A 129-foot commercial lift boat carrying 19 people capsized off the Louisiana coast on Tuesday after a severe storm passed through the area, authorities said.
The U.S. Coast Guard and multiple good Samaritan vessels responded after the SEACOR Marine boat capsized south of Grand Isle around 4:30 p.m., according to USCG officials. Six people who were on the boat at the time were been rescued and two people were found dead, Capt. Will Watson, commander of the Coast Guard’s New Orleans sector, said on Wednesday.
Update 3:00 p.m. EDT April 19: The U.S. Coast Guard will call off the search for missing crew members at sunset, officials announced Monday afternoon, The New Orleans Advocate reported.
In all, six crew members were saved, five have been found dead and eight are still listed as missing, The Associated Press reported.
While the ocean search will end Monday, divers will still search the inside of the boat during the vessel’s recovery.
Meanwhile, the fifth victim has been identified as Lawrence J. Warren, 36, of Terrytown, Louisiana, WDSU reported.
Update 1:41 a.m. EDT April 18: According to NOLA.com, Lafourche Parish Coroner John King identified the latest victims, both found inside the jackup barge: Anthony Hartford, 53, of New Orleans; and James “Tracy” Wallingsford, 55, of Gilbert, Louisiana.
Update 9:49 p.m. EDT April 16: The Coast Guard announced it had recovered two more crew members on Friday, bringing the death toll to four, WVUE reported. Nine more crew members remain unaccounted for.
Update 5:55 p.m. EDT April 16: The second crew member who was found dead was Ernest Williams, 69, of Arnaudville, Louisiana, according to Lafourche Parish Coroner John King.
King said that crews recovered Williams’ body on Thursday night in the vicinity of Cocodrie, NOLA.com reported.
Williams was identified a day after King released the name of the first victim: David Ledet, 63, of Thibodaux, the website reported.
Update 2:10 p.m. ET April 14: Capt. Will Watson, commander of the Coast Guard’s New Orleans sector, confirmed Wednesday that crews searching for survivors after a SEACOR Marine lift boat capsized off the coast of Louisiana on Tuesday have recovered the body of one person who died in the incident. Six people have so far been rescued.
“The search effort continues on the remaining 12,” Watson said Wednesday at a news conference. “My heart and the collective heart of our team goes out to the families and to SEACOR, but we’re giving it all we have.”
Watson said unexpectedly bad weather likely posed a challenge for the SEACOR crew, which was headed for a pass about 25 miles east of Port Fourchon. The boat had left the port around 1:30 p.m. Tuesday.
While responding to the incident, officials said they dealt with 80 to 90 mph winds, 7- to 9-foot seas and “extremely limited visibility.” It was not immediately clear why the boat was in the water amid the inclement weather.
“We’re trying to figure this out as we go,” Watson said. “We’re talking to survivors, we’re talking to the company, and so we’re focused on the search and rescue effort more than anything right now, but those details will come out ... as we learn more about what went on.”
Authorities continue to investigate.
Update 11:14 p.m. EDT April 13: Coast Guard officials said that at least six people were rescued after the boat capsized, NOLA.com reported.
Lafourche Parish President Archie Chaisson confirmed that 18 people were on board before the lift boat, named the Seacor Power, took on water sometime before 7 p.m. CDT, the website reported.
Jefferson Parish Councilman Ricky Templet, whose district includes Grand Isle, said several boats were overturned on the island, NOLA.com reported.
“We expected some winds and possible rains, but nothing as extensive as what took place on the coastal areas of Jefferson Parish,” Templet told the website.
Original report: Coast Guard spokesperson Petty Officer Jonathan Lally said his agency received reports of “multiple vessels hit” by the stormy weather, according to WAFB. Wind gusts of up to 75 mph were measured during the storm, the television station reported.
Coast Guard officials said a search plane was en route to help, NOLA.com reported. Lally added that Coast Guard boats were in the water searching for victims, WVUE reported.
Bruce Simon, of Cutoff, Louisiana, posted several photos of the high waves on his Facebook page.
Simon wrote that he had never heard so many “mayday” calls at one time.
“I’m on the boat and we doing 4 knots keeping the bow in the wind,” Simon wrote. “Waves are breaking over the bow.”
It is unclear how many people have been rescued.
The U.S. Coast Guard in Houston confirmed that authorities from Texas are on their way to assist in the search and rescue, WWL reported. That includes a search plane from Corpus Christi, the television station reported.