O cruise ship in 2002.

P&O has said it no longer employed off-duty police on board its ships and recognised the importance of police investigating complaints being seen to be independent.

Originally Posted at: www.brisbanetimes.com.au

November 23, 2010

Carnival Cruise Ship Death Investigated

The Carnival Liberty cruise ship has returned to South Florida after a 36-year-old female passenger was found unconscious in her cabin. Medical aide tended her on the cruise ship, but she was pronounced dead 2 hours later. The cruise was headed to St. Thomas at the time of the incident.

The FBI has launched an investigation into the woman's death and they are waiting on the autopsy report. The passenger’s identity hasn’t been released.

According to San Juan FBI spokesman Harry Rodriguez, the incident could have been a homicide, it could be another factor, but they are still investigating the case right now. Michael Leverock, a spokesman for the FBI in Miami, noted that St. Thomas agents are handling the investigation.

Vance Gulliksen, a spokesman for Carnival Cruise Lines, said in a statement that evidence is pointing to the death being medical related. They aren’t able to release any specific details on the nature of the medical condition in respect to the privacy of their guests, he added.

This incident comes a week after the cruise line’s Carnival Splendor was stranded at sea due to an engine fire cutting off the power. The some 4,000 people on board had to do without air conditioning, working toilets and hot food. A Navy aircraft took them crates of water and food, which included spam. The ship was finally towed to San Diego by tugboats, and everyone arrived safely.

This just shows that anything can go wrong on a cruise ship – just like any other form of travel. This isn’t the first time that a passenger has died on board, while power outages have been experienced on other ships as well.

Originally Posted at: news.carrentals.co.uk

November 15, 2010

Bandits hold up cruise ship tourists in St. Kitts

Authorities in St. Kitts say two masked gunmen have held up a tour bus, robbing 16 cruise ship passengers of their cash and cameras. No one has been harmed.

Police say the tourists from the Celebrity Mercury ship were traveling to the Brimstone Hill Fortress, a park popular with visitors.

Park manager Joseph Woodley tells local radio the robbers blocked the road with a fallen tree. When the bus driver got out to clear the way, they emerged from bushes and robbed the tourists before disappearing back into the woodlands.

A police statement calls Sunday's robbery "an unprecedented incident in St. Kitts." It calls visitors' safety a "highest priority."

Police are hunting for the robbers.

Originally Posted at: www.taiwannews.com

September 28, 2010

Gambler jumps from cruise ship after losing $857,500 in casino

HONG KONG - A 51-year-old man from mainland China died when he jumped off a 13-deck cruise ship after losing HK$5 million ($857,500) at the baccarat table, according to The Standard newspaper.

The gambler, identified by police only as Xu, jumped from the Star Cruises vessel SuperStar Aquarius as it sailed back to Hong Kong from international waters on Sunday, the report said.

An alert was raised and rescuers retrieved Xu's body after a search that lasted almost an hour.

He was pronounced dead by the ship's doctor.

Xu reportedly boarded the ship on Saturday for a two-day gambling trip.

He was seen placing bets at the baccarat table after dinner.

According to some passengers, he gambled until 8am on Sunday and lost almost HK$5 million, The Standard reported.

He was seen on the deck for about an hour before he jumped, said the newspaper.

Genting Hong Kong, the company that operates the Star Cruises fleet, said the ship had 1,500 passengers on board at the time of the incident, according to the report.

Besides casino facilities, SuperStar Aquarius has a range of entertainment and sports facilities, according to the report.

The case was classified as "man overboard" with no suspicious circumstances, police said.

Originally Posted at: www.todayonline.com

September 26, 2010

Chinese man to be charged over cruise ship death

HONG KONG – A 47-year-old man from mainland China will appear in a Hong Kong court Monday on a charge of murder over the death of a woman who last week fell from a cruise ship, police said.

A police report said the man was arrested Friday after the 43-year-old woman fell into the sea off Waglan Island, near the eastern edge of Hong Kong's territory, a special autonomous region in southern China.

A Hong Kong newspaper reported Saturday that the woman was pulled unconscious from the water 50 minutes after she was pushed overboard from the casino ship MV Macau Success.

The woman was pronounced dead by rescuers and marine police arrested her 47-year-old husband on board the Macau Success for questioning, the South China Morning Post reported.

The MV Macau Success is one of several passenger ships that ferry gamblers from Hong Kong into international waters, beyond the jurisdiction of city's strict controls on gambling.

Originally Posted at: www.newsinfo.inquirer.net

August 15, 2010

Cruise ship passenger dies; Epic returns briefly to the Port of Miami

A 21-year-old man hours into a seven-day cruise to the Caribbean with his family suffered an apparent severe allergic reaction to food and died onboard Norwegian Cruise Line's Epic, forcing hundreds of fellow passengers to return to the Port of Miami early Sunday.

The death of the unidentified man -- ultimately of a heart attack -- cast a pall on the start of a seven-day Caribbean cruise with stops in St. Maarten, St. Thomas and Nassau.

Stunned passengers onboard the 1,080-foot long Epic -- Norwegian Cruise Line's newest ship based at the port and big enough for 4,100 guests -- turned to social media to spread the news of the tragedy which happened late Saturday night.

After having sailed out with its joyful passengers at about 4 p.m. Saturday, the cruise ship was back in port at 1 a.m. as the young man's body was taken off the ship.

One passenger posted under the name ``Cruizinpooh'' in a website used by cruise ship passengers:

``Unfortunately, it's sad,'' she posted of the news of the death on a message board of cruisecritic.com. ``From what I've been told it was a 21 yr old that had some kind of allergic reaction to something he ate and the end result was not a good one. The family of 6 is due to get off as soon as we dock.''

The FBI in Miami on Sunday confirmed the death and said there was no foul play suspected. The man's name has not been released. It's unclear what food the young man ate that sparked the allergic reaction, or if he was aware of his allergy.

Food, and plenty of it at all hours, is a staple of any cruise. The Epic has 20 dining options. Deaths during cruises occur. Passengers have been known to fall to their deaths or suffer heart attacks.

The Miami-based cruise line issued the following statement Sunday:

``While the ship was approximately 40 nautical miles from Miami, a guest on board suffered a heart attack and passed away. All local authorities were notified and some met the ship upon arrival,'' said AnneMarie Mathews, a spokeswoman for the company.

``Norwegian Cruise Line extends its sincerest thoughts and prayers to the guest's family during this difficult time.''

She would not release further details of the incident citing privacy concerns, but a passenger posting under the name ``Nancygop'' said the problem began during the evening's entertainment. She said fellow passengers heard an emergency call on the ship's public announcement system.

``My son and I were in the show with comedian/magician and they called a CODE ALPHA to a cabin on the 11th deck,'' she wrote in her post. ``About 15 minutes later they paged three guests (all with the same last name) to call 00 or go to customer service immediately. About 15 minutes after that the cruise director came on and said we were headed back to Miami because of a medical emergency.''

The announcement to return to the Port of Miami created a buzz on board, passengers said.

``The Captain came on about 45 minutes ago and said we will get into Miami around 11 p.m. and dock at 12:30 a.m. No word on what has happened, but hope everything will turn out OK for all involved. Captain also said all ports and itinerary will stay the same and not change and that we will not get any more announcements tonight.''

Other passengers posted on the site that a number of police officers came on board and were there for hours. Many passengers went to balconies to observe police activity on the dock, including police cars and what passengers said was a Crime Scene investigation van.

Then, just before 2 a.m., one passenger posted this:

``A body was just removed from the Ship and taken away in a white van.''

Passengers said police were on board until after 2:30 a.m., and about 2:45, the gangway was removed and the ship prepared to set sail.

By 3:30 a.m., the ship was back on its itinerary, which according to the NCL website, included a day at sea Sunday and a port call at the Dutch-French island of St. Maarten Monday.

One online poster, under the name ``maja',' cautioned passengers with food allergies about the dangers of such varied food fare and shared her own near emergency. She wrote she almost ordered fried rice on a cruise, but told a waiter she was allergic to shell fish.

``He came back & told me that they use the shells from the shrimp to give the broth flavor when they make the rice,'' she wrote.


Originally Posted at: www.miamiherald.com

August 9, 2010

Cruise Ships Traveling In Changing Legal, Security Climate

Crime on cruise ships is rare, considering 10 million North Americans sailed last year.

But some crime victims believe that justice also is rare -- due to overlapping investigative powers, difficulty obtaining evidence and witnesses, and a lack of sworn officers aboard ships.

Some of that could soon change.

The Cruise Vessel Security and Safety Act of 2010, aimed at strengthening safety and reporting standards, was signed by President Obama.

The new law requires the cruise industry to install video surveillance systems in common areas, as well as door viewers and security latches on cabin doors.

Each ship must carry equipment and materials to perform sexual assault medical exams and to collect forensic evidence. Ships also need to have drugs to prevent sexually transmitted diseases after an assault.

Another provision requires cruise ships to log and report all deaths, missing persons, alleged crimes and complaints involving some thefts, sexual attacks and assaults involving U.S. citizens.

Those records will be available to the FBI and the Coast Guard electronically and to all law enforcement officers upon request. The Department of Homeland Security will make cruise line crime statistics available to the public.

Cruise lines say they follow a zero-tolerance policy when it comes to crime on their vessels, and safety is their number one priority.

The new law will "bring consistency and clarity to the security and safety laws and regulations for our industry,'' said Terry Dale, president and CEO of the Cruise Lines International Association, in a written statement.

The Sun Sentinel analyzed hundreds of incidents that the cruise lines sent to the FBI starting in 2007, after pressure from Congress and cruise passenger advocates led to a voluntary reporting agreement. Cruise lines serving U.S. ports said they would voluntarily report serious crimes, which the FBI defined as homicides, suspicious deaths, so-called "sexual matters,'' assaults, kidnapping, acts of terrorism and theft of items worth more than $10,000.

Despite the 2007 agreement, passenger advocates and Congress continued to press for increased regulation because the hodgepodge of rules was inadequate for many victims. "They get the run-around,'' said Jim Walker of Miami-based law firm Walker and O'Neill, P.A.

The newspaper's analysis of 363 incidents voluntarily reported by cruise lines to the FBI from December 2007 through October 2008 shows:

* The FBI rarely launched full-fledged investigations, saying there wasn't enough evidence, the allegations weren't serious enough, or the agency wasn't authorized to act;
* Florida police agencies have authority to investigate crimes at sea, but few do, saying the crimes are outside their jurisdiction and often victims refuse to cooperate;
* Ship security officers lack the power to arrest and the tools to investigate when most U.S. law enforcement agencies would; and
* In at least 84 situations, cruise lines and ship captains responded to complaints on their own. The worst punishment was kicking off alleged offenders at the next port. In other cases, passengers were warned or had their shipboard alcohol privileges yanked.

JURISDICTION ISSUES

On Feb. 28, 2008, a fight broke out among passengers aboard the Carnival Paradise while the ship was in international waters on the way to its home port in Long Beach, Calif. One passenger claimed another punched him, causing minor injuries that required shipboard medical attention. All of the passengers involved were U.S. citizens.

The injured passenger and another victim told cruise security officials they wanted to press charges.

A Long Beach FBI agent was contacted, but hearing what happened, the agent "stated that the FBI will not respond to the ship's call (will not take the case),'' the cruise line report said. A spokeswoman for the FBI office in Los Angeles/Long Beach declined to comment on the incident.

FBI officials in Miami say if agents don't board a ship to investigate, it's because allegations or the cruise line's findings suggest the case isn't serious enough or lacks the evidence necessary to meet the threshold for federal prosecution.

"So long as the victim or offender is a U.S. citizen, we would work the investigation or at least vet it out,'' said David Nunez, an FBI Miami special agent for maritime cases.

FBI Miami officials declined to comment on specific incidents reported by the cruise lines. Federal investigators said they receive hundreds of phone calls about incidents aboard cruise ships.

Crimes in the United States are generally investigated without regard to the citizenship of the victim or suspect. At sea, citizenship is a factor that can lead to confusion and dropped investigations.

On Jan. 5, 2008, a 17-year-old Canadian boy said a fellow passenger on the Caribbean Princess grabbed the boy's crotch in an elevator. The day before, the same man touched himself inappropriately in front of the teenager at the spa, the incident report said.

The ship sailed from Port Everglades, and the case was referred to the FBI by the Broward County Sheriff's Office and Princess Cruises. The FBI said the incident did not rise to the level of federal prosecution.

Nothing further was done to investigate the accused man, a Mexican citizen living in Pinecrest and working at a recreational park for children, according to the incident report filed with the Broward Sheriff's Office.

John Sifling, vice president of fleet security for Princess Cruises, said there were no witnesses; it was the teenager's account versus that of the other passenger.

In at least 46 of the cases examined by the Sun Sentinel, victims declined to press charges or refused to cooperate with investigators. In at least 22 of those, law enforcement agencies were notified but declined further action.

"Without a victim, we don't have a crime,'' Nunez said. "We don't force victims into speaking if they choose not to report, or do not want law enforcement intervention.''

That's a choice victims on land don't usually have, he said.

At least 17 arrests resulted from the 363 incidents reported by the cruise lines, the records show.

FLORIDA INVESTIGATIVE POWER

When the case of the 17-year-old was first referred to the Broward County Sheriff's Office, the agency looked to the FBI because the incident occurred in international waters.

Yet Florida gives local law enforcement agencies the authority to investigate crimes that occur on ships that depart or arrive from a Florida port, if the U.S. government and the flagship country decline.

In the case of the 17-year-old, the Broward sheriff's office says there's no documentation to show the FBI sent the case back to Broward investigators, according to spokeswoman Keyla Concepcion. Without that, there could be no follow-up investigation, she said.

In general, the Broward sheriff's office investigates cruise ship incidents only if they happen at Port Everglades or within 12 miles of the port.

FBI reports show the Broward sheriff's office made two arrests under those circumstances one for domestic battery and one for grand theft.

Not all sheriff's departments set limits. The Brevard County Sheriff's Office, for example, actively investigates crimes that happen in international waters, records show. Investigating cruise ship crimes is no less of a priority than investigating those that happen within the county, officials say.

"We have a duty to enforce the laws of the state of Florida,'' said Lt. Don Barker of the Brevard County Sheriff's Office.

Brevard sheriff's records indicate officers made six arrests involving cruise ship incidents that occurred in international waters during the timeframe of the reports analyzed by the Sun Sentinel.

Among them, Brevard authorities arrested registered sex offender Richard DeBartolo of Davenport, Fla., for offering money to 13-year-old boy in exchange for sex aboard the Carnival Sensation on Oct. 19, 2008. The cruise line was told by an FBI agent that the U.S. Attorney's Office would not accept the case because there was no physical contact.

The Brevard County Sheriff's Office charged DeBartolo for lewd or lascivious conduct and for procuring a minor for prostitution. He is in jail in Brevard County, where the case is pending.

SHIP SECURITY

On March 31, 2008, a member of the Seabourn Legend crew reported being raped by another crew member. The ship did not have a sexual assault exam kit onboard to collect medical specimens, the report said. Both crew members' clothing was listed as evidence, but the bed linens were changed before the incident was reported to the FBI.

The FBI investigated, but no action was taken, said Bruce Good, spokesman for Yachts of Seabourn, in an e-mail. Sexual assault exam kits were not required by law at the time, but Seabourn now has two on each vessel.

Without evidence, FBI agents say it's almost impossible to determine whether a sexual assault or domestic assault occurred at sea.

On U.S. soil, officers who see evidence of violence often can make an arrest.

Shipboard security officers preserve crime scenes and evidence until law enforcement officers can board the ship. That can be days. Once in a port, officers may have only hours to investigate the crime scene, until the ship leaves for another cruise.

"We have issues because we're (dealing with) a floating crime scene,'' said Nunez.

Ship security employees are trained to observe and report incidents, but they are not police officers, say cruise security officials. They're employed by the cruise line.

"There's a tremendous conflict of interest with the ship security officials being employed by the cruise ships,'' said Kendall Carver, chairman of the International Cruise Victims Association.

Carver contends that ship security officials are overstepping their role by asking victims about their alcohol consumption or whether they want to prosecute.

Cruise security leaders insist their employees treat victim allegations as if they were true, leaving detective work to law enforcement. Company legal departments are notified of onboard incidents, but attorneys do not interfere with shipboard investigations, they say.

"Mistakes can be made from time to time,'' said Robert Beh, vice president of security services for Carnival Cruise Lines. "There's never anything malicious involved in our investigations. Everything is forthright.''

The reports may not represent the entire picture, said Dale, of the Cruise Lines International Association, which represents the cruise industry's 24 major lines.

"We're doing an awful lot right,'' Dale said. For example, security leaders from the association meet every 60 days to share information and discuss ways to improve, he said.

SHIPBOARD JUSTICE

Captains can put ashore anyone who poses a threat to others on the ship, and passengers agree to those terms in the fine print of the cruise contract when they buy tickets.

In at least 44 cases, passengers or employees suspected of crimes were kicked off ships or left voluntarily, the records show. Cruise companies say they tell federal authorities about former employees who are kicked off so the employees will be denied work visas in the future.

Whether other agencies are informed of potential wrongdoing is unclear. When male crew members aboard Royal Caribbean's Vision of the Seas reported that a ship doctor fondled them during medical exams, the Los Angeles Port Police told the victims to make a citizen's arrest on the medical professional because the "alleged crime was a misdemeanor,'' the report to the FBI showed.

Instead, the ship's captain conducted a shipboard hearing into the allegations, and the doctor was immediately fired and put ashore, the cruise line report said. There is no indication whether the doctor was reported to medical or local authorities.

On April 22, 2008, Holland America MS Statendam officers put ashore a 75-year-old male passenger in Kobe, Japan, after he confessed to sexually assaulting a crew member.

Holland America reported the incident to the FBI, which contacted the legal attache in Tokyo.

No one knows where the passenger went next. "I have no knowledge that they did follow-up,'' said Charles Mandigo, director of fleet security for Holland America Line.

How many shipboard offenders go unprosecuted is unknown.

"It's a huge problem,'' said Charles Lipcon, a Miami-based maritime attorney who represents cruise ship victims and has written a book about crime on cruise ships. "There are a lot of sexual predators who believe they can go onboard a cruise ship and do whatever they want without any ramifications.''

HOPE WITH THE NEW LAW

Nearly five years ago, a few people who had lost members of their family on cruise ships formed the International Cruise Victims Association and quickly began advocating for increased regulation on the cruise industry. The group laid the groundwork for many provisions included in the new cruise law.

The issue of crime aboard cruise ships came under the national spotlight in 2005, when passenger George A. Smith IV went missing during his Mediterranean honeymoon cruise headed to Turkey, and blood was found below his cabin balcony. Smith's disappearance prompted a Congressional hearing later that year and others followed.

Sponsors of the cruise bill and leaders of the victims association say the new law will improve the safety of Americans who go on cruise vacations without realizing they are not protected under U.S. laws when they leave its territorial waters.

Yet, some industry watchers say they expect it to have marginal impact.

The FBI can enforce federal laws on the high seas when a U.S. citizen is involved, but it rarely does, said Lipcon, the Miami-based maritime attorney. "The enforcement of those laws has been very meager, though recently it seems to be getting better.''

Experts say crimes at sea would best be prevented if passengers and crew members were more vigilant. That means consuming alcoholic beverages responsibly and supervising children and teenagers, said David Spanich, supervisor special agent of maritime operations for FBI Miami.

"You can't let your guard down, because bad guys take cruises, too,'' Spanich said.

Originally Posted at: www.insurancejournal.com

August 3, 2010

Crimes on Cruise Ships Rarely Investigated

The cruise safety bill signed last week by President Obama requires cruise lines to report serious crimes such as deaths, missing persons, sexual attacks and assaults to the FBI and the U.S. Coast Guard. But if the legislation is going to bring the justice that safety advocates are pursuing, law enforcement authorities will need to change their ways.

Since 2007, cruise lines that use U.S. ports have agreed to voluntarily report serious crimes, but law enforcement agencies rarely investigated the reports, according to an investigation by the South Florida paper The Sun-Sentinel.

The paper analyzed 363 incidents reported to the FBI from December 2007 through October 2008, and found that the FBI seldom launched full-fledged investigations, claiming that alleged crimes were not serious enough, there wasn’t enough evidence, or that the agency was not authorized to act.

In at least 84 of the cases, cruise lines and captains dealt with complaints and allegations without outside help, and the most serious punishments involved leaving offenders at the next port or taking away alcohol privileges. The newspaper identified 17 arrests that resulted from the 363 incidents.

Likewise, Florida police agencies, which have the authority to investigate crimes at sea, did so infrequently, saying that crimes had occurred outside of their jurisdiction, or that victims were uncooperative.

Investigators face extra challenges in dealing with crime on cruise ships. The ships' security officers lack the authority to make arrests, and collecting evidence can be difficult, in part because of the time that passes before investigators can board the vessel.

“We have issues because we’re [dealing with] a floating crime scene,” David Nunez, FBI Miami special agent for maritime cases, told The Sun-Sentinel.

August 2, 2010

Keeping crime at bay on cruises

Crime on ships presents problems of jurisdiction, justice and security, but a new law is designed to improve passenger safety

Crime on cruise ships is rare, considering 10 million North Americans sailed last year.

But some crime victims believe that justice also is rare -- due to overlapping investigative powers, difficulty obtaining evidence and witnesses, and a lack of sworn officers aboard ships.

Some of that could soon change.

The Cruise Vessel Security and Safety Act of 2010, aimed at strengthening safety and reporting standards, was signed by President Obama last week.

The new law requires the cruise industry to install video surveillance systems in common areas, as well as door viewers and security latches on cabin doors.

Each ship must carry equipment and materials to perform sexual assault medical exams and to collect forensic evidence. Ships also need to have drugs to prevent sexually transmitted diseases after an assault.

Another provision requires cruise ships to log and report all deaths, missing persons, alleged crimes and complaints involving some thefts, sexual attacks and assaults involving U.S. citizens.

Those records will be available to the FBI and the Coast Guard electronically and to all law enforcement officers upon request. The Department of Homeland Security will make cruise line crime statistics available to the public.

Cruise lines say they follow a zero-tolerance policy when it comes to crime on their vessels, and safety is their number one priority.

The new law will "bring consistency and clarity to the security and safety laws and regulations for our industry," said Terry Dale, president and CEO of the Cruise Lines International Association, in a written statement.

The Sun Sentinel analyzed hundreds of incidents that the cruise lines sent to the FBI starting in 2007, after pressure from Congress and cruise passenger advocates led to a voluntary reporting agreement. Cruise lines serving U.S. ports said they would voluntarily report serious crimes, which the FBI defined as homicides, suspicious deaths, so-called "sexual matters," assaults, kidnapping, acts of terrorism and theft of items worth more than $10,000.

Despite the 2007 agreement, passenger advocates and Congress continued to press for increased regulation because the hodgepodge of rules was inadequate for many victims. "They get the run-around," said Jim Walker of Miami-based law firm Walker and O'Neill, P.A.

The newspaper's analysis of 363 incidents voluntarily reported by cruise lines to the FBI from December 2007 through October 2008 shows:

-- The FBI rarely launched full-fledged investigations, saying there wasn't enough evidence, the allegations weren't serious enough, or the agency wasn't authorized to act;

-- Florida police agencies have authority to investigate crimes at sea, but few do, saying the crimes are outside their jurisdiction and often victims refuse to cooperate;

-- Ship security officers lack the power to arrest and the tools to investigate when most U.S. law enforcement agencies would; and

-- In at least 84 situations, cruise lines and ship captains responded to complaints on their own. The worst punishment was kicking off alleged offenders at the next port. In other cases, passengers were warned or had their shipboard alcohol privileges yanked.

JURISDICTION ISSUES

On Feb. 28, 2008, a fight broke out among passengers aboard the Carnival Paradise while the ship was in international waters on the way to its home port in Long Beach, Calif. One passenger claimed another punched him, causing minor injuries that required shipboard medical attention. All of the passengers involved were U.S. citizens.

The injured passenger and another victim told cruise security officials they wanted to press charges.

A Long Beach FBI agent was contacted, but hearing what happened, the agent "stated that the FBI will not respond to the ship's call (will not take the case)," the cruise line report said. A spokeswoman for the FBI office in Los Angeles/Long Beach declined to comment on the incident.

FBI officials in Miami say if agents don't board a ship to investigate, it's because allegations or the cruise line's findings suggest the case isn't serious enough or lacks the evidence necessary to meet the threshold for federal prosecution.

"So long as the victim or offender is a U.S. citizen, we would work the investigation or at least vet it out," said David Nunez, an FBI Miami special agent for maritime cases.

FBI Miami officials declined to comment on specific incidents reported by the cruise lines. Federal investigators said they receive hundreds of phone calls about incidents aboard cruise ships.

Crimes in the United States are generally investigated without regard to the citizenship of the victim or suspect. At sea, citizenship is a factor that can lead to confusion and dropped investigations.

On Jan. 5, 2008, a 17-year-old Canadian boy said a fellow passenger on the Caribbean Princess grabbed the boy's crotch in an elevator. The day before, the same man touched himself inappropriately in front of the teenager at the spa, the incident report said.

The ship sailed from Port Everglades, and the case was referred to the FBI by the Broward County Sheriff's Office and Princess Cruises. The FBI said the incident did not rise to the level of federal prosecution.

Nothing further was done to investigate the accused man, a Mexican citizen living in Pinecrest and working at a recreational park for children, according to the incident report filed with the Broward Sheriff's Office.

John Sifling, vice president of fleet security for Princess Cruises, said there were no witnesses; it was the teenager's account versus that of the other passenger.

In at least 46 of the cases examined by the Sun Sentinel, victims declined to press charges or refused to cooperate with investigators. In at least 22 of those, law enforcement agencies were notified but declined further action.

"Without a victim, we don't have a crime," Nunez said. "We don't force victims into speaking if they choose not to report, or do not want law enforcement intervention."

That's a choice victims on land don't usually have, he said.

At least 17 arrests resulted from the 363 incidents reported by the cruise lines, the records show.

FLORIDA INVESTIGATIVE POWER

When the case of the 17-year-old was first referred to the Broward County Sheriff's Office, the agency looked to the FBI because the incident occurred in international waters.

Yet Florida gives local law enforcement agencies the authority to investigate crimes that occur on ships that depart or arrive from a Florida port, if the U.S. government and the flagship country decline.

In the case of the 17-year-old, the Broward sheriff's office says there's no documentation to show the FBI sent the case back to Broward investigators, according to spokeswoman Keyla Concepcion. Without that, there could be no follow-up investigation, she said.

In general, the Broward sheriff's office investigates cruise ship incidents only if they happen at Port Everglades or within 12 miles of the port.

FBI reports show the Broward sheriff's office made two arrests under those circumstances — one for domestic battery and one for grand theft.

Not all sheriff's departments set limits. The Brevard County Sheriff's Office, for example, actively investigates crimes that happen in international waters, records show. Investigating cruise ship crimes is no less of a priority than investigating those that happen within the county, officials say.

"We have a duty to enforce the laws of the state of Florida," said Lt. Don Barker of the Brevard County Sheriff's Office.

Brevard sheriff's records indicate officers made six arrests involving cruise ship incidents that occurred in international waters during the timeframe of the reports analyzed by the Sun Sentinel.

Among them, Brevard authorities arrested registered sex offender Richard DeBartolo of Davenport, Fla., for offering money to 13-year-old boy in exchange for sex aboard the Carnival Sensation on Oct. 19, 2008. The cruise line was told by an FBI agent that the U.S. Attorney's Office would not accept the case because there was no physical contact.

The Brevard County Sheriff's Office charged DeBartolo for lewd or lascivious conduct and for procuring a minor for prostitution. He is in jail in Brevard County, where the case is pending.

SHIP SECURITY

On March 31, 2008, a member of the Seabourn Legend crew reported being raped by another crew member. The ship did not have a sexual assault exam kit onboard to collect medical specimens, the report said. Both crew members' clothing was listed as evidence, but the bed linens were changed before the incident was reported to the FBI.

The FBI investigated, but no action was taken, said Bruce Good, spokesman for Yachts of Seabourn, in an e-mail. sexual assault exam kits were not required by law at the time, but Seabourn now has two on each vessel.

Without evidence, FBI agents say it's almost impossible to determine whether a sexual assault or domestic assault occurred at sea.

On U.S. soil, officers who see evidence of violence often can make an arrest.

Shipboard security officers preserve crime scenes and evidence until law enforcement officers can board the ship. That can be days. Once in a port, officers may have only hours to investigate the crime scene, until the ship leaves for another cruise.

"We have issues because we're [dealing with] a floating crime scene," said Nunez.

Ship security employees are trained to observe and report incidents, but they are not police officers, say cruise security officials. They're employed by the cruise line.

"There's a tremendous conflict of interest with the ship security officials being employed by the cruise ships," said Kendall Carver, chairman of the International Cruise Victims Association.

Carver contends that ship security officials are overstepping their role by asking victims about their alcohol consumption or whether they want to prosecute.

Cruise security leaders insist their employees treat victim allegations as if they were true, leaving detective work to law enforcement. Company legal departments are notified of onboard incidents, but attorneys do not interfere with shipboard investigations, they say.

"Mistakes can be made from time to time," said Robert Beh, vice president of security services for Carnival Cruise Lines. "There's never anything malicious involved in our investigations. Everything is forthright."

The reports may not represent the entire picture, said Dale, of the Cruise Lines International Association, which represents the cruise industry's 24 major lines.

"We're doing an awful lot right," Dale said. For example, security leaders from the association meet every 60 days to share information and discuss ways to improve, he said.

SHIPBOARD JUSTICE

Captains can put ashore anyone who poses a threat to others on the ship, and passengers agree to those terms in the fine print of the cruise contract when they buy tickets.

In at least 44 cases, passengers or employees suspected of crimes were kicked off ships or left voluntarily, the records show. Cruise companies say they tell federal authorities about former employees who are kicked off so the employees will be denied work visas in the future.

Whether other agencies are informed of potential wrongdoing is unclear. When male crew members aboard Royal Caribbean's Vision of the Seas reported that a ship doctor fondled them during medical exams, the Los Angeles Port Police told the victims to make a citizen's arrest on the medical professional because the "alleged crime was a misdemeanor," the report to the FBI showed.

Instead, the ship's captain conducted a shipboard hearing into the allegations, and the doctor was immediately fired and put ashore, the cruise line report said. There is no indication whether the doctor was reported to medical or local authorities.

On April 22, 2008, Holland America MS Statendam officers put ashore a 75-year-old male passenger in Kobe, Japan, after he confessed to sexually assaulting a crew member.

Holland America reported the incident to the FBI, which contacted the legal attaché in Tokyo.

No one knows where the passenger went next. "I have no knowledge that they did follow-up," said Charles Mandigo, director of fleet security for Holland America Line.

How many shipboard offenders go unprosecuted is unknown.

"It's a huge problem," said Charles Lipcon, a Miami-based maritime attorney who represents cruise ship victims and has written a book about crime on cruise ships. "There are a lot of sexual predators who believe they can go onboard a cruise ship and do whatever they want without any ramifications."

HOPE WITH THE NEW LAW

Nearly five years ago, a few people who had lost members of their family on cruise ships formed the International Cruise Victims Association and quickly began advocating for increased regulation on the cruise industry. The group laid the groundwork for many provisions included in the new cruise law.

The issue of crime aboard cruise ships came under the national spotlight in 2005, when passenger George A. Smith IV went missing during his Mediterranean honeymoon cruise headed to Turkey, and blood was found below his cabin balcony. Smith's disappearance prompted a Congressional hearing later that year and others followed.

Sponsors of the cruise bill and leaders of the victims association say the new law will improve the safety of Americans who go on cruise vacations without realizing they are not protected under U.S. laws when they leave its territorial waters.

Yet, some industry watchers say they expect it to have marginal impact.

The FBI can enforce federal laws on the high seas when a U.S. citizen is involved, but it rarely does, said Lipcon, the Miami-based maritime attorney. "The enforcement of those laws has been very meager, though recently it seems to be getting better."

Experts say crimes at sea would best be prevented if passengers and crew members were more vigilant. That means consuming alcoholic beverages responsibly and supervising children and teenagers, said David Spanich, supervisor special agent of maritime operations for FBI Miami.

"You can't let your guard down, because bad guys take cruises, too," Spanich said.

August 1, 2010

How to stay safe on a cruise

Cruise safety tips:

Keep it simple: From luggage to wristwatches, avoid expensive-looking accessories that could make you a target for theft. Some 75 percent (30 of 53) of passenger theft reports involved stolen jewelry. Usually, jewelry was reported missing from cabins, but in more than a third of the cases it was taken from bags or luggage. Eleven percent of theft reports involved electronics, and another 11 percent involved cash.

Keep it in sight: If you bring valuables on a cruise, make sure you have photographs or other documentation. Don't leave valuables unattended. Use your cabin safe or carry them with you.

Watch the alcohol: In addition to your own intake, pay attention to how much people around you are drinking. Alcohol was noted as a factor in almost half of the sex assaults (16 of 33) and sexual incidents (31 of 70) reported by guests. Alcohol was also mentioned in about a third of the assault cases (35 of 108) reported by passengers. Never accept drinks from people you do not know. Get drinks directly from a bartender, and watch them being poured. Do not leave drinks unattended or entrust them to others.

Watch your children: While victim ages weren't always listed in the reports, about one in four passenger sexual assault (eight of 34) and sexual incident (19 of 70) reports described the victims as minors, teen-agers or children. Of those cases, about half involved alcohol – sometimes alcohol had been consumed by youngsters, and sometimes drunken adults made lewd comments, gestures or inappropriately touched the youngsters.

Traveling companions: If you don't get along with your spouse or traveling companion on land, being in close quarters on a cruise ship won't improve the situation. More than a third (42 of 108) of the passenger assault cases involved family violence, and about 40 percent (17 of 42) of those cases also involved alcohol.

Use common sense: Do not wander the ship alone or allow your children to roam unattended. In ports, stay with tour groups or people you know. Don't flaunt cash or onshore purchases. Take important phone numbers with you on the cruise, including contact information for your credit card companies, the cruise line and the FBI's Miami office, (305) 944-9101 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting (305) 944-9101 end_of_the_skype_highlighting.

If you are injured or believe you are a victim of crime while on a cruise:

Immediately report the incident to ship security. Make the report in writing and get a copy. Collect the names of all onboard security personnel you deal with. Contact the FBI at the nearest port.

Take photographs of the scene of the incident as soon as possible. If the incident involves a sexual assault or suspicious death, the scene should immediately be sealed off for law enforcement.

If there are witnesses to the incident, write down their names, addresses, and telephone numbers.

If you have been physically injured, go to the ship doctor for treatment.

If you are the victim of sexual assault or rape, insist on a full sexual assault medical examination as soon as possible in the shipboard infirmary to ensure forensic evidence is preserved. Do not eat, drink, shower, bathe, brush teeth or go to the bathroom before the exam is done by a physician. Blood samples and photographs should be part of the exam. If necessary, go to an onshore doctor at the next port.

How cruise ship security guards are hired, trained

Security chiefs from Royal Caribbean International, Celebrity Cruises, Carnival Cruise Lines, Princess Cruises, and Holland America Line say they follow these procedures when hiring security personnel for their ships.

Who gets hired: Onboard security guards and officers, as well as security leaders at company headquarters, usually have worked in the security industry, law enforcement, government or military service in their native country. Job applicants are screened by employment agencies that conduct background checks. Applicants for top-level shipboard security positions are interviewed in their home country by cruise line security directors. As part of the interview process, these candidates are asked how they would handle hypothetical situations. They also must pass language and writing tests.

How they're trained: Onboard security personnel are trained to handle situations ranging from crowd control to terrorism threats. When a criminal incident occurs — or there are allegations that a crime occurred at sea — ship security workers are taught to observe and report. They are not trained in traditional law enforcement interview and interrogation techniques. However, they receive FBI instruction on how to collect written statements from victims, witnesses and suspects and how to preserve crime scenes and physical evidence.

Who's in charge: At sea, ship captains are responsible for the safety of passengers, crew and the vessel. They have the authority to kick off anyone who poses a threat. Sometimes, a ship captain will delegate or share some of this responsibility with staff captains, who rank directly below them and handle matters involving passengers and crew. Security officers, and guards reporting to them, respond to shipboard incidents and allegations. Security leaders on shore often direct onboard personnel in the handling of serious onboard incidents. These leaders have wide-ranging expertise in investigations, and often held positions of high authority in U.S. law enforcement or military. Shoreside leaders notify law enforcement about incidents.

Training updates: Security officers and guards are trained on security and safety procedures each year. Some cruise lines have trainers who evaluate security staff and practices, conducting follow-up training as needed.

About the reports

Under a 2007 agreement, cruise lines began voluntarily reporting to the FBI violations of U.S. law aboard cruise ships. The Sun Sentinel's information request to the FBI for copies of the cruise line reports yielded 363 incidents from 75 ships, from December 2007 through October 2008. Requests for additional information remain unfulfilled.

When a crime is committed aboard a cruise ship, the FBI has jurisdiction if the ship is owned by a U.S. company or citizen, if the crime took place within 12 miles of the U.S. coast, if the victim or perpetrator is a U.S. national on a ship departing or arriving at a U.S. port, or if the crime involves an act of terrorism against the United States.

Not all of the incidents reported by the cruise lines were criminal acts at sea – some were natural deaths, and some involved crimes and accidents that took place at ports of call.

The reports included 123 assaults; 43 sexual assaults; 90 incidents involving sexual contact or misconduct; 80 thefts; eight deaths, including four natural deaths, two suicides and two accidental deaths. The rest involved missing people, drugs, security breaches or other issues.

Passengers were victims in 108 assaults, 34 sexual assaults, 70 sexual contact incidents and 53 thefts. All but one of the deaths involved passengers.

June 10, 2010

Cruise ship passengers say they were swindled in onboard art auctions

Are cruise ship art auctions fair or foul? It's a hot topic these days among cruisers -- and one the Detroit Free-Press today is taking a hard look at in a lengthy front-page story.

The sister paper to USA TODAY profiles a number of cruise ship passengers who have accused Detroit-based Park West -- the biggest player in cruise ship art auctions -- of selling fake, forged and overpriced artwork and using phony appraisals and certificates of authenticity.

Park West operates the art auctions on a number of lines including Norwegian Cruise Line and, until this year, Royal Caribbean.

The Free-Press quotes cruisers such as Marti Szostak, a 60-year-old nurse from Bargersville, Ind., who bought 21 pieces of art for $48,000 from Park West during art auctions on Royal Caribbean cruise ships in 2005 and 2007.

Szostak tells the news outlet she worked three jobs to pay for the art and then decided to sell, only to be told by art dealers that the art was largely worthless. She says experts told her signatures on limited-edition prints by Dalí she had bought at the auctions were forged.

"I was sick, I could hardly breathe," Szostak is quoted as saying.

Szostak is one of a number of Park West customers suing the company. The Free-Press says Park West faces charges of racketeering, fraud and violating consumer protection laws by using phony certificates of authenticity to misrepresent artwork, issuing bogus appraisals that vastly overstate the value of artwork, selling mass-produced photomechanical copies as limited-edition prints and selling fake artwork, including art with forged artist signatures.

Park West founder Albert Scaglione denies the allegations and tells the Free-Press the negative publicity is killing his business.

"These charges are ridiculous," he says. "We have never done anything wrong."

Scaglione tells the Free-Press Park West's annual revenue, at $250 million in 2007, has dropped by $100 million, forcing him to lay off half of his workforce.

May 26, 2010

Cocaine Bust on Cruise Ship in England

British news outlets are reporting authorities have made a sizeable drug bust on the Italian ship MSC Opera. The ship was visiting the Port of Dover in England, on its way from Brazil to Amsterdam.

The reports say eight Latvian and Lithuanian passengers on the ship were arrested and more than $2 million worth of cocaine was seized.

According to Kent Online, the cocaine, about 35 kilos in total, was discovered in passenger cabins. British authorities are still investigating.

This is the second such big drug bust on a cruise ship in England this year. In March, in Southampton, U.K. Border Authorities arrested two Spanish passengers on the Black Watch, a ship operated by Fred Olsen Cruise Lines.

Those two pleaded guilty to drug smuggling charges -- they were alleged to have tried to hide $10 million worth of cocaine in their pants -- and were coincidentally sentenced just this week by a British judge to 12 years in prison.

May 25, 2010

Investigation: Crimes on Cruise Ships Often Not Reported

Local Victims Hope Laws At Sea Will Change

Team 5 Investigates has learned that cruise ship companies are not required to report crimes committed on board if their ships are 12 or more miles from shore.

It’s a painful lesson that countless families have learned the hard way, including Kendall Carver, whose 40-year-old daughter, Merrian, disappeared while on a cruise in 2004.

“We'll never know what happened to Merrian,” said Carver in a recent interview in Cambridge with Team 5 Investigates’ Cheryl Fiandaca.

After the free-spirited Harvard student and mother vanished, Carver said the cruise company failed to notify the FBI for five weeks, ignoring evidence that she hadn’t come back to her cabin, he said.

“The (ship's) steward had reported Merrian missing daily, for days, and his supervisors told him to 'forget it and do his job,' said Carver.

What To Do If Cruise Crime Happens

He immediately launched an international investigation into his daughter’s disappearance, spending, he said, $75,000 in legal fees before his attorney was allowed to depose that steward.

“You wouldn't do this unless you loved her,” said Carver.

Angela Orlich, of Massachusetts, is another victim who has testified about the matter before Congress. Orlich went on a cruise with friends, never realizing a scuba diving trip would change her life. She said the instructor sexually assaulted her.

“He took of the top of my bathing suit and started molesting me,” she said. “He shut my air tank off. It was a struggle. I could have died underwater.”

Orlich stayed calm and managed to get back to the ship, where she told two cruise ship employees what had happened.

“In my case, they didn’t do anything,” she said.

And then there’s the still unsolved case of George Smith. Five years ago, the handsome newlywed from Connecticut vanished from his honeymoon cruise. His body has never been found.

“When something happens on land, you have the police involved,” said Carolyn Latti, a maritime attorney in Boston who has represented hundreds of victims of crimes on board cruise ships. “When you're on a cruise ship, when you leave the port, you basically leave your rights.”

Currently, cruise ship companies are not required to report crimes to any American law enforcement.

The FBI tells Team 5 Investigates there is no way to know how many vacationers become victims.

“People have no idea,” said Latti. “They think, ‘I'm a United States citizen, I’m going to have the same rights apply to me once I get on the boat.' And it doesn't. And that's the sad part.”

Sen. John Kerry proposed a new law, Senate Bill No. 588, which would force cruise ship companies that do business in the U.S. to report crimes to the FBI. It would also require measures to improve passenger safety be taken on board, for instance, installing peep holes on the doors of all cabins.

Carver and others have testified emotionally on behalf of the bill.


“It’ll just put a window of transparency about what's going on in cruise ships. We’re talking about protecting 11 million passengers,” Carver said.

Carver’s personal plight has so engulfed his life he founded an organization called International Cruise Victims Association. It has several hundred members around the globe.

Kerry’s bill is still in Congress. Carver and Orlich are hopeful of the outcome, but the cruise industry may be fighting the changes.

According to lobbying records from the Senate Office of Public Records, in 2009 alone, cruise companies paid millions of dollars to lobbyists.

Coincidentally, the Merrian Carver, Angela Orlich and George Smith cases all happened on board Royal Caribbean cruise ships. The company refused numerous calls from Team 5 Investigates and e-mails requesting comment.

March 22, 2010

Cruise Liner Pollution Kills Up to 8,300 People a Year in US and Canada, Says EPA

Newly proposed restrictions would limit the amount of pollution cruise liner ships can emit in waters 200 miles around the coast of the US and Canada. The proposal is about to be adopted by the UN's International Maritime Organization, and is supported by many governmental groups, including the EPA. In fact, according to Reuters, the EPA argues that adopting the pollution controls would clear the air of particulates in port cities--and would save 8,300 lives a year. Which would mean that unregulated pollution from cruise lines is currently killing 8,300 people a year in the US and Canada

Here's the report, via Reuters:

Proponents, including the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, say the plan would clear the air around polluted port cities and save up to 8,300 lives a year in the United States and Canada. It would limit emissions of sulfur oxides, nitrogen oxides and particulate matter, pollutants that are linked to asthma and cancer. The Environmental Defense Fund activist group cheered the plan, saying "the dangerous air pollution from these floating smokestacks is a serious health threat to tens of millions of Americans who live and work in port cities."

Of course, the cruise industry execs are crying foul--they complain that the pollution controls would force them to pay up to 40% more for low sulfur fuels, and that they would no longer be able to burn any of the fuels they currently use within 200 miles of land. To which I say, Good.

To cruise ship executives: I am sorry that your fuel expenses will rise--perhaps you will have to increase the price of admission for your monolithic floating tributes to excess, in order to prevent some 8,300 people from dying every year for the crime of happening to live in port cities.

Okay, so that may have been a tad melodramatic--but it seems to me that there's a pretty strong case for limiting pollution from ships, and that the industry's case against doing so rests only on the complaint that it would be expensive. Thankfully for the 8,300 folks whose lives are likely to be saved by the measure, the proposal looks likely to be adopted by the IMO--leaving the world a slightly less polluted place.

March 14, 2010

Coming and Going: Violent crime is up in the Bahamas

Crime wave

Bahamas-bound travelers, beware.

Crime in the popular tourist destination is on the upswing, especially on New Providence Island, where the capital city, Nassau, is located. And we're not talking just petty thefts or purse-snatching, but far more serious violent crime.

This island nation finished 2009 with a record 87 murders -- a statistic tourism officials probably won't be trumpeting in their next "It's Better in the Bahamas" ad.

More recently, on Feb. 25, an American tourist was attacked in his hotel room on usually tranquil Harbour Island (60 miles from Nassau) by two men wielding a cutlass, according to the Tribune newspaper. The victim survived and suspects are in custody, but the incident prompted police and Ministry of Tourism officials to meet with concerned Harbour Island residents last Monday.

Bahamian officials from Prime Minister Hubert Ingraham on down have publicly acknowledged the problem and taken steps to address it, putting more police on the streets in Nassau, especially after 18 cruise ship passengers became victims of an armed robbery in November.

The criminal activity has prompted the operators of the world's largest cruise ship, Oasis of the Seas, to warn its passengers to "be mindful of their personal safety," the Nassau Guardian newspaper reported.

CoGo isn't waving sun-seekers away from the Bahamas, because most of the violent crime seems to have occurred in New Providence's "Over the Hill" neighborhoods, where few tourists venture. Would-be tourists should also know that crime hasn't been as much of an issue in the Bahamas' less populated Family Islands, such as Exuma, Bimini and Abaco.

Even so, "be mindful" seems like an appropriate mantra for visitors, especially in Nassau, where the State Department has reported "assaults, including sexual assaults, in diverse areas such as in casinos, outside hotels, or on cruise ships."

Some Bahamians attribute the crime wave to high unemployment (hovering around 15 percent on New Providence Island, according to the Guardian) and the nation's status as a gathering spot for drug traffickers.

On a personal note, CoGo saw no evidence of criminal activity during a recent three-day stay in Nassau, if you discount the scruffy young man who whispered "coke, weed, coke, weed" as we strolled along Bay Street, the main shopping drag, one evening.

Google your ride

Here's another reason to bike your way around town: You can now get bicycling directions on Google Maps.

Google has partnered with D.C.-based nonprofit Rails-to-Trails Conservancy (RTC) to offer the feature, which allows users to type in their destination and get directions for the best bicycling route. CoGo, for instance, was pleased to find out that it would take just 10 minutes to bike from the heart of Adams Morgan to downtown Washington.

Google has already been offering this service to drivers, walkers and transit riders. Now Google users in all 50 states will have access to RTC's database of more than 1,600 rail-trails and connecting corridors for free. RTC has been offering its trail maps gratis on TrailLink.com, where demand has grown in the past year.

"Bikers all over the country now will be able to explore new trails or find specific directions in their local community with just a few clicks of their mouse," Shannon Guymon, product manager for Google Maps, said in a statement.
Travelers weigh in

What are travelers' biggest gripes these days? Limited legroom on planes and fees for checked baggage and other in-flight services, according to TripAdvisor's second annual air travel survey.

The survey of 3,200 U.S. respondents revealed some other interesting traveler sentiments. Sorry, Kevin Smith, but 74 percent said they think that travelers of size should pay for two seats on their flights. (Actor-director Smith waged a Twitter campaign against Southwest Airlines after he was forced off a flight for being too big to fit comfortably in a single seat. Southwest later apologized.)

Thirty percent said that they would be more likely to book a ticket on a flight offering WiFi. Some travelers -- 45 percent -- said they want Internet access so badly that they would put up with a seatmate accessing inappropriate content. Another 27 percent, however, said that they would alert a flight attendant and 22 percent would ask their seatmate to shut down any lewd sites.

And what of those controversial full body scanners that can see through your clothing? Seventy-nine percent had no problem with them.

January 22, 2010

Cruise ship passenger murdered during port call in Antigua

A 30-year-old American woman sailing in the Caribbean this week on a Star Clippers cruise ship was murdered during a port call in Antigua.

In a statement issued today to USA TODAY, Star Clippers confirms several reports in small Caribbean news outlets that the woman, identified as Nina Elisabeth Nilssen, was attacked and killed on Tuesday after she went ashore from the 227-passenger Royal Clipper.

"According to Antiguan police officials, Nilssen's body was discovered around 5 p.m. on a secluded trail at Windward Bay, near Pigeon Point Beach," the statement says. "Authorities have a description of the alleged assailant, but have not made an arrest."

A story in the Antigua Sun says Nilssen's body was found with what appeared to be a stab wound to the neck and was partially unclothed.

The murder is just the latest serious crime against tourists in Antigua. A 38-year-old Australian man visiting the island last year on his yacht was shot dead while walking with his girlfriend and daughter, and in 2008 the island was the scene of a double murder of a honeymooning British couple -- incidents that have raised questions about the safety of visiting the island. The British couple were shot in their room at Antigua's Cocos Hotel.

Antigua's tourism industry also suffered a black eye in September when six Carnival cruise passengers were arrested after a brawl with local police. Carnival announced shortly after the incident that it was ending most cruises to Antigua. The Carnival Victory's last stop on the island took place earlier this month.

Star Clippers says Nilssen's family disembarked Royal Clipper Tuesday evening and received assistance from both Star Clippers and the Antiguan government with accommodations, flights home and arrangements to return Nilssen's body to the United States.

"Star Clippers CEO Mikael Krafft has expressed his heartfelt sympathy and condolences to the members of Ms. Nilssen's family," the line's statement says.

"Star Clippers also is cooperating with Antiguan authorities in their ongoing investigation and search for the assailant."

A spokesperson for Star Clippers says the line hasn't decided whether the Royal Clipper will return to the island. The ship normally visits every two weeks.

December 14, 2009

Safety warning for cruise visitors

Nassau, capital of The Bahamas, has spent millions of dollars dredging its harbour and building new port facilities so it can handle Oasis of the Seas, the largest cruise ship in the world.

So a recent spate of armed attacks on visiting cruise ship passengers, must have sent a shudder of panic through the local authorities and Oasis's owners, Royal Caribbean.

The ship's maiden call on Friday went ahead as planned, but passengers were warned of the risks before going ashore. As Thea Rutherford reports in the Nassau Guardian, the 6,000 passengers were advised to be "mindful of their personal safety" during their time on the island.

The warning was printed in Cruise Compass, the daily newsletter provided for each cabin on the 225,000-ton ship.

"Nassau is one of the most beautiful cities, and the residents are warm and welcoming," it said. "However, recently Nassau has experienced an increase in crime. Visitors to Nassau, like visitors to all large cities in the world today, need to be mindful of their personal safety."

During a ceremony in which the ship's captain was presented with a plaque to commemorate the visit, Prime Minister Hubert Ingraham said: "I assure Royal Caribbean and, indeed, all cruise lines calling at Nassau, that the government takes seriously its obligation to provide a safe environment in our city."

"We want every visitor to our country to feel good about being here. We seek to make visitors' stay safe and enjoyable so that they look forward not only to returning but also to sending their friends."

A man has appeared in court accused of robbing 18 cruise passengers at gunpoint in November and there have been 79 murders in The Bahamas this year.

Tourism Director General Vernice Walkine said, "It's troubling to all of us. We're continuing to talk about how we can together try to mitigate those kinds of incidents and so we continue to collaborate with all of the cruise lines, talk through what measures we can take to ensure that their passengers, our visitors, continue to be safe in The Bahamas."

Noting that millions of cruise ship passengers enjoyed safe visits to the country each year, she said, "We continue the quest to make sure that they all have a safe and enjoyable time... Everybody's understandably concerned and committed to ensuring that we work very hard to prevent those kinds of incidents from recurring."

November 28, 2009

Too little, too late? A cruise passenger robbed in Nassau speaks out

Bahamas pledged to place more police in the tourist sectors of Nassau after a spate of crimes against cruise passengers in the last few weeks, but at least one victim is saying that is too little, too late.

Carly Milne was one of almost 30 cruise tourists that have been robbed while on Nassau shore excursions in the last two months.

Last week, she was robbed at gunpoint while on a Segway excursion, one of 18 passengers in two groups that were targeted on the same day.

None of those passengers were hurt, and the cruise lines involved, Disney Cruise Line and Royal Caribbean International, are no longer offering the Nassau Segway tour. In a similar October incident, 11 Carnival Cruise Lines passengers were robbed near Nassau's Queen’s Staircase attraction, also at gunpoint.

Milne, who declined to mention what ship she was on, said she was shocked to learn that none of these were isolated incidents.

On the day her group was targeted, she met a woman at the Nassau police station whose husband had been robbed in the shopping district. Later, Milne read an article citing another man robbed that day of his wallet.

“We were repeatedly assured by police that ‘this never happens,’ and yet, 21 people were victims of aggravated theft in one day, each in busy tourist areas that are supposedly safe,” Milne said. “I was horrified when I started doing the research online and saw just how much armed robbery, theft and violence is happening in Nassau these days.”

Milne said if she had known this, “I would’ve never gotten off the ship."

A travel writer, Milne said she has been all over the world, and knows well that tourists are often targets for criminals. But she believes Nassau is not doing enough to counter what is clearly a trend.

“I don’t think it’s unreasonable to expect that if a city or country is experiencing a vast amount of criminal activity that targets tourists, that they take as many strides as they can to ensure their safety to the best of their ability,” she said. “That means armed guards and police presence at heavily populated tourism destinations. As I walked with our group from the cruise ship to the taxi through a little of the shopping area, I saw no security presence. As we drove through town on the way to the Segway tour, nothing. And at the tour itself, zero police – at least, not until five minutes after we were violently robbed.”

Milne believes that cruise lines and their passengers should not visit Nassau until the town beefs up its security.

“I don’t think they’ll really step things up unless the tourism industry is severely impacted,” Milne added. “Right now, the cruise ships and their clientele have the ability to affect change. I sincerely hope they do so.”

Nassau crime wave hits cruises

A series of armed attacks on cruise ship passengers in Nassau has raised fears about the safety of visitors to the Bahamas.

Several Europeans were among a group of 18 tourists held up by two men wielding shotguns during a guided tour of an eco-park close to Nassau last weekend. Their local guide was tied up and a woman hit in the face with the butt of a gun as the robbers took money, cameras, mobile phones and passports from the passengers.

Last month, in another daylight incident, 11 cruise passengers were robbed at gunpoint as they stood at the top of the Queen's Staircase, the city's landmark attraction.

Police authorities in Nassau have reported a sharp rise in muggings in the city, including a recent attack on a Canadian tourist as he walked along Bay Street, close to the cruise line terminals.

The increase in violence at a destination previously considered safe for visitors has caused Royal Caribbean and Disney cruise lines to suspend some shore-based excursions.

"A holiday is supposed to be filled with fun, rejuvenation and relaxation. An act of crime should not be part of any vacation, and we regret that our guests had to experience those events," said Lyan Sierra-Caro, a Royal Caribbean spokeswoman. "We are thankful that none of our guests was injured."

Royal Caribbean has joined Disney in halting its excursions to the Earth Village park, which offered Segway and horseback tours through woodland, while it conducts an investigation.

Tourism and police chiefs, wary of the threat to this £2.3bn industry, have promised to deploy more uniformed officers at tourist sites and renew efforts to catch those responsible for the attacks.

The Bahamas is trying to combat an increase in violent crime – there have been a record 77 murders so far this year. In the past it was rare for tourists to be targeted.

"It is difficult to promote the islands as a place for people to consider for their holiday when these kinds of incidents occur," said Vernice Walkine, minister for tourism. "We are deeply concerned about a troubling series of events involving rogue elements of our society. We want to assure our cruise line partners that we will work closely with the police until they have rooted out these problems and restored these places and activities as safe for the enjoyment of our visitors."

Nassau is one of the most popular stopovers on cruises from Florida, with more than two million passengers visiting last year, according to the Bahamas tourism ministry.

According to the London-based Passenger Shipping Association, 208,000 Britons took a Caribbean cruise in 2008.

November 24, 2009

Bahamas security to be beefed up after U.S. cruise ship passengers robbed

Bahamian officials plan to beef up security after the armed robbery of 18 U.S. cruise ship passengers visiting a forest preserve just minutes from the busy port of Nassau last weekend, the founder of the tourist attraction said Monday.

The tourists, who arrived on Royal Caribbean's Navigator of the Seas and Disney Cruise Line's Disney Wonder, were accosted Friday as they toured the 200-acre Earth Village on off-road vehicles called Segways, officials said. No one was injured.

They were on a tour called "Segway Off Road Back To Nature."

Terry Miller, the founder of Earth Village, said Monday the Bahamian government has promised to set up "an intensive security system in the forest" in response to the incident.

Miller said he arrived at the scene minutes after the robbery and found the tourists shaken but calm.

"They were soldiers, man, every one of them," he said. "They took it very well. But we apologized at every opportunity."

Miller called tourists "our life blood."

The Bahamian newspaper The Tribune reported Monday that armed thugs tied up the Bahamian tour guide who was with one group of visitors and ordered them to the ground before robbing them of money, passports, cell phones, credit cards and other items.

During the robbery, a second group of visitors approached and were also held up, the newspaper said.

The attackers also hit a Bahamian woman with a gun, The Tribune reported. Her injuries were minor, the newspaper said.

"Clearly, this incident is very troubling to us," said Vernice Walkine, director general for Bahamas Ministry of Tourism. "We have 5 million visitors a year, and we have always had a good reputation as a safe destination."

Walkine said Bahamian police told her Monday morning that they were questioning a suspect in the robbery. "They have assured us they would give it their full attention to make sure there is no repeat of this sort of thing," she said.

Among the robbed tourists were Americans, Canadians, Irish and Chinese, said Walkine.

Disney Cruises in a statement said it took immediate action by cancelling the tour from its list of shore excursions.

"No guests were injured and our shipboard and shoreside teams worked closely with these guests once back aboard, to make certain their needs were met and provided them with any additional assistance," the statement said. "The crime was reported to Bahamian police who are investigating the situation."

In a statement issued Tuesday, Royal Caribbean said nine of its passengers were in the group robbed at gunpoint. "We are thankful that none of our guests were injured in this unfortunate event, and will continue to provide them any support they may need," the Miami-based company said. "An act of crime should not be part of any vacation, and we regret our guests had to experience those events."

Officials from Royal Caribbean and Disney said they had removed from its suggested activities the visit to Earth Village.

The Disney Wonder sails from Port Canaveral, and the Navigator of the Seas from Miami.

July 18, 2009

Emotional comments from man held in cruise death

SAN DIEGO — Robert McGill, the man accused of killing his wife on a Mexican cruise, made a dramatic first court appearance in San Diego, arguing with public defenders as family members sobbed loudly in the gallery.

The 55-year-old man asked a judge Friday if he could make a statement, then had a hushed but emotional conversation with two federal defenders.

During the talk, McGill gestured to his family and could be heard saying: "I think they are suffering and need to hear from me."

McGill also said: "That's putting more financial burden on top of the pain and horror that I've caused this family."

It wasn't immediately clear what McGill was referring to.

U.S. District Magistrate William McCurie Jr. entered a plea of not guilty on McGill's behalf and set a detention hearing for July 23.

Robert McGill and his wife seemed to be living a romance story: ex-high school sweethearts who found each other decades later and renewed their love.

So friends and neighbors were shocked to learn the veteran Los Angeles County school teacher is accused of killing his wife on his 55th birthday during a domestic dispute on a Mexican cruise. Shirley McGill had turned 55 just six days before she died.

"It doesn't make any sense. You are talking about a situation that just doesn't have any connection to the people I know as neighbors," said Michael Hougardy, who lives on the McGills' cul-de-sac in the San Fernando Valley of Los Angeles.

"Bob and Shirley never said anything negative about each other," he told The Associated Press on Friday. "I saw Bob a couple days before they left. He was excited. He was looking forward to it."

McGill was arrested for investigation of murder and jailed Thursday after the Carnival Elation returned to San Diego.

Debra Hartman, a spokeswoman for the U.S. attorney's office in San Diego, declined Friday to say whether he had been charged but said she would provide information later in the day. McGill could make a first court appearance as early as Friday afternoon, she said.

An autopsy was also tentatively set for Friday, according to the San Diego County medical examiner's office.

The first hint of trouble came on Tuesday, three days into the five-night cruise to Cabo San Lucas, when a passenger contacted the ship's security to express concerns that a woman might be dead, said Keith Slotter, a special agent in charge of the FBI's San Diego bureau.

Crew members found the body of Shirley McGill in the cabin and later detained her husband and placed him in the brig as the ship sailed home.

It wasn't immediately known if McGill had an attorney.

McGill was a divorced father of two sons when he reconnected with Shirley through the Internet, colleagues said.

Court records show McGill was divorced from his first wife in 1998 after a 2½-year proceeding and then filed for bankruptcy in 2001. Two years later, he married Shirley McGill in Las Vegas.

In bankruptcy papers, McGill listed assets of $50,000 to $100,000 and debts of $100,000 to $500,000. The attorney who handled the case did not immediately return a call seeking comment.

"Bob and Shirley loved each other very much. Their marriage was the most important thing in his life," Paul White, a teacher at the school where McGill taught, told the AP. "They were childhood sweethearts."

White said he worked with McGill for nearly 11 years and knew him to be calm and pleasant.

"He's a great friend, he's great with kids, he's a great dad, he's a great husband," White said.

McGill, whose gray hair falls below his shoulders, played guitar, liked to ride horses and hike and "was always out every morning walking the dogs," Hougardy said.

McGill has worked for the Los Angeles County Office of Education since 1979 but would likely be placed on administrative leave if his case is prosecuted, spokeswoman Margo Minecki said.

Colleagues said McGill spent years teaching at-risk teens, became burned out by the job a decade ago but was revitalized when he came to work at the West Valley Leadership Academy in Canoga Park, a county-run alternative high school that White founded to help at-risk youth. The county closed it in June because of dwindling attendance.

McGill had switched teaching jobs a few years ago and was tutoring pregnant teenagers in an independent-study program.

Mo Freedman, who worked with McGill at the county education agency for 20 years, called him "a free thinker" who enjoyed his work.

"We all get a little cynical at one time," Freedman said. "I thought Bob was like that years ago, and then he reacquainted with his high school sweetheart, Shirley. He was reinvigorated. And Paul (White) kind of pulled him out of the doldrums, working with the kids."

Shirley McGill retired last week from the state Department of Motor Vehicles, and her husband had planned to retire soon as well, acquaintances said.

Hougardy said Shirley McGill planned to move to Oregon, where her family and her children from a previous marriage lived. McGill was going to join her when he retired.

Her former colleagues at the Canoga Park DMV office were shocked when they heard about Shirley McGill's death on television.

"They took it very hard," George Wong, the office's administrative manager, told the Daily News. "She was a very loving person and a kind person."

Associated Press writers Sue Manning, Solvej Schou and Anthony McCartney in Los Angeles and Ken Ritter in Las Vegas contributed to this report.

June 9, 2009

2,200 Pages Of Court Records Released About Cruise Ship Death

With the release Monday of more than 2,200 pages of court records, the 2005 death of George Allen Smith IV of Greenwich aboard a cruise ship in the Mediterranean continues to confound the experts - and to divide family members.

There were noises in George Allen Smith IV's stateroom not long before he plunged over the side of the cruise liner and vanished in the Mediterranean Sea after a night of hard honeymoon partying four years ago.

That is one of the few undisputed aspects of a case that has drawn worldwide attention, eluded FBI agents and forensic scientist Henry C. Lee, and driven a wedge between Smith's Greenwich family members and his widow, Jennifer Hagel Smith.

And with the release Monday of 2,200 pages of depositions and probate court hearings, the chasm between the families has only widened.

"You can't buy this stuff at home," Hagel Smith recalled Askin saying during a stop in Florence, according to a transcript. But there was one problem. Cruise policies prohibited passengers from bringing alcohol on board.

Askin wore tight shorts the day that he toured Florence and couldn't hide the bottle. So George Smith volunteered to stuff the absinthe in his shorts underneath a baggy T-shirt.

She said that George Smith also brought vodka on board to keep in the room so "he didn't have to pay for drinks the whole trip."

But bar receipts showed the partying went well beyond their cabin. Hagel Smith acknowledged in her deposition that she couldn't recall how many drinks she had the night before she learned that her husband had vanished. There are also references in the court records to Smith's use of prescription anti-anxiety medication.

December 2, 2008

Pirates Chase, Fire on US Cruise Ship

NAIROBI, Kenya (Dec. 2) - The luxury American cruise ship steaming across the Gulf of Aden with hundreds of well-heeled tourists just might have been too much for Somali pirates to resist.

But the six bandits, riding in two skiffs and firing rifle shots at the gleaming ship, were outrun in minutes when the captain of M/S Nautica gunned the engine and sped away, a spokesman for the company said Tuesday.

Still, the implications had the pirates hijacked the ship added a new dimension to the piracy scourge, as NATO foreign ministers groped for solutions at a meeting in Brussels and the United Nations extended an international piracy-fighting mandate for another year.

The potential for massive ransom payments from the families of hundreds of rich tourists may encourage similar attempts, especially following the successful capture of a Ukrainian cargo ship laden with tanks and a Saudi oil tanker carrying $100 million in crude.

And the brazen attack also raises questions: What was a cruise ship doing in the pirate-infested waters of the Gulf of Aden? How many such targets are sailing these seas, and how can they be protected?

Even the pirates' motives were in question: they could simply have been testing the defenses of the massive ship, rather than making a real effort to hijack it.

Sunday's attack on the M/S Nautica, which was reported Tuesday, comes several weeks after a NATO mission served mainly to underscore the impotence of the world community. A handful of Western ships can do little to prevent attacks in a vast sea, and without the right to board hijacked vessels, they can only watch as the booty is towed to port.

"It is very fortunate that the liner managed to escape," said Noel Choong, who heads the International Maritime Bureau's piracy reporting center in Malaysia, urging all ships to remain vigilant.

Some of the world's leading cruise companies said Tuesday they are considering changing their itineraries to avoid going near the coast of Somalia following news of the weekend attack.

Cunard's public relations manager Eric Flounders said the company has two liners, the Queen Mary 2 and Queen Victoria, scheduled to go through the Gulf of Aden in March but added the company "will obviously consider changing the itinerary" should the situation not improve.

Spokeswoman Michele Andjel said P&O Cruises is considering whether to reroute the Arcadia, which is due around the Gulf of Aden in January.

Lt. Nathan Christensen, a Bahrain-based spokesman for the U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet, said 21,000 ships cross the Gulf of Aden every year, but he did not know how many cruise liners are included in that figure. The gulf links the Mediterranean Sea, the Suez Canal and the Red Sea to the Indian Ocean.

"We are not advising ships to go a different way, but we do advise to go through the international corridor within the Gulf of Aden," Christensen said, referring to a security corridor patrolled by the international coalition.
Pirates have attacked about 100 ships off the Somali coast this year and hijacked 40 vessels. They still hold 14 ships along with more than 250 crew members, according to maritime officials.

NATO said an Italian destroyer prevented five cargo ships from being hijacked Tuesday in the Gulf of Aden by blocking the small pirate boats from the ships and using a helicopter to disperse them.

The Nautica is not the first pleasure boat to be attacked.

The luxury yacht Le Ponant was attacked earlier this year, and pirates opened fire in 2005 on the Seabourn Spirit off the Somali coast. The cruise ship evaded capture by using its speed and a long-range acoustic device that blasted a painful wave of sound at the pirates.

The Nautica also escaped by speeding up as two small pirate skiffs tried to close in, said Tim Rubacky, a spokesman for Oceania Cruises, Inc., which owns the Nautica. He said one skiff made it within 300 yards of the cruise ship and fired eight rifle shots at the vessel before trailing off.

"When the pirates were sighted, the captain went on the public address system and asked passengers to remain in the interior spaces of the ship and wait until he gave further instructions," Rubacky said. "Within five minutes, it was over."

He said the ship still plans to return through the Gulf of Aden.
"We believe this was an isolated incident," he said. "M/S Nautica is well-equipped to deal with these situations and the crew is well-trained."

However, Rubacky would not comment on the crew's training or whether the ship had weapons or other devices to help fight off a hijacking.

The Nautica was on a 32-day cruise from Rome to Singapore, with stops at ports in Italy, Egypt, Oman, Dubai, India, Malaysia and Thailand, according to Oceania's Web site. Choong said the ship was carrying 656 passengers and 399 crew members.

The liner arrived in the southern Oman port of Salalah on Monday morning, and passengers toured the city before leaving for the capital, Muscat, that evening, an Oman tourism official said.

In New York on Tuesday, the U.N. Security Council extended for another year its authorization for countries to enter Somalia's territorial waters, with advance notice, and use "all necessary means" to stop piracy and armed robbery at sea.

U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is expected to address the Security Council on the subject of piracy at a followup session Dec. 16.

Somalia has not had a functioning government since 1991, and pirates have taken advantage of the country's lawlessness to launch attacks on foreign shipping from the Somali coast.

In two of the most daring attacks, pirates seized a Ukrainian freighter loaded with 33 battle tanks and other heavy weapons in September and captured the Saudi oil tanker on Nov. 15.

On Tuesday, a Somali pirate spokesman said his group will release the Ukrainian ship and crew within the next two days after a ransom is paid.

Sugule Ali told The Associated Press by satellite phone on Tuesday that a ransom agreement had been reached, but would not say how much. The pirates had originally asked for $20 million when they hijacked the MV Faina.
"Once we receive this payment, we will also make sure that all our colleagues on ship reach land safely, then the release will take place," Ali said.

August 21, 2008

It's not all fun, food and foolin' around on cruise ships

Cruises are marketed as the perfect place for a holiday. Pampering and self-indulgence have been perfected, and whims and wishes are satisfied with minimum effort. In 2007, over 12 million Americans decided to travel on cruise ships; unfortunately most were clueless about their vulnerability to crime on the open seas.

Danger on the High Seas
From April through August 2007, the cruise line industry reported 207 suspected crimes, including 41 sexual assaults (of which 19 were alleged rapes). According to the law firm of Lipcon, Marguiles, & Alsina PA, there is criminal jurisdiction over sexual assaults and rapes on vessels; however, from a criminal law enforcement point of view, very little happens, leaving only civil actions for money damages as a means to obtain justice. The law firm determined that out of 174 complaints of sexual assault or rape on a major cruise line's vessels during a 4-year period, not one person had neither been prosecuted nor convicted.

Protect the Crime Scene
If we have learned nothing else from watching television shows like "Law and Order" and "CSI: Miami," we should know that after any crime, including sexual assault and rape, it is important to preserve the crime scene until law enforcement arrives. Crime scene investigators, wearing both gloves and booties are responsible for collecting names, addresses and telephone numbers of every possible witness and crewmember, and immediately taking their statements and photographs.

The victim should not be allowed to eat, drink, shower, bathe, brush their teeth or even use the toilet before a rape exam is completed by a physician. Blood samples from the victim should also be taken immediately, with a complete set of photos showing bruises, tears, and other injuries. Simultaneously, FBI notification is imperative and their instructions for processing the crime should be followed.

Crimes Onboard
Cruise ship crimes run the gamut from sexual assault of passengers by crewmembers to rapes by teenage group counselors. Women passengers have had "ruffies" in their drinks; underage "children" allowed into discos have been served alcoholic beverages and raped, while ship's nurses have been raped and assaulted by officers and medical staff.

Who Knew
Representative Carolyn Malloy (D-NY) finds that, "…cruise ship crime too often goes overlooked, and consumers don't have access to information that could help keep them safe on vacation."

Representative Ted Poe (R-TX) has determined that, "At this time, there is no oversight or accountability of safety and security of cruise ship passengers."

Representative Doris Matsui (D-CA) has asked for "increased transparency of reported crimes and increased oversight to cruise security standards… (so) that the public is aware of the potential for a crime to happen in the high seas."

Currently, cruise operators are required to work closely with local, state, federal and international authorities including law enforcement at all ports of call (including US Coast Guard, US Customs, Border Protection, FBI and Interpol) and every ship has a security officer on board to protect both passengers and crew. However, Congressman Christopher Shays (R-CT.) is frustrated by the current state of cruise line legislation. "This industry may be highly regulated by the State, Federal and international governments, but because all are involved, no one takes ownership."

George Smith IV's Death Brings About Change
During an investigation into the death of George Smith IV, who was lost at sea on his honeymoon onboard a Mediterranean cruise, Shays' office documented passenger stories that detailed missing family members who were never notified of the incident. To make matters worse, the cruise line personnel took the person's possessions, put them in a lost and found department and then sold them. They also heard first hand accounts of sexual assaults, robberies and the absence of reports to law enforcement.

Cruise Line Accurate Safety Statistics Act (CLASS Act)
In cooperation with Carolyn Maloney (D-NY), Congressman Christopher Shays is seeking to improve the process of reporting cruise ship crimes. Finding the industry basically "self-regulated" his office has worked with families of victims to develop a bill that will improve reporting of crimes involving Americans on board cruise ships, ensure these ships have capacity to investigate a criminal activity and make the information available to the public and potential cruse passengers.

Bree Smith, a member of the International Cruise Victims (ICV) organization, commenting on the Shays proposal determined that it is an important initial step in finally holding the cruise line operators accountable for the safety and security of their passengers.

The Cruise Line Accurate Safety Statistics Act requires:
-Cruise ship owners calling at a US port must report any crime, man overboard or missing person incident that happens onboard involving an American citizen to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) no later than four hours after the master of the cruise ship learns of the incident.

-Cruise organizations must submit a quarterly report of each crime, missing person or man overboard case which occurs on its vessel to the DHS, making the information available on the Internet

-DHS is to inspect each cruise ship that docks in the US to ensure that the ship has adequate equipment and trained personnel to investigate crimes

-The cruise company must refer potential cruise ticket buyers to the Internet site with crime statistics and provide the name of each country the ship is visiting and the location of the US embassy and consulate in each country

-Cruise ship owners are liable for up to $250,000 if they fail to report a crime, man overboard or missing person in accordance with the law, have inadequate equipment and trained personnel or do not provide a ticket buyer with the required information before completing the transaction.

-The Department of Homeland Security can deny entry of any cruise ship to an American port if the ship does not comply with the law or fails to pay the penalty.

Setting a Standard
Royal Caribbean has said it plans to refit cabin doors with peepholes (similar to hotel room requirements). They are also placing additional security guards on each ship, adding two experienced female investigators to its security team to oversee sexual assault investigations and contracted with private investigators with specialized training to respond to critical incidents onboard. This organization will also provide passengers with 24-hour telephone access to a sexual assault hot line. Under discussion is the development of an industry "blacklist database," so that cruise lines do not hire problem employees from other organizations.

When Shays' legislation is finally passed (it is already three years into the process) cruise consumers will be in a better position to make informed decisions. Once the risks are acknowledged precautions for "staying safe" can be implemented.

July 2, 2008

Cruise Ship Crime Sparks Demands for Law

By Joan Delaney
Epoch Times Victoria Staff

When Merrian Carver went missing on the second day of a Royal Caribbean cruise to Alaska in 2004, her family members say they weren't notified by the cruise line.

In fact Kendall Carver, the father of the 40-year-old woman from Massachusetts, says after his daughter's disappearance his family had to cope with a painful "cover-up" by cruise ship officials.

The incident went unreported to the FBI until weeks after the disappearance, and was only reported then because Carver contacted Royal Caribbean.

The cruise line, which had already disposed of most of Merrian's belongings, indicated to the FBI that nothing had happened on the cruise, says Carver, and refused to permit Carver to interview the steward who had looked after his daughter's cabin.

"We determined that we wanted to speak to one person (the steward) on board that ship, and to do that we had to hire an international detective agency, two law firms, take court action in two states and spend $75,000." It was only after a court-ordered deposition, Carver says, that "we found out they were lying to us the whole time" as the steward had in fact reported Merrian's disappearance. She has never been found.

Carver has since formed the International Cruise Victims Association to support victims and help bring about change in an industry that has been accused of being arrogant and uncaring toward victims of crimes perpetrated during a cruise.

It has been said that cruise ships are the perfect place to commit a crime. This is because international cruise lines operate under foreign "flags of convenience" and are not required under U.S. law to report crimes that occur outside of U.S. territorial waters.

Although cruise lines have agreed to voluntarily report crimes committed at sea to the FBI and the U.S. Coast Guard, this currently only applies to Americans.

NDP MP Denise Savoie and NDP Transport Critic Brian Masse want some protection in place for Canadians as well and are asking for a written commitment from Miami-based Cruise Line International Association (CLIA) to report all crimes committed against Canadian passengers and crew while on board international cruise ships.

"I'm asking why is the industry not reporting to Canadian authorities and why has our government not stepped up and demanded this," says Savoie, whose riding of Victoria will receive 211 international ship visits this year and an additional 10 "pocket-ship" visits.

Savoie's call coincides with a Senate hearing led by U.S. Senator John Kerry on the issue of crime on cruise ships. Last week, Kerry introduced legislation that would improve safety and accountability. Similar legislation has been introduced in the House of Congress.

The Senate hearing and also a series of Congressional hearings in recent years heard from victims of cruise ship crime and their families who felt abandoned and frustrated with what they said was a cavalier attitude and a lack of cooperation from the industry.

Critics and victims accuse cruise lines of attempting to conceal crimes while the only "punishment" meted out to crew members is to fire them. However, these workers are often able to get hired on another ship.

While most who take a cruise will never encounter any problems, victims of a crime may find that they're on their own.

Ross Klein, a professor of social work at Newfoundland's Memorial University, says that while the industry has agreed to report crimes to the FBI, the agreement has no teeth because it is done on a voluntary basis and there's no obligation to make the crimes public.

"Back in 1999 the cruise lines announced a zero tolerance policy but that certainly hasn't been the case in practice given the numbers of sexual assaults and other crimes," he says.

While the industry insists passengers are safer at sea than on land, Klein says his research shows that the rate for sexual assaults on cruise ships is about 57 per 100,000.

"That's about 80 to 90 per cent higher than the rate for forcible rape in the U.S. Particularly significant is that it is more than three times higher than what the industry claimed in their testimony before Congress in 2006."

Passengers as well as crew members can be both victims and perpetrators. Children have been sexually assaulted as well.

People disappear from cruise ships at the rate of about 20 per year, says Klein, some of which take place "under very mysterious circumstances."

"In some cases they are suicides, in some cases they are accidents, but certainly the majority of cases remain questionable in terms of how and why that person disappeared."

Klein, who testified at the Senate and Congressional hearings, has written extensively about the cruise industry and often appears as an expert witness on cruise ship crime. He has also joined in the call for Canadian regulations.

While requests for an interview with the CLIA were not granted, CLIA president Terry Dale told the Senate hearing that the industry's "care and compassion" in dealing with victims of crime has not always been satisfactory.

However, he said cruise lines "have made great strides in the past two years to improve our procedures to provide more support to those who have been injured or families that have been affected."

Dale also said that both the FBI and the U.S. Coast Guard have testified that the voluntary reporting system is working efficiently.

Some commentators believe the high number of sexual assaults during cruises is partially due to staff being separated from their wives or girlfriends for up to six months at a time and a party atmosphere on board where alcohol flows freely.

Miami-based Charles Lipcon, a maritime lawyer for 30 years, cites an additional reason.

"I believe that the number of sexual assaults on cruise ships is increasing quite a bit. I think the word is out among sexual predators that you can go on a ship and rape someone and nothing happens to you even if you're caught. So what kind of message is that?"

Date rape drugs are increasingly used in sexual assaults on cruise ships, says Lipcon, adding that in his experience the cruise lines first and foremost scramble to safeguard themselves rather than the victim in the event of a crime.

While the U.S. government has jurisdiction over crimes involving U.S. citizens and residents, Lipcon says investigations usually lead nowhere because in many cases law enforcement cannot board the ship until a few days after a crime is committed and evidence is often not properly preserved.

In an industry worth an estimated $35.7 billion, Carnival Cruise Lines, Royal Caribbean and Norwegian Cruise Lines account for about 94 per cent of the North American market.

The ships are registered in countries such as Liberia, Panama and Bermuda, and pay little if any corporate tax. Some ships carry up to 4,000 passengers.

As well as testifying at the hearings, Carver says he has had "feel-good meetings" with cruise industry officials several times who, he says, agree to make improvements but never do.

He hopes Kerry's bill will be passed, but given the lobbying power of the industry, he's not holding his breath.

"Last year they spent $2,800,000 in Washington lobbying — you're talking big money. We know we're in an uphill struggle but at least we're giving them a lot of heartburn."

June 22, 2008

Hearings on "Cruise Ship Safety: Examining Potential Steps for Keeping Americans Safe at Sea"

Testimony of Ross A. Klein, PhD, Before the Subcommittee on Surface Transportation and Merchant Marine Infrastructure, Safety, and Security Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation

Hearings on "Cruise Ship Safety: Examining Potential Steps for Keeping Americans Safe at Sea"
[PDF 420K]


June 8, 2008

Sailing in Troubled Waters


Brittany Oakley
English 12 Honors
2nd Block-Ms. Henderson


Can you imagine going on a cruise with your family and returning home without your brother or sister, because they have disappeared into thin air or become a victim of a tragic accident? This is a harsh reality for many families, who are left with no where to turn when they are victimized aboard a cruise ship. They turn to the cruise line for help, only to find later that the cruise line is more interested in protecting themselves and keeping their tragedy a secret. Between the years 2003 and 2006, two hundred and six crimes were reported aboard cruise ships, eighty six percent of which were sexual assaults. Although the number seems to be extremely low, the industry is only required to report incidents that result in serious physical injuries, and reporting is left up to the cruise line with no oversight (Lipcon 39-41).

In 1993, the General Accounting Office (GAO) concluded that the safety of United States (U.S.) citizens onboard cruise ships could be enhanced and recommended that the Coast Guard seek to improve the international regime of regulating cruise ships. The GAO emphasized that the growth of cruising and the increasing size of cruise ships has created a "serious potential for a high loss of life" ("GAO Urges Coast Guard to Improve Cruise Ship Safety" NP). During the years 2003 through 2006, twenty-eight cruise ship passengers were reported as missing, but it remains to be determined by U.S. lawmakers if these missing person cases were reported properly and investigated thoroughly ("Congress Questions Cruise Ship Safety and Security" NP). The International Cruise Victims Association (ICV) was formed early in 2006 by eight families with relatives who disappeared from cruise ships. A spokesman of the ICV stated in a congressional hearing, "The number of disappearances plus the number of sexual assaults is alarming. The only way they're going to change is by Congress regulating them" (Lipcon 4-5). The ICV is currently being successful at getting Congress to hear their positions, but lobbyist for the cruise lines continue to be very effective in convincing our lawmakers that the industry is concerned enough about the negative publicity to take care of passenger safety and security problems without the need for regulations (Klein, "Cruise Ship Squeeze" 195).

There are many personal tragedies aboard cruise ships, but most are unreported due to disclaimers or settled by payoffs in return for secrecy, and the real causes of these tragedies are never known. Consequently, Congress has not determined that the U.S. should place additional regulations on cruise ships that sail in and out of our ports in order to provide for the safety and security of our citizens. Any cruise ship that operates out of a U.S. port should be subjected to U.S. rules and regulations, and the safety and security of the passengers should be of paramount concern to the cruise line industry and the U.S. Government. However, numerous problems continue to exist within the industry.

The cruise lines do not call in authorities immediately, interfere with investigations, and seem to be more interested in avoiding negative publicity than punishing the guilty. Complaints of sexual assault are quietly settled with victims in return for their silence ("Victims of Crimes Urge Federal Regulations on Cruise Ships" NP). Industry lawyers are flown in to intimidate victims to sign confidentiality agreements. Threatening to subpoena schools records to raise questions in the community about the family or victim's character is a common technique used by the lawyers. In some cases, victims are given sedatives or liquor, so they will give an incoherent account of the incident. In most cases, the victim agrees to a settlement with the cruise line. (Lipcon 63-72) Janet Kelly, a business woman and cruise-crime victim was drugged and raped by a bartender aboard a cruise ship in 2000. The assailant continued to work on the same cruise ship for months before the FBI interviewed him and examined the evidence. Eventually, by filing a civil suit, she was able to successfully settle a lawsuit against the cruise line. Point in fact, the assailant was fired and rehired by another cruise line. Janet is one of the few that have been allowed to subsequently discuss their settlement, because she refused to be silenced ("Congress Questions Cruise Ship" NP).

Cruise ships are known for using certain tactics to avoid publicity and settle with underrepresented and injured passengers, and the captains are known to receive large bonuses for trips without complaints. A common practice is to delay reporting a crime by telling the victim that the FBI has been contacted, offering a cabin upgrade, or trying to get them off the ship. In many cases, the accused perpetrator is removed from the ship and sent home to a foreign country, where they cannot be tracked. Crewmen who commit or witness crimes are known to lie to avoid retaliation by the cruise line. Often crimes occur on the last day of a cruise, and the victim does not have time to report the complaint while onboard. Later, they find that complaints not filed while onboard are not entertained by the cruise line. In one case, a Massachusetts woman was assaulted by a cabin steward on the last day of her cruise as she was packing to leave. She didn't have time to report it, but told another passenger and dropped a note in the suggestion box. When she got home, she wrote a letter to the cruise line, but was told there was nothing they could do, because she did not report the crime while onboard (Lipcon 69).

Another known tactic to avoid publicity is sloppy investigations. Numerous problematic actions are completed by the cruise line's security personnel before the FBI is contacted: failure to adequately secure the crime scene, passengers who should be interviewed as witnesses are not, and passengers are interviewed without audio or videotape. In addition to the fact that the security guards are known for being inadequately trained, in some cases having only eight hours of training, the security guards completing crime investigations have limited ability to communicate in English, which limits their ability to communicate with the victim and possible witnesses (Lipcon 64-69).

The medical staff members aboard the cruise ships are not properly trained and do not have adequate test equipment to investigate crimes. Medical records are found to be incomplete. Rape test kits are not used on rape victims, and saliva tests are not used on rape suspects. The American Medical Association (AMA) called on Congress for federal legislation to establish minimum standards for medical care on all cruise ships, but Congress is dragging their feet and no legislation has been passed. In the case of Elizabeth Carlisle, she complained of abdominal and lower back pain. Without examining her, Dr. Mauro Neri diagnosed her with the flu and prescribed an antibiotic. Her condition worsened and when she arrived back in Michigan, it was discovered that she had a ruptured appendix and massive infection. The delay and misdiagnosis left her with lifelong problems. In another case, James Curtis was found unconscious in a restroom. When revived, he complained of stomach pain, so he was put on intravenous medication. His pains were caused by an abdominal rupture, which required a transfusion. Improper diagnosis delayed treatment and he died.

Many people die onboard cruise ships; undoubtedly, some could be prevented if the proper medical care were offered. A ship's medical care is equivalent to the care available at a walk-in clinic. However, emergencies are bound to occur on ships that require medical care equivalent to that provided by hospital emergency rooms. Margaret DiBari complained of chest pains and difficulty breathing. She was diagnosed with an upper respiratory infection. Later, she was hospitalized and died in intensive care after experiencing a second heart attack. In another case, Janice Hatch went to the ship infirmary to have her blood sugar checked. The doctor and nurse said it was extremely high and administered insulin. She went into insulin shock. Her husband used his wife's glucose meter to check her blood sugar, which indicated it was too low. Glucose was administered, but she was left permanently disoriented (Lipcon 86-88).

Cruise ships operate under the auspices of the International Maritime Organization (IMO) ("International Maritime Organization" NP). The IMO is an agent of the United Nations and represents 152 major maritime nations. While aiming at providing a safe and organized industry, it does not protect individual rights of U.S. citizens or guarantee any form of humane treatment for cruise ship employees ("International Maritime Organization" NP). The International Transport Workers' Federation (ITF) focuses on the rights of workers on all ships, and is actively engaged in a campaign to end the "flags of convenience" practice, a practice under which cruise ships can avoid U.S. taxes and regulations (Klein, "Cruise Ship Blues" 120-141). "Flags of Convenience" is a Maritime Law from the Roosevelt administration that was passed to protect U.S. ships during wartime, under which U.S. ships were allowed to register in other countries and by doing so, were less apt to be attacked. After the war, the law was not repealed, just like many laws that remain on the books forever. Cruise lines have found it to be a good means to avoid paying U.S. taxes and the restrictions associated with employees when subjected to U.S. regulations, and lobbyists for the industry have been successful in convincing Congress that it should not addressed.

Cruise ship employees are hired with promises of high paying jobs. They become disillusioned, angry and are vulnerable to take bribes or commit other criminal activity. Cruise ships are run like sweatshops with workers being underpaid, required to work long hours, and poorly treated (Lipcon 43). Some people believe that cruise ship employees are involved in "Trafficking in Women," a term used to describe taking women into captivity for the purpose of sexual exploitation, which is a criminal phenomenon in which cruise ship employees are paid to drug women and allow them to be taken by captors to other countries where the women end up in the sex trade.

Cruise lines are exempt from the U.S. laws that help provide for our safety and security. The ICV speaking for the families and friends of victims, joined Congressman Christopher Shays and Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney in June of 2006 when the Cruise Line Accurate Safety Statistic Act (CLASS) was introduced (Lipcon 53-61). In 2004, Kendall Carver did not return from a cruise, and the cruise line made no effort to notify the family or authorities ("Victims of Crimes Urge" NP). In August 2005, George Smith, IV disappeared from a cruise ship while on his honeymoon after a horrific thud was heard and blood was found on the overhang of the balcony below. The cruise ship provided no information or assistance. In another situation, Christopher Caldwell was thirty-eight years old when he disappeared from a Carnival Cruise Ship in July 2004. His sister, Shannon Nowlan testified about the lack of assistance and cooperation from the cruise line. She also conveyed that the cruise line showed no sympathy toward her brother's situation. In a similar manner, Amy Lynn Bradley was twenty-three years old when she disappeared from a Royal Caribbean Cruise Ship in 1998. Many sightings of Amy have been reported, but none have led to finding Amy. Amy's family is still searching for answers and closure (Lipcon 55-56). All of these cases have one thing in common, the poor assistance and cooperation they received from the cruise line, and the lack of laws to hold the cruise line responsible or accountable for their actions.

Laws governing cruise ship operations and the small print on cruise tickets are skewed in favor of the cruise lines, which make it virtually impossible for families to hold any of the cruise lines accountable or to be compensated for losses. (Lipcon 64-68) The cruise ticket entitles the passenger to three meals a day and travel, nothing else. Ira and Myrtle Leonard were robbed of jewelry valued at $6,774. It was not reported by the cruise line as a crime, because it was less than $10,000. A disclaimer on the ticket exempted Royal Caribbean of any responsibility, leaving the couple with a civil suit as the only alternative, which would not have been cost-effective. Unlike in most U.S. states that give two to four years to sue, passengers on ships must file a claim within six months and begin the lawsuit within one year to receive any compensation for physical injury. Also, the cruise lines can pick the location where victims can sue (Lipcon 28-29).

In spite of the numerous tragedies that occur aboard cruise ships, there are many counter-arguments that are used by lobbyists to support the status quo position. Richard Fain, the chairman of the International Council of Cruise Lines (ICCL) argues, "There is no question, the cruise line industry is safer and more environmentally friendly today than it was five years ago" ("Safety Officials, ICCL Pledge to Cooperate" NP). News of injuries and accidents are creating doubts about the safety of cruise vacations and are threatening the $15 billion industry. The industry's sales have slowed and discounts are up, particularly for Caribbean vacations ("Cruise Ship Incidents Hurting Industry" NP). It is in the best interest of the cruise lines to establish their own standards and avoid the negative publicity caused by injuries and accidents (International Council of Cruise Lines' Members to Set New Mandatory Safety and Environmental Standards" NP). Representative John Duncan insists, "If we over-regulate, it could make it so expensive that only wealthy people could take cruises" ("Victims of Crimes Urge" NP). Regulating cruise ships sailing from U.S. home ports would require the ship to be registered in the U.S., and would cause the cruise line to be taxed as any other U.S. business. In order to be able to pay the taxes and meet the requirements of increased regulations, the cruise lines would have to raise the price of a cruise ticket significantly (Klein, "Cruise Ship Blues" 140).

Alaska is one state that does not allow any cruise ship to enter its ports without complying with U.S. rules and regulations. No "flags of convenience" are allowed, and their cruise industry is thriving (Klein, "Cruise Ship Blues" 101-102). In 2006, Michael Crye, president of the ICCL, reported to Congress that cruise lines appear to have a relatively low crime rate when compared with many American communities, and the cruise industry is thirty times safer than American communities in general. Charles Lipcon, maritime lawyer for the victims, explained that cruise line reporting requirements allow only thefts over $10,000 to be reported, and a majority of sex crimes are never reported due to the lack of federal oversight. Lipcon also asserts, "The cruise lines are silently working against the victim." Cruise lines control the scene of the crime, the witnesses, and the evidence, all of which is filtered through their risk-management department ("Congress Questions Cruise Ship Safety and Security" NP).

The safety and security of cruise ship passengers can only be accomplished by subjecting any cruise ship that operates out of a U.S. port to U.S. rules and regulations. It is a concern for all cruise ship passengers, because they are unsafe when outside of U.S. laws. It is important to cruise line employees, because they are treated inhumanely and subjected to unfair labor practices when not protected by U.S. laws. As concerned citizens, average people can write letters to Congress Members, U.S. Coast Guard Officials, and politicians at any level of government ("Cruise Ship Incidents Hurting" NP). Television and other media can focus on the education of potential cruise ship passengers, by raising the public awareness of the safety and security hazards. Cruise ship passengers can take responsibility for their own safety and security by increasing their awareness and avoiding potentially hazardous situations. Individuals can unite with the ICV or other local organizations to lobby congress to do something about the lack of regulation regarding safety and security of passengers of cruise ships (Lipcon 88-91). Consumers and citizens need to ensure that cruise ships are held accountable for their actions ("Cruise Ship Incidents Hurting" NP).

Holding cruise lines accountable will require government intervention. Congress needs to pass H.R. 5707, "Cruise Line Accurate Safety Statistics (CLASS)" Act, which requires all disappearances of passengers be reported to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) within 4 hours. Under H.R. 5707, the cruise company must submit a quarterly report of each crime, missing person, or man overboard case to the DHS, where it will be posted on the Internet. The DHS will inspect each cruise ship that docks at a U.S. port to ensure adequate equipment and trained personnel to investigate crimes ("Victims of Crimes Urge" NP). Cruise companies must refer potential cruise ticket buyers to an Internet site with all cruise crime statistics, the name of each country the ship is visiting, and the location of the U.S. embassy and consulate in each country. U.S. Sea Marshalls, as proposed by the ICV at the 2006 hearing of the House subcommittee, should be on all cruise ships to provide for the safety and security of the passengers. These Sea Marshalls must have the credentials necessary to conduct a thorough and timely investigation of all reported crimes. Most importantly, our lawmakers need to repeal the outdated "Flags of Convenience" law and pass new laws that will hold cruise lines accountable for negligence and crimes committed by employees (Lipcon 81-83). "The message must be delivered to the cruise lines that if they take passengers from a United States port, they are responsible to return them safely or be held accountable if they commit crimes or acts of gross negligence" ("Victims of Crimes Urge" NP).

Once again, imagine going on a cruise and returning home without a family member, because they have disappeared into thin air or become a victim of a tragic accident. When this realization becomes clear, stand up and support U.S. government regulation of the cruise line industry.


Works Cited

Blum, Ernest. "Safety Officials, ICCL Pledge to Cooperate." Travel Weekly 60.23 19 Mar. 2001: 30. General Reference Center Gold. Gale. NC Wiseowl. Cedar Ridge High School Media Center, Hillsborough, NC. 10 Mar. 2008. .

"Congress Questions Cruise Ship Safety and Security." Access Control and Security Systems Integration (Online Exclusive) 6 Mar.2006. General Reference Center Gold. Gale. NC Wiseowl. Cedar Ridge High School Media Center, Hillsborough, NC. 10 Mar. 2008. .

Cruise Lines International Association. 2008. Cruise Lines International Association. 10 Mar. 2008. .

"Cruise Ship Consumer Fact Sheet." Jul. 1998. U.S. Coast Guard. .

"Cruise Ship Incidents Huring Industry." UPI News Track 30 Jul. 2006. General Reference Center Gold. Gale. NC Wiseowl. Cedar Ridge High School Media Center, Hillsborough, NC. 10 Mar. 2008. .

"GAO Urges Coast Guard to Improve Cruise Ship Safety". Travel Weekly 52.28 12 Apr. 1993: 80. General Reference Center Gold. Gale. NC Wiseowl. Cedar Ridge High School Media Center, Hillsborough, NC. 10 Mar. 2008. .

Gibson, William E. "Victims of Crimes Urge Federal Regulations on Cruise Ship Industry." South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Fort Lauderdale, FL) 7 Mar. 2006. General Reference Center Gold. Gale. NC Wiseowl. Cedar Ridge High School Media Center, Hillsborough, NC. 9 Mar. 2008. .

IMO Library Services. 14 Dec. 2007. International Maritime Organization. 10 Mar. 2008. .

"International Council of Cruise Lines Members to Set New Mandatory Safety and Environmental Standards." PR Newswire 5 Feb. 2001:

5349. Professional Custom Journals. Gale. NC Wiseowl. Cedar Ridge High School Media Center, Hillsborough, NC. 11 Mar. 2008. .

Klein, Ross A. Cruise Ship Blues: The Underside of the Cruise Industry. Gabriola Island, BC: New Society Publishers, 2002.

---. Cruise Ship Squeeze: The New Pirates of the Seven Seas. Gabriola Island, BC: New Society Publishers, 2005.

Lipcon, Charles R. Unsafe on the High Seas. Miami, FL: I. Adels, Inc., 2008.

April 5, 2007

Who do they think they are kidding?

FBI Executive to Join Royal Caribbean

WASHINGTON (AP) - Eleni Pryles Kalisch, assistant director of congressional affairs for the Federal Bureau of Investigation, is leaving the bureau for a similar position with Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd., the agency said Thursday.

Kalisch, 45, who began her FBI career in 1995 as assistant general counsel at headquarters and was named to her current position in August 2003, will join the world's second-largest cruise line in mid-May as its vice president of congressional affairs.

Kalisch "has been directly involved in every major issue facing the FBI over the past five years, and I have greatly relied on her skill and counsel," FBI Director Robert Mueller said in a release. "She will be sorely missed."

Representatives from Miami, Fla.-based Royal Caribbean did not immediately return calls for comment Thursday afternoon.

Shares of Royal Caribbean dipped 21 cents to $42.49 in afternoon trading on the New York Stock Exchange.

The Associated Press.

March 27, 2007

Congressional Hearing Requested by Congresswoman Matsui Exposes Cruise Industry’s Lax Responses to Crimes Committed Onboard its Ships

Washington, DC - Congresswoman Doris O. Matsui (CA-05) questioned cruise industry representatives and took testimony from Sacramento resident Laurie Dishman today during a hearing on cruise ship crimes before the Transportation and Infrastructure Subcommittee on the Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation. The Congresswoman requested the hearing after learning of how Ms. Dishman was sexually assaulted by a Royal Caribbean employee while on a cruise in February of 2006.

In her opening remarks, Congresswoman Matsui highlighted the dangerous and hazy legal status of cruise lines such as Royal Caribbean: “Cruises operate in a legal vacuum, where a lack of accountability empowers predators and obstructs their victims’ pursuit of justice.”

Continued Matsui: “This is an unacceptable situation, one made worse by the cruise lines’ own efforts to avoid scrutiny of, and accountability for, their own handling of the security of their passengers.”

During her appearance before the Subcommittee, Ms. Dishman recounted her disturbing and emotional struggle that stemmed from Royal Caribbean’s refusal to investigate how she was raped by one of the company’s “security guards.” Ms. Dishman’s assailant, in fact, had no security training at all. He was actually a janitor who was only performing security duties because Royal Caribbean did not have enough trained guards on board its ship.

In her opening remarks to the Subcommittee, Congresswoman Matsui focused on the cruise industry’s historic pattern of delay and obfuscation in investigating allegations such as Ms. Dishman’s. Said the Congresswoman: “There is no shortage of rape, sexual assault, alcohol-related abuse, or man-overboard cases on America’s cruise lines. This is alarming in and of itself. However, what is even more troubling is that most of these incidents are never fully resolved or prosecuted.

“My hope for this hearing is that the cruise lines finally take these crimes seriously and enact necessary reforms to protect innocent people like Laurie Dishman.”

Congresswoman Matsui’s remarks before the Subcommittee, as prepared for delivery:

I would first like to thank Chairman Cummings for calling this important hearing. Mr. Chairman, I appreciate your willingness to bring this issue before this Subcommittee and to conduct a thorough and fair hearing of crime on cruise ships.

I asked Chairman Cummings to hold this hearing because a young woman from my district came to me for assistance after she had been a victim of a violent crime on a cruise ship.

That young woman, Laurie Dishman, is here with us today.

Laurie shared her shocking story with me in a letter one year ago.

As a passenger on board the Vision of the Seas, a ship operated by Royal Caribbean, Inc., Laurie was raped by a crew member. The story of her ordeal on the ship was shocking enough. Unfortunately, I soon learned that was only the beginning.

Laurie wrote me to tell me she was having difficulty getting a response to her request for information about the incident from the cruise line. As I began looking into the matter, a number of red flags were raised regarding the handling of Laurie’s particular case.

Specifically, the FBI made a decision not to compel the alleged rapist to take a polygraph test. In addition, Royal Caribbean was withholding Laurie’s own medical information from her.

These examples beg the question: What is the process when a crime is committed on a cruise line, and what recourse do passengers have?

The more I have inquired, the more I have been alarmed that there is no shortage of cases of rape, sexual assaults of minors, alcohol-related fighting and abuse, and persons overboard.

Even more troubling, most of these incidents have not been fully resolved or prosecuted. The onion, it seems, has only more layers to peel back.

Laurie’s case was declined for prosecution under circumstances that strongly suggest federal authorities did not fully investigate her case. In addition, it appears that cruise industry representatives had coached the alleged rapist in his testimony.

I have since learned that there have been no convictions for rape cases on cruise lines in four decades. This is a statistic that takes on a new meaning through the lens of Laurie’s experience.

Cruise industry executives testified last year before the House Government Reform Committee that 66 cases of sexual assault were reported from Royal Caribbean between 2003 and 2005.

However, as a result of a civil lawsuit, Royal Caribbean was forced to turn over internal documents that showed that these numbers were actually much higher. Specifically, such cases had actually occurred 273 times over the three-year period in question.

I have also come to learn that many of the crimes that were not reported involved minors. It seems impossible that Royal Caribbean would not consider these crimes worthy of reporting.

This time around, I want to know whether the industry has accurately depicted the number of sex crimes on ships. We also must be told how the industry chooses to define these crimes.

The cruise industry claims that they are the safest form of transportation. Some industry representatives have even said that cruises are safer than being onshore. I find such claims to be dubious at best, because they ignore a critical issue: on land, citizens benefit from the security offered by a police force, and there are laws on the books governing people’s actions.

Not so on cruise lines. Americans who go on cruise ships for a family vacation have no idea they may be stepping into a situation in which United States law has little power, and where they may be victims of a crime without any opportunity for recourse.

Cruises operate in a legal vacuum, where a lack of accountability empowers predators and obstructs their victims’ pursuit of justice. This is an unacceptable situation, one made worse by the cruise lines’ own efforts to avoid scrutiny of, and accountability for, their own handling of the security of their passengers.

My hope for this hearing is that the cruise lines finally take these crimes seriously and enact necessary reforms.

I am certain that, after hearing from Laurie, you will come to the same conclusion I have: we must make sure something like this never happens again. I appreciate Laurie’s determination and I am very proud to be by her side in this effort.

I am confident that, as a result of this hearing, we will have a better understanding of what actions we must take to ensure the safety and security of the more than ten million Americans who travel on cruise ships.

Thank you, Mr. Chairman.

Before you go on a cruise, make sure you take the free Cruise SOS Card. The free wallet sized card has important phone numbers and instructions on what to do if you are the victim of a crime on a cruise ship.

January 28, 2007

Cruise ships' crime reporting examined

Cruise ships' crime reporting examined
WASHINGTON, Jan. 20 (UPI)

The U.S. Congress is looking into the cruise ship industry and how it handles crimes at sea.

Victims of shipboard crimes want lawmakers to regulate the industry and its response to crime, the Los Angeles Times reported Saturday.

Cruise ship companies say increased regulation isn't necessary.

"A person on a cruise is many times safer than a person on land in the United States," Royal Caribbean spokesman Michael Sheehan told the Times.

But the newspaper reported there is little consensus on what to do about crime in international waters, and industry critics say cruise ships don't adequately report shipboard crimes to authorities in U.S. ports.

Industry executives told a House subcommittee that from 2003 to 2005, 178 passengers on North American cruises reported being sexually assaulted, 24 people went missing and four others were robbed, the Times said. Royal Caribbean Cruises accounted for 66 of the 178 reports of sexual assaults.

Documents obtained by the Times said at least 273 people told Royal Caribbean they had been the victims of sexual assault, battery, harassment and inappropriate touching during an even shorter time period. Royal Caribbean said it only testified about the most serious reports.


Our maritime lawyers uncovered the following facts during the handling of some cruise ship rape cases:

1) A major cruise lines combined fleet has approximately 2 reports of sexual assaults or rapes per hundred thousand passengers. Statistically it should be kept in mind that these passengers are not on the vessel but for a short period of time, which makes comparison of these statistics to shore side sexual assaults and rapes difficult.

2) A major cruise lines had reports of 99 sexual assaults or rapes in a five year period.

3) Another major cruise lines had reports of 173 sexual assaults or rapes in a five year period. None of the 173 sexual assault or rape reports resulted in a single prosecution which is why it is so important to get help.

4) Yet another major cruise line has reports of having 2 rapes or sexual assaults per month on each of it's ships.

5) One cruise line has a risk management team dedicated to handling only rape and sexual assault claims. They have a full-time staff just for cruise rapes and sexual assaults. One has to wonder why the security department does not handle rape and sexual assault situations, but rather a risk management team.

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.
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....

March 15, 2006

Carnival Cruise Lines President calls disappearance of honeymooner George Smith a "non-event"!

Carnival Cruise Lines President Robert Dickinson called the disappearance at sea of honeymooning cruise passenger George Smith IV "a non-event." The article published today in Florida Today discusses how cruise executives feel the concerns regarding crimes on cruise ships are overblown.

We are frankly shocked to hear the disappearance of a cruise passenger referred to as a "non-event"!

The cruise ship crime article discusses the opinion of one of firm's our maritime attorneys.

Continue reading "Carnival Cruise Lines President calls disappearance of honeymooner George Smith a "non-event"!" »

February 27, 2006

Cruise Ship Crimes- Statistics Vary

Crimes on cruise ships is the topic of a recent New York Times article. The article starts off with news of a passenger having over $32,000 in jewels stolen, and she can't get an answer from the cruise line what happened to them. The questions is asked if cruise ships are as safe as being on land or not? The statistics released in the article vary from ICCL statistics, to FBI statistics to statistics that our law firm is aware of through deposition during some cruise ship crime cases we have handled.

Continue reading "Cruise Ship Crimes- Statistics Vary" »

February 10, 2006

Cruise Ship Safety Recommendations

Joseph A Kinney, a leading security and safety expert, has published a report on cruise ship safety issues for Congressman Shays. The report which is titled "The Slippery Slope of Security in the Cruise Industry" makes several recommendations that cruise lines could adopt to increase safety aboard its ships.

We have posted the entire report for you to download here , or you can continue reading this post for the report in its entirety.

Continue reading "Cruise Ship Safety Recommendations" »

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

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

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.

November 12, 2005

Rape & Sexual Assault on Cruise Ships

Rapes are much more common that you would think on cruise ships. On one news show covering this topic (I think it was A Current Affair), stated that cruise ships are just big parties/ drink-fests which is partly to blame for so many rapes occuring on ships. Things like "ruffies" (a.k.a. the date rape drug) are put into girls drinks to get them wasted, something you wouldn't really think to have to worry about when departing on your dream cruise.

Most people depart with family or friends on their cruise vacation not even giving safety a though. There's a false sense of security when you are on a cruise, you think nothing can happen because the perpetrator would have no where to run. Actually, its really the opposite....crimes aboard cruise ships are hardly, if ever, prosecuted. Lipcon, Margulies & Alsina, P.A. discovered that one cruise line had 173 incidents of sexual assault or rape in a 5 year period, and not a single one resulted in a prosecution.

So the questions that come to mind are:
- What can the cruising industry do to make cruise ships safer?
- What can you do while on board a ship to ensure the safety of yourself, your family and/or your friends?
- When these horrible incidents do happen, how come nothing is done about it?

More information on cruise ship rapes can be found on the following sites:

CruiseRape.com: web site created by a cruise ship rape victim named April. There's her whole story as well as a video of her interview on A Current Affair.

http://www.lipcon.com/news_tv.shtml: several clips from Television shows including A Current Affair, CourtTV, MSNBC, Fox News, the O'Reilley Factor and more

We are interested in hearing all of your comments and experiences, if any, on cruise ship crimes and safety so let us know what you think and if you're going on a cruise STAY SAFE!

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.

August 20, 2005

Charles Lipcon on A Current Affair

Charles Lipcon has been featured on 6 episodes of A Current Affair. The episodes aired between July 16 and August 19, 2005.

The disappearance of cruise passenger George Smith & cruise ship crimes including rape and sexual assaults on cruise ships were covered. Charles Lipcon believes that it's "open season on the high seas" and has his own ideas about what might have happened to George Smith. Lipcon has handled similar cases, so listen to the clips from A Current Affair to learn more.