California Boat Fire

Thirty-three people agreed to spend what promised to be a glorious Labor Day weekend boarded the Conception, a 75-foot boat that offered a scuba diver’s dream: unlimited diving among colorful underwater sea life, with sterling meals served between dives.

But on the last part of the three-day trip,the ship caught fire off California’s Santa Cruz Island. At least 20 people died, Santa Barbara County Sheriff Bill Brown.

A day after Monday’s incident, about 14 people are still missing.

“This is probably the worst-case scenario you can possibly have. You have a vessel that’s on the open sea, that is in the middle of the night. I mean, it’s 3:30 in the morning.” Brown said at a press conference.

Of the 39 people on board — 33 passengers and six crew members — only five people have been found alive and they are all crew members.

The boat was about 20 miles off the coast of mainland California when it caught fire.

Questions raised about why the boat caught fire, and whether lives could have been saved.

A mayday call reveals the tension between a Coast Guard dispatcher and the Conception’s captain. But only the dispatcher’s words could be heard.

The captain evidently reports a fire and provides a location. The dispatcher is heard saying, “And there’s 33 people on board the vessel that’s on fire, they can’t get off? … Roger, are they locked inside the boat? … Roger, can you get back on board and unlock the boat, unlock the door so they can get off? … Roger, you don’t have any firefighting gear at all? No fire extinguishers or anything?”

Later in the conversation, the dispatcher asks, “Was that all the crew that jumped off? … Roger, is the vessel fully engulfed right now … Roger, and there’s no escape hatch for any of the people on board?”

At one point, the caller says, “I can’t breathe.”

Ventura County firefighters were able to reach the boat within 15 minutes, the fire department said.

But by then, it was inundated with flames.

Firefighters struggled to extinguish the fire because each time it was tackled out, flames flared back up – may be because of the fuel on board, the Coast Guard’s Aaron Bemis said.

., the ship began to sink in 64 feet of water by 7:20 a.m. The boat had burned down to the water line, Santa Barbara County fire spokesman Mike Eliason said.

Many of the passengers were below deck, most likely sound asleep when the fire broke out, authorities said.

None of the people who were on board have been identified.

The company that operates the Conception, Truth Aquatics, declined to comment to CNN.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Subscribe To Our Newsletter