Thursday, September 12, 2024

Video shows moments before superyacht went down in storm off coast of Sicily

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Newly released video captures a luxury superyacht being battered by a violent storm before it suddenly sank off the coast of Sicily with 22 people aboard Monday.

The grainy images obtained by NBC News and other outlets were recorded on closed-circuit television not far from where the Bayesian was anchored, about a half-mile from the port of Porticello, on Sicily’s northern coast.

The yacht’s 250-foot mast, illuminated with lights and lashed by the storm, appears to be bending to one side before it finally disappears and is replaced by darkness.

The speed with which a yacht built to handle the roughest seas capsized stunned maritime experts.  

“I can’t remember the last time I read about a vessel going down quickly like that, you know, completely capsizing and going down that quickly, a vessel of that nature, a yacht of that size,” said Captain Stephen Richter of SAR Marine Consulting Inc.

British tech tycoon Mike Lynch and five of the 21 other people who were aboard the 184-foot vessel remain unaccounted for and are believed to be trapped in the Bayesian’s hull, nearly 170 feet underwater.

Officials on Monday confirmed that at least one person, the ship’s cook, had died.  

Bayesian, left, and Sir Robert Baden Powell at anchor off the Sicilian village of Porticello near Palermo, Italy, on Sunday. Fabio La Bianca / Baia Santa Nicolicchia via AP

Superyachts like the Bayesian, which had been available for charters at a rate of  $215,000-a-week, are designed to stay afloat even as they are taking on water to give the people aboard a chance to escape, Richter said. 

“Boats of this size, they’re taking passengers on an excursion or a holiday,” Richter said. “They are not going to put them in situations where it may be dangerous or it may be uncomfortable, so this storm that popped up was obviously an anomaly. These vessels that carry passengers, they’re typically very well-maintained, very well-appointed.”

Built by Italian shipbuilder Perini Navi in 2008, the U.K.-registered, Bayesian could carry 12 guests and a crew of up to 10, according to online specialist yacht sites. Its nearly 250-foot mast is the tallest aluminum sailing mast in the world, according to CharterWorld Luxury Yacht Charters. 

On Tuesday, Italian rescue workers resumed the search for Lynch and the five other passengers still missing: Lynch’s 18-year-old daughter Hannah, Morgan Stanley International Chairman Jonathan Bloomer and his wife, as well as Clifford Chance lawyer Chris Morvillo and his wife.

“The fear is that the bodies got trapped inside the vessel,” Salvatore Cocina, head of civil protection in Sicily, told Reuters.

The Bayesian is owned by a firm linked to Lynch’s wife, Angela Bacares, who was one of the 15 people rescued Monday after the vessel suddenly capsized.

Divers of the Vigili del Fuoco, the Italian Corps. of Firefighters, near Palermo
Divers of the Vigili del Fuoco, the Italian Corps. of Firefighters, near Palermo on Friday.Alberto Pizzoli / AFP – Getty Images

“It’s extremely rare for a boat of this size to sink,” Richter said.

What’s not rare is the kind of storm that sank the vessel, said Simon Boxall, senior lecturer in oceanography at Britain’s University of Southampton.

“People assume the Mediterranean is this rather calm and passive place that never gets storms and always blue skies,” Boxall said. “In fact, you get some quite horrendous storms that are not uncommon at this time of year.”

The president of Italy’s meteorological society has said that Monday’s violent storm may have involved a waterspout, essentially a tornado over water, or a downburst, which occur more frequently but don’t involve the rotation of the air.

Luca Mercalli, the Italian climatologist, also said that recent temperatures may have been a factor. 

“The sea surface temperature around Sicily was around 30 degrees Celsius (86 Fahrenheit), which is almost 3 degrees more than normal,” Mercalli said. “This creates an enormous source of energy that contributes to these storms.”

The Mediterranean sailing vacation was designed to be a celebration for Lynch, who two months ago was acquitted by a San Francisco jury of fraud charges stemming from the 2011 sale of his software company Autonomy to Hewlett-Packard for $11 billion.

Prosecutors alleged that Lynch, dubbed “Britain’s Bill Gates,” and Autonomy’s finance executive Stephen Chamberlain had padded the firm’s finances ahead of the sale. Lynch’s lawyers argued that HP was so eager to acquire Autonomy that it failed to adequately check the books.

Lynch had taken Morvill, who was one of his defense attorneys, on the luxury trip. 

Chamberlain was not on the Bayesian.

In what appears to be a tragic coincidence, Chamberlain was struck and killed Saturday by a car while he was jogging in a village about 68 miles north of London, local police said.

“Steve fought successfully to clear his good name at trial earlier this year, and his good name now lives on through his wonderful family,” Chamberlain’s lawyer, Gary Lincenberg, said in a statement.

Henry Austin reported from London, and Corky Siemaszko reported from New York City.

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