Suddenly Submerged: The Loss of FV Emmy Rose

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On the morning of Monday November 23rd,  2020... At about 01:30 Eastern Standard Time...  The Fishing Vessel Emmy Rose sank roughly 20 miles  off the Massachusetts coast near Provincetown   with no reported distress calls or  signs of trouble received from the crew. As of the making of this video, the  NTSB and US Coast Guard's investigation   into the vessel's demise, is still ongoing. This  will be an in-depth look at the rescue efforts,   the vessel's history and much of  the authorities findings so far... As always... all sources, references and  featured media... are linked in description. At 1:29 AM, Monday November 23rd a transmission  was received from an Emergency Position Indicating   Radio Beacon or EPIRB. Every EPIRB transmits a  signal unique to its respective entity or vessel.   Vessel mounted EPIRBs are designed  as a last resort distress call.   Triggered only once submerged, they float to the  surface and begin transmitting pertinent data like   coordinates and vessel identifiers. This  information is received via Satellite   and forwarded to rescue coordinating personnel. Based on US Coast Guard reports, their Boston  Sector location would head up search and   rescue efforts, dispatching an Air Station  Cape Cod based MH-60 Jayhawk helicopter.   First on scene approximately an hour and  a half after the EPIRB pinged initially...   followed shortly thereafter by... A Coast Guard 47 Foot Motor   Life Boat out of Station Provincetown Along with Cutters Vigorous and Key Largo Atlantic Waters in this area around  50 degrees or less in November. ...all units on scene, searching  throughout the night. An empty life raft,   debris patch and the EPIRB were the only  findings upon arrival. The conditions,   at the time of initial search, were reported to  be 30 knot winds with up to 8 foot high seas.   Challenging, but not considered  extreme for this area of the Atlantic. At first light Monday morning, a Coast  Guard HC-144 would be dispatched,   helping to widen the search area. Efforts  would continue through Tuesday November 24. After 38 hours covering approximately 2,066 square  miles... nothing more than the initial findings;   the empty liferaft, debris patch and  EPIRB... would be found on the surface.  Coast Guard command would suspend the search  by roughly 5:45pm Tuesday November 24th. All 4 souls aboard were lost... The vessel would remain undiscovered until May of  2021 when the NTSB and US Coast Guard collaborated   with MIND Technology, Stellwagen Bank National  Marine Sanctuary and NOAA. At this point the team   was only using side scan sonar, just confirming  its location. Viewed from above, the Emmy Rose   would be seen for the first time in 6 months. A clear picture of the fishing vessel sitting   upright on the seafloor, outriggers still  extended, at a depth of about 800 ft. This would of course confirm the  vessel had sunk but more importantly,   its location did coincide with where the  automated distress signal originated...  These images would provide little to no insight  though, as to why this tragedy took place. 4 Months later, in September of 2021,  investigators teamed up once again.   This time with the assistance of a remotely  operated vehicle from Woods Hole Oceanographic   Institution and the National Science Foundation. Deployed from Cutter Sycamore, these images   from the ROV are all that's been published by  authorities thus far. So it's unclear whether   any images gathered from the September excursion  provided clarity into the vessel's unusual demise. In the meantime, throughout the remainder of  2020 and even as recently as September 2021,   multiple interviews have been  conducted by the NTSB and Coast Guard   in an effort to determine cause and  potential safety recommendations. Although it can provide little in the way  of actual closure, some of the interviews   were pretty eye opening as I read through the  transcripts. The way the Emmy Rose was handled,   according to interviewees who, to their credit,  despite such a difficult situation, were very   forthcoming... This painted a picture that was  at least enough to, so far, create all these   recommendations you see here. The recommendations  and interviews we will cover in this video... However, The Emmy Rose didn't start its life as  a groundfish net dragger... the booming shrimp   industry, in the 1970s and 80s brought about  the production of outrigger shrimp boats in   staggering numbers, to keep up with market demand. The Emmy Rose was, originally, one such vessel,   purpose built for shrimp trawling, completed in  1987 by Tommy Nguyen Shipyard out of New Iberia,   Louisiana. From the records I've found, going by  the original name of; Miss Elizabeth the third.  The vessel would change hands and go  by several other names after that;  In '94 changed to Miss Monica In '95 changed to Virgin Steel  '98 Changed to Captain Huey Then, in 2001 renamed to Sasha   Lee When it was purchased by  the now infamous, Carlos Rafael   and moved to New England, for the new purpose  it would serve throughout the next 15+ years... This wasn't unique to the Sasha Lee though. Shrimp  trawling comes with some of the highest by-catch   rates in commercial fishing, meaning, the style  and method of netting used, hauls in multiple   other, unwanted species that aren't shrimp,  chief among them; Sea Turtles. And by-catch   species in any form of commercial fishing, aren't  always just simply thrown back, unaffected.  With regulations clamping down  on Gulf Coast shrimp trawling,   toward the late '90s and turn of the century. With shrimp farming starting to contribute   significantly to the US shrimp  supply around the same time...  There was understandably a glut of Shrimp  trawlers, becoming available on the market,   looking for new homes. Groundfishing in New England waters, has been  an industry staple for hundreds of years...  Cod, Haddock, Yellowtail, Pollock ...to name a few. However, commercially fishing for groundfish  requires a different method of net dragging   compared to Shrimp trawling on the gulf coast.  The New Bedford and Gloucester commercial fleets,   2 major hubs for groundfishing, are partly  comprised of large numbers of former shrimp boats,   purchased and brought up from the gulf. Many of the boats tend to be more flat bottomed  than the purpose built trawlers of the Northeast.   In addition, Shrimp & Prawn trawling uses  what are known as outriggers. These long,   heavy booms are used exclusively for dragging  dual nets along the bottom, but important to note,   ARE NOT used in the style of net dragging  that's most popular off the New England coast. Instead, for groundfish applications, the  former shrimp boats are heavily modified with   ramps & net spools on the stern. And sometimes  additional booms are added, pointing sternward.   The nets dragged directly aft of the vessel  in either dual or single configurations.  These methods do not utilize these heavy  port & starboard outrigging booms...   as you'll see in the transcripts of  several interviews, the outriggers   tend to become more of a liability,  in these repurposed shrimp boats. The notorious Carlos Rafael, known locally as "The  Codfather". According to several media outlets;   In 2017, The New Bedford fleet owner was  convicted on multiple charges of conspiracy,   false labeling of fish, bulk cash  smuggling with the assistance   of a local Sheriff's deputy, tax  evasion and falsifying federal records. In addition to Rafael's nearly 4 year jail  sentence, he was also ordered to pay $3m   in civil claims, and give up all involvement  in commercial fishing -permanently. Rafael was reportedly caught, when  baited by agents posing as quote   "Wealthy Russian Businessmen seeking to launder  large sums of money through his companies." He was also ordered to forfeit at least 13 vessels   from his fleet that prosecutors  say were directly involved in his;   "long-running scam of lying about the value and  species of the fish he landed." Vessels Like...  "My Way" "Athena"  The "Sasha Lee" Amongst Others... The Sasha Lee, having been in New England  for more than 15 years by that point.   In the years surrounding this though, the Sasha  Lee would have its own share of incidents,   although not completely uncommon  amongst fishing vessels in the area...  -In September 2010: The fishing boat  experienced a total loss of propulsion at sea   when the propeller shaft sheared. No one  was injured and the vessel was towed back   to port safely. This resulted in  an estimated $55,000 in damages. In January of 2016: The Sasha Lee  would report flooding in the fish hold   due to water ingress from the propeller shaft.  The shaft had been inspected just 2 days prior   after becoming entangled and fouled by stray  line that wrapped around the shaft and prop.  This line was removed but unbeknownst to the  crew, the incident had caused further, unseen   damage to the shaft, causing it to eventually  lose its water tight seal while out to sea.  The US Coast Guard and Good Samaritan  vessel, "Triunfo" would respond in time   to aid the Sasha Lee. The Coast Guard providing  two auxilliary pumps to help contain the flooding   and once the shaft was secured  enough to mitigate water ingress,   the Fishing Vessel Triunfo then  provided the tow back into port.  No injuries were reported and this resulted  in an estimated $20,000 in damages. In Novemember of 2018: The Sasha Lee was  escorting fellow fleet vessel "My Way"   to Newport News in Virginia. The Sasha Lee  experienced a sudden loss of hydraulic fluid   which subsequently damaged its clutch plates.  This prevented the vessel from going into   forward or reverse, a loss of propulsion at sea. The My Way would end up towing the Sasha Lee   to port safely, with no injuries reported. The Coast Guard later determining this   loss of hydraulic pressure was  due to a lack of maintenance. Purhcased in New Bedford when many Carlos  boats finally went up for sale all at once,   the Sasha Lee would change  ownership in May of 2020.   Owner; Boat Aaron and Melissa, Inc. would  rename the Sasha Lee to "Emmy Rose". It can not be over stated just how bizarre the  circumstances of this vessel's total loss were;  With no record of any distress calls No victims, survival suits or   life preservers found No communications out of   the ordinary in the afternoon, evening or as  the events unfolded to or from any of the crew The interviews also revealed that,   vessels like the Emmy Rose were known  to routinely stay in contact with;  Loved ones on shore Managers, Owners, Shore Based Support  But most crucially, fishing vessels maintaining  contact with each other when out to sea,   especially when fishing the same general  area. It's a tight knit community out there   and they never hesitate to contact each  other when it comes to collision avoidance,   vessel issues or even just idle chatter. They  aren't in some sort of fierce competition with   one another where they avoid contact, in  fact, it tends to be the total opposite. Now, again, just to make one more point  clear... information in this video is *NOT*   meant to imply what was actually  causal, in the loss of Emmy Rose.   This is just what I've researched and  substantiated in the vessel's history,   what investigators have gathered thus far and also  provides insight on (at least to me personally) a   very intriguing investigation process. Made even  more interesting when there is so little to go on,   with the root cause sitting there,  metaphorically, just out of reach. When fishing vessel Aaron and  Melissa the second sank in 2018,   70 miles southeast off the coast of  Portland, Maine... another boat owned by   Aaron and Melissa Inc. and perhaps worthy of  a video on its own, the vessel had encountered   heavy weather after struggling with  water ingress throughout the night.  According to authorities; Wind gusts up  to 50 knots and seas up to 20 feet high.  From the time of unrecoverable list, to  completely underwater, was about a 3 hour window.   Despite some of the crew having worked to the  point of exhaustion in the days leading up,   fatique that can happen all too often in the  industry. They were all able to don life suits,   call the coast guard AND inform their port  engineer of the situation so that their on-shore   support could help maintain contact with the coast  guard once the vessel was completely submerged.  All 4 crew were rescued successfully  when the Coast Guard's helicopter   arrived roughly 2 hours after the distress  call, recovering them from their life raft. Of all the quote "Carlos  Boats" lined up to choose from,   the parties who purchased the soon  to be "Emmy Rose" in May of 2020... Upon seeing the Sasha Lee... The Future Emmy Rose Engineer stating: "the engine was in pretty good shape,   actually, which I was surprised,   because the boat was a Carlos boat that came from New Bedford, and the engine wasn't in bad shape." When asked by investigators what drew  him to the Sasha Lee in the line up,   The Emmy Rose Manager Stating: "The steel was in good shape on it, had a   history of being a very good boat by the previous  owners and just it was an all-around good boat.  There was a whole bunch of boats for  sale, but not all good ones, you know?  Just a very comfortable sea boat She was just well laid out,   plenty of power, plenty of on-deck  power for winches and what not" The Emmy Rose Owner Stating:  "The only thing about the Emmy Rose that I saw  was it needed a good paint job and that was it. When investigators asked: "So nothing  structurally that caused any concern?"  "No, not at all." Was the owner's reply. However, it must be pointed out. In addition  to the modifications from outrigger trawling   to stern net trawling... when the vessel entered  the "Carlos" fleet, like many other vessels of its   type in New Bedford, the Sasha Lee also received  these massive steel bulwarks that raised the   gunwale 4-6 feet. Somewhat common amongst these  fishing boats in New England the additional   bulwark is meant to provide more protection from  the elements... for workers on the Main Deck. A former Emmy Rose deckhand telling authorities: "I think that the boats aren't that stable. Carlos   had added a lot of extra steel up around  the rails and stuff on them, which is what   weights them down a lot. They carry way too  much fuel, which makes them heavy as it is.  The storm wall from behind the wheelhouse back  like almost to where the door comes up, you know,   like 6 feet tall, that was all add-on. Up  around the bow, it was like a whole extra,   you know, 4 to 6 feet of rail added  up around the whole bow of the boat.   And then he had a bunch of extra  rigging added up on top, you know,   like a real big mast and stuff. So, yeah,  the boats had a lot of extra weight on." The Sasha Lee received a stability test around  2001 or'02 since those were the approximate   years the conversion was made. The Naval  Architect that performed the tests stating:  "...Obviously the outriggers in the  shrimping fleet are used for the nets,   and I try to explain to the guys, you know,  outriggers do not add to the stability of   a fishing boat; they detract from  the stability of a fishing boat.  What they do is they -- because they're away  aloft, they are ride controlled; they're like   a shock absorber. So you've got the outrigger  lowered and the bird in the water, ...the sole   purpose is to slow the roll of the boat, to make  the boat more comfortable and more workable. And these boats ...when they're in the Gulf,  they're just -- they have a bulwark that runs   from bow to stern, and what the guys up here do  is they build that bulwark up. So, if you look   at the Sasha Lee and Emmy Rose, ...the walk space  between the house and the side is enclosed to the   deck house. But all of these are standard features  you would see on a boat that was converted over." He'd go on to say, regarding the Outriggers: "Typically, they don't pass stability if  they're up, so it's ...pretty standard   that we put that in our stability booklets. You'll find that most of our stability booklets   will say that they've got to lower those things  [the outriggers]. You've got something [like] 30,   40 feet in the air...so you take the center of  gravity ...that's 40 feet above the baseline   of the boat that weighs about a ton and a half. They do not enhance the stability of the boat.   They are just there as shock absorbers. They just  make the boat roll less when they're deployed.  ...These Gulf Coasters, are very  flat-bottom, hard-chine boats,   so it has good initial stability. ...The  outriggers ...make the boat workable, and   it's gotten to the point where it's so ingrained  in these guys, they just -- everybody's got them." When asked about weight creep by investigators or  weight slowly added over time due to more subtle   modifications that can still affect stability,  investigators showing photos of the boat's   evolution over time after becoming the Sasha  Lee and Emmy Rose. The Naval Architect stated:  "Comparing the boat to when it happened ...the net  reels ...the diameter has been increased pretty   dramatically, and she's gotten a second  boom. Those are the things that I can   see just from the pictures. If you look at the pictures,   it looks like they may have added as much as  4 feet to the diameter, which means they're   carrying bigger gear. Again ...just looking  at the photographs, that jumps out at us." Expanding on the matter of stability,  investigators also questioned the method of   fuel usage from saddle tanks on either side of  the vessel. In these types of fishing vessels,   "they're not using all the fuel that pulls  into the engine"... the unused excess fuel gets   pumped back into whichever tank the captain has  chosen in a process nicknamed "burn and return".  Now, I've been unable to determine what, if any,   other fuel oil tanks the Emmy Rose had  beyond those shown in the Sasha Lee   stability reports from back in '02... which  shows only these two large saddle tanks.  To burn and return from one side of the vessel,  to the other, requires frequent stability   management as the center of gravity shifts. This  is exacerbated by the amount of fish in the holds,   the ice used to keep the fish cool, saltwater  ballast, dirty oil, weather conditions,   the vessel's current activity or  maneuvering requirements and so on. A 3rd party condition and value survey was  conducted in New Bedford in August of 2019 where   the Sasha Lee was hauled out and valuated. The  survey published by investigators, unfortunately,   contains only pictures, timestamps and  brief descriptions. It does not go into   detail about what surveyors thought of  conditions or the value they determined. The Most recent safety inspection was  July of 2020 with the Marine Safety   Inspector checking out Immersion Suits,  Extinguishers, Flares, the Life Raft   and other more subtle items like EPIRB  batteries, safety sticker placement...   routine stuff. The Emmy Rose  ultimately passing inspection. By most interview accounts available, and from  much of what I can find, the Emmy Rose's Captain   was a competent, respected and very experienced  ship's master, fisherman and engineer. He knew   all of his boat's systems very well and would  insist on performing any maintenance needed   himself, whenever they were at sea. The boat also had, for the most part,   the same crew ever since its purchase  in May of 2020. Deckhand # 2 and the   captain had known each other and fished  commercially, together, for years prior.  The crew also regarded as highly competent  and experienced fishermen and mariners.  That fateful night, November 23rd; The captain  reportedly had plans to unload the catch in   Gloucester and then make preparations to  head right back out for a few more days.  All 4 aboard reportedly got along very well  and were not upset to be working a schedule   that had them heading right back out to fish,  potentially, through the upcoming holiday.   Interviewees stating those on board  would not have felt obligated to remain,   if they needed to disembark for the holiday. The crew got along well, but just like  any other commerical fishing operation,   it wasn't *always* smooth sailing... A former (fill-in) deckhand, who was rather  forthcoming about his most recent journey,   (roughly August or September 2020) aboard the  Emmy Rose... did have the following to say   (and keep in mind, this seasoned deckhand  was only aboard to fill in temporarily.   By his own admission, is also captain of  Emmy Rose's sister ship, the Allagash); "We was on our way in [back to port]  and we started transferring fuel,   which I didn't know about. I was down in the  hole with the green guy showing him what to do.   There was another guy at the wheel. And I  noticed the boat started listing pretty bad,   so I decided to come up out of the hole, but  when I did, I stepped into waist-deep water.   And, you know, I wasn't very happy about it.  ...Obviously I went straight to the wheelhouse.   There's a guy standing up there watching TV.  And, you know, I keep thinking about this   ...as to how the boat could have sank and  ...had I not I come up out of the hole that   night when I did, another 10 minutes,  she'd have rolled right over. And that   was with somebody awake at the wheel. ...It definitely was not a fun scene." The Investigators Asked; "So ...you said as you  came up ...who was conducting the fuel transfer?" The Deckhand Replied; "[The Captain] was at the time, but he went to his   bunk as he was transferring fuel. I have no idea  why. He went and laid down and fell asleep. And,   you know, I come up out of the hole, waist-deep  water. I go over, try to get the scuppers open.   All the gear is (indiscernible) out of the side,  the side ...all the (indiscernible) on deck. And   I immediately go up to [another deckhand],  and I was like ...what's going on here?  He's like, what do you mean? I'm like, what do  I mean? I said, we're half sunk is what I mean.   You know, why haven't you got [The Captain] up  yet? Oh, well, well, it ain't my job; you go.   And so I went and woke B [The Captain] up.  And the second I woke him up, you know,   he knew what he had done and he went down  and started transferring it back across.   ...And it was pretty flat calm the night  this happened to me. Now had there been   a 10-foot sea rolling across that rail  that night, it wouldn't have been good." He went on to say; "I run the Allagash,   the identical boat. And they hold so much fuel  that I never even once transferred fuel. I've been   running boats for 30 years, and I've never once  turned on a transfer pump, never. I don't believe   in it because stupid stuff like that can happen.  I always just open up, you know, the burn and   return on the two side tanks, burn them even. You  shouldn't be burning one side or the other ...but   I see other captains doing the same thing, too. ...you shouldn't have to. I mean,   if you got two side tanks, open up all four  valves, it will burn and return evenly, and   then you ain't got to get into transferring fuel. But I don't know ...what his common routine was.   I only made them two trips  with [the Emmy Rose Captain]." At the same time, when asked about the vessel's  overall condition, he did state the following... "I thought it was in very good shape  myself. I mean it looked fine shine to me,   but fresh paint does a lot. But my first -- my first look at that boat,   [referring back to when he saw it at the time  of purchase] yeah, the stern ramps looked like   they was rusted right out of it. So, but  then he painted it all up, so I don't know.   But when I was fishing on it, yeah, the boat  looking good. But like I said, paint does wonders. When the investigators questioned about  weight of fish on board (in pounds); "And on that night that you're speaking of where   you ...the water on the aft deck ...approximately  how much fish did you guys have on board?" The former deckhand would respond; "Oh, we probably had about 40,000 on." "Okay. And how much do you  think that boat can hold?" "Oh, well, I had 103,000 on the Allagash. So  I'd say she can hold 100,000 easily enough.  But like I said, I always burn -- like when I  first got [on] the boat, the fuel tanks was full.   And it's like, why do we have all this extra  weight on this boat? We already have all this   heavy steel rigging on here and stuff. So myself, as the captain, I only fill   my fuel tanks half full. Just to try  to compensate for all the extra steel   that Carlos had added onto the boats. Now if them fuel tanks was full to the   top and then put 100,000 on it, probably  would've been a little bit different." NOAA or the National Oceanic and Atmospheric  Administration is the primary agency for   managing U.S. fisheries and protection  of marine mammals and endangered species.   One of NOAA's methods to accomplish this  is by sending an observer on board various   fishing vessels to actively assess the catch  and by-catch activites during routine voyages.  A NOAA observer who came aboard the Emmy Rose for  a ride along around November 4th through the 12th,   just a couple weeks prior to the incident  in 2020... was also interviewed by the NTSB   and Coast Guard on December 17, 2020. The investigators asked;  "Could you tell us about your experience on the  Emmy Rose, the one trip that you made on it?" The Observer Responded; "Yeah. So when I first got to the boat,   they did ask me before I stepped on  the boat if I was comfortable with weed   and kind of just was like oh -- I  kind of just blew off the question.  I kind of ignored it and then I called my  coordinator because I was like -- we just talked   about drugs on the boats before. So I called him  to make sure -- just to double check with that,   and he was like, if you're comfortable going  on that -- like if it's just the crew, then   it's okay, and they told me before, the captain  would not be smoking it, and so I went on it. The Interviewer followed up; "Okay. While the vessel was under way,   did you actually see 3 crew members smoking weed? The Observer Replied;  "Yes. I never saw the captain  smoking, but I did see the crew." "Okay. Did you see any other  drug usage or alcohol usage?" "No. Just weed and cigarettes." "And was that a daily occurrence or at  certain times of the day they were using?" "No. It was ...daily occurrence  pretty much in between each haul." "Did you ever not feel safe  while you were on the boat?" "I always felt safe just because I never  saw the captain using any of the drugs.   I stayed away from those drugs all the  time ...I never saw the captain using it,   so I felt safe in that aspect, and I always  felt the boat felt stable. I mean, other than   like the normal rocking from  waves, but I never felt unsafe." "So once they were hauling ...and setting  the nets, would it be around the clock   operation or would the crew seem to get some  decent rest? Could you tell if anyone was   working around the clock nonstop or could  you see them sleeping and taking naps?" "Oh, I could see them sleeping and taking naps,  especially if it was a longer time that the fish   nets were in the water. It could be from five to  six hours. I believe one of them was almost seven   hours. So they would sleep when the nets were in  the water after they were done with everything,   but they would try to sleep as much as  they could in between their breaks." "Okay. Would you say [The Captain] was in  the wheelhouse a majority of the time?" "Yes." "And do you know what time -- was there a  set schedule that B [The Captain] slept? "No. It was pretty much just whenever.  I feel like it was more at nighttime,   but I don't think it was a set schedule." "All right. Did you happen to see anything -- any   maintenance or anybody complaining about  something with the vessel being off?" "Just the nets would get a little torn up,  and I know the crew would complain about   that because the captain would -- he would  fall asleep at the wheel, like he would doze   off and would leave the nets in... a little too  long, like longer than they should have been.   So then those nets would get torn  up a little bit because they were   in longer than they were supposed  to be and the crew would complain   about that. I think they had to adjust and  fix up the net maybe two or three times." "Did somebody have to go up to the  wheelhouse to wake up the captain, then?" "Yeah." "And did that happen often?" "Yeah. ...I know for like the last day when I  had to get all my information about the boat,   like about the expenses it costed for this trip  and just information about the nets, I went up to   the wheelhouse maybe two minutes after he was just  awake and doing something ...and he already dozed   off -- I didn't realize he was dozed off, and I  asked him if I could ask him the questions then,   just so I didn't wait until the morning  when he was worried about landing the boat.  And he was like 'oh, did you have to wake me up  when I was sleeping to ask me these questions   right now?' So he wasn't happy about that. But yeah, the crew would have to wake him up   sometimes and be like hey, we need  to get the net out of the water." The investigator followed up; "Okay. The scenario -- when you're fishing   and heading to the dock -- so you're done fishing,  they've got all their catch onboard, and they're   steaming in to offload, could you kind of describe  who's where and who's doing what at that point?" "So captain was steering the boat. He was in  the wheelhouse and the crew would be cleaning   up the kitchen and just cleaning up the deck  and making sure everything's back in its place.   ...I think when they were done  with that, they went to sleep."   "Okay. Are you pretty sure, though, that as  the vessel was heading back to Gloucester   that the master -- was generally the one  always on the helm steering the boat?" "Yes." The NOAA Observer also confirming that they  were able to use the boats satellite phone   easily to call loved ones and check in  or if needed, email was also available.  Confirming that indeed cell  service was non-existent,   which is to be expected but that  the Satellite phone worked fine,   only dropping a call once but working  immediately after when trying the call again. The Emmy Rose also had triple redundancy  in electrical power to the comms eqipment;  The Main engine, a 630hp 12 cylinder Caterpillar  The main generator, another, smaller  engine, enough to power the entire boat.  The back up generator, another engine, enough   to power necessities, like radio equipment. And backup batteries known to routinely have   enough charge to allow for more than enough time  to call for help should all the others fail. Investigators are also suspicious  of some possible welding that the   crew was performing while the vessel was underway.   The NOAA Observer confirming they knew *OF*  some welding even during their voyage but   only because they overheard the crew discussing  it ...and didn't actually see it taking place. One other vulnerability the investigators  are looking into, is the Lazarette.   The lazarette, on a vessel like this, is the  portion of the hull that provides access to   the rudder mechanisms and or prop shaft with  a large hatch on top toward the stern. Should   this be left open or otherwise fill with water, it  could lead to a possibly unrecoverable situation.   But interviewees don't have much information  on it from the transcripts I've read so far.   It's not a portion of a boat  that gets accessed very often,   like the fish hold or engine room... and thus  didn't seem to stick out in interviewees minds. Investigators also seem to be suspicious of  this in combination with the reported 8-foot   seas that night, potentially being a following  sea as the Emmy Rose steamed toward Gloucester.  Ideally, for sea going vessels, "riding  out the storm" means keeping the bow   pointed into oncoming waves or a "head sea" when  conditions are challenging. A "following sea",   the total opposite, can be very dangerous however. When a vessel steams in the same direction as   the waves, depending on the vessel size  and type, these can either be a benefit,   say when the seas are mild and the  easy waves provide some extra momentum   or "riding the waves" so to speak. Versus when  the seas are large enough or have enough momentum   that a wave overtakes the vessel instead. If the Emmy Rose was already stern heavy   for example *AND* worst case scenario, if the  Lazarette wasn't watertight at that moment...   a 6 to 8 foot following swell could have been  enough to overwhelm the aft of the vessel. Would this have been quick enough that not even a  radio call could be made? It's difficult to say.  The Naval Architect, in his interview,  insisting that the vessel would needed   to have capsized completely and near  instantly, to create such a situation. When these vessels have fish in their holds, it's  also crucial they take stability into account   when dividing their catch amongst the "pens".  These pens are not only meant to divide species,   but allow the crew to control  how the weight is distributed.  In addition, the ice used to chill the  live catch, especially in a vessel with   no additional refigeration, like the Emmy Rose,  will melt and create liquid in these holds.  Bilge pumps are always prepared to pump this out,  or "dewater" the holds but another phenomenon all   boats, of any size must always take into  account... is the "Free Surface Effect". The Free Surface Effect is the tendency of  liquids — and similary of large quantities   of small objects, like fish, shrimp, grain  or even just heavy loose gear or cargo,   whose behavior approximates that  of liquids — moving in response to   changes in the attitude of a craft's cargo holds,   decks, or liquid tanks in reaction to induced  motions like waves, winds or vessel maneuvers. Or to oversimplfy, when water  tends to "slosh" around. Only, in vessels where the quantity of  material is enough and moves to one side,   suddenly. The forces can be so great it overcomes  the vessel's ability to right itself. In extreme   cases causing sudden capsizing, like we've  seen in so many Roll-On/Roll-Off vessels. The Naval Architect Stating; "So ...you got the heavier gear on the boat,   you've reduced the stability slightly, and then  you lose the rudder seal or you lose the shaft   seal, and the boat starts to slowly take on water  and ...now you throw a free surface into it. Boats don't just disappear  without something happening.  There was a catastrophic event that  caused this boat to capsize, and..." The Investigator Interjecting: "Is that  your opinion? You think it capsized?" "Oh, yeah, I absolutely think this boat  capsized. Boats don't disappear without   a mayday ...if they didn't flip over.  ...if you got the boat heeled almost   to the rail ...it's going to have no  range of stability in that direction;   it's going to want to roll that way. And  then, if you throw free surface into the mix,   and you've got that fluid moving over, then  you can certainly get the boat into trouble. "So that would be, with a  combination of the two ...enough to   obviously trim the boat, turtle or  capsize the boat? In your opinion?" "Yeah. I mean, if you got all  that fuel on one side and then,   depending on the amount of free surface  you have in the fish hold -- and then you   induce some type of outside factor, a wave or  a gust of wind, the boat could certainly go." Investigators are also looking into the vessels  that were in the vicinity that night, so far   there is only one listed on the official report,  another fishing vessel and no further details. The manager of the Emmy Rose, was the type to  stay in relatively close contact with the vessel   but didn't receive any communications  from them the night of the sinking. However, the father of one of the  deckhands did have the following to say   regarding the night of the incident. The investigators asked; "When he would get underway on   these trips, would he ever reach out to you,  communicate with you while he was under way? "Yeah, he'd call once in a while and so forth,   you know, let us know when he  was coming back, going out. "Did he call you on this last trip?" "Yes, he did. "When did he call you?" "It was probably between midnight and  12:30. Yeah ...the date of the sinking." "Our conversation was about buying a part,   he wanted to know if I had ordered  a part for his four-by [4x4]   and then all of a sudden he just said I got  to go, something happened, and that was it.  Never heard from him again  until you guys contacted us." "And he didn't say anything else after the --" "No." "[Just] ...I got to go?" "That was it. All we mainly talked about  was the clutch assembly for his 4x4.   ...He did say they was coming in to Cape Cod  ...I thought they would be going into Gloucester,   but I don't know if he's got  to go ...by that way or what." "Is that typical for them ...to go to Cape Cod?" "Not really. They'd go there every once in a great  moon or by their way or -- they unloaded their   fish in Gloucester. Being 20 miles out, I'm sure  they was heading -- coming in from someplace." The vessel's manager did have this to  say regarding the Captain from their   conversations in the days prior to the incident; "He was going to go back out  and fish over the holiday,   so --and as luck would have it,  the 20th of this last month was his  birthday. He was at sea for his  birthday, on his last birthday. That sucks, don't it? I remember calling  him and wishing him a happy birthday." We'll get into my final thoughts shortly,   as for the Safety Recommendations and Potential  Lessons Learned From the US Coast Guard's Report; Recommendation #001: Fishing Vessel  Periodic Stability Verification Implement new regulations requiring commercial  fishing vessels 79 feet or greater in length   undergo vessel stability periodic  verification, by a qualified individual,   every 5 years and/ or after a major modification  to ensure the vessel is still in compliance   with their required stability instructions.  Implementing this regulation will ensure that a   vessels profile has not been substantially altered  in a manner which adversely affects its stability,   including the cumulative  effects of all alterations. Recommendation #002: Fishing Vessel  Required training for Operators Reflect requirements enacted under the Coast Guard  Authorization Act of 2010, specifically provisions   for individuals in charge of vessels operating  beyond 3 nautical miles from the baseline to pass   a training program covering certain competencies,  including stability. Most fishing vessel operators   are unlicensed, and a licensed operator is only  required on vessels over 200 gross tons. This   new training requirement for operators will help  ensure their competency to command the vessel. Recommendation #003: Load line for  applicable commercial fishing vessels Reflect the requirements enacted under  the Coast Guard Authorization Act of 2010,   requiring applicable Commercial Fishing  Vessels to have a load line assigned.  Require a fishing vessel built on or before July  1, 2012, that undergoes a substantial change to   the dimension of or type of vessel completed  after July 1, 2012, or a later date set by the   Coast Guard, to comply with an alternate load line  compliance program developed in cooperation with   the industry. A load line indicates the minimum  safe freeboard to which a vessel may be loaded.  Fishing vessels are often modified  such that their dimensions are changed,   or they are converted to a different type of  fishing vessel. When this action is taken,   the loading conditions and seaworthiness  of the vessel can be affected. Recommendation #004: Chemical testing for  commercial fishing vessel crewmembers. Implement new regulations requiring certain  crewmembers aboard commercial fishing vessels   to be subject to a chemical testing program. It  is recommended that the Commandant should require   pre-employment, random, and reasonable cause drug  testing for those crew members who are in safety   sensitive positions onboard documented commercial  fishing industry vessels operating beyond 3   nautical miles of the baseline. Individuals  in charge and crew aboard commercial fishing   vessels less than 200 gross tons are not required  to hold Merchant Mariner Credentials, therefore   the only instance when they are required to be  drug tested is after a serious marine incident.  Instituting a pre-employment, random, and  reasonable cause drug testing program covering all   crew members who are in safety sensitive positions  would reduce the risk to crews and vessels. Recommendation #005: It is recommended that [The  Fishing Vessel Safety Division]   provide guidance and instruction to  Vessel Examiners to conduct Fishing   Vessel Stability Training and Outreach. Specifically to include proper freeing   port design and the importance of  maintaining watertight integrity. Recommendation #006: Commercial  Fishing Vessel Examiners to conduct   Crew Endurance Management System and  Anti-Fatigue Training and Outreach It is recommended that [The  Fishing Vessel Safety Division]   provide guidance and instruction to Vessel  Examiners to conduct education and outreach   to promote awareness and provide Crew Endurance  Management System and Anti-Fatigue training.  Fatigue experienced by commercial fishing vessel  crewmembers while fishing is a chronic issue and   often a contributing factor to marine casualties  within the commercial fishing vessel community.   This investigation revealed a latent unsafe  condition where the crews of the EMMY ROSE,   who had been working in the commercial  fishing industry for their entire adult life   had grown accustomed to working and  operating vessels while fatigued. It can offer some insight into where  investigators are in their process   whenever preliminary recommendations are  provided. It's not unheard of for either   the NTSB or Coast Guard to post them part  way through an investigation like this. And it's no secret that commercial fishing crews  sometimes push... just about everything to its   limit; their vessel, the conditions,  regulations, especially themselves.  Creating these (even just potential) lessons  learned can do no harm in promoting awareness   and helping future mariners return home  safely to their families, every time. Thanks so much to all those viewers & supporters  out there who enjoy this content and especially   to the Immortar Supporters on Patreon... A shout out to those Top Tier Supporters; Alex S  Alex W Andrew M  Jeremey H Kenneth P  Lil Tony Nathan F  Paul R and Philip B Don't Forget; You're Important  and Your Safety Matters.
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Channel: Brick Immortar
Views: 1,026,868
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Keywords: emmy rose, provincetown cape cod, provincetown massachusetts, ntsb investigation, us coast guard, uscg investigation, united states coast guard, carlos rafael codfather, sasha lee, fishing vessel emmy rose, capsized fishing boat, fishing trawler accident, maine news, provincetown news, coast guard, why do ships sink, the emmy rose
Id: BGtkMAoE-z4
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 40min 7sec (2407 seconds)
Published: Sun Sep 04 2022
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