
5th District Public Affairs
U.S. Coast Guard
News Release
WRIGHTSVILLE BEACH, N.C. - The Coast Guard found a deceased operator of an overdue fishing vessel approximately 12 miles east of New Topsail Inlet, N.C., Tuesday night.
The operator's wife notified Coast Guard Sector North Carolina watchstanders at around 8 p.m. stating that her husband had departed Surf City at 8 a.m. aboard their lobster-style cabin cruiser Marina K Tuesday to fish for grouper, and had not returned.
A 25-foot rescue boat crew from Station Wrightsville Beach searched between New Topsail Inlet and the operator's preferred fishing area about 12 miles east of the inlet, but did not find the vessel. At 8:56 p.m., watchstanders attempted contact the victim via cell phone with no response, but were able to obtain an approximate position, indicating his vessel was 12 miles southwest of the phone tower at Sneads Ferry.
An HC-130J Hercules air plane crew from Air Station Elizabeth City arrived on scene, found a vessel matching the Marina K's description, and guided the rescue boat crew to the scene. The boat crew boarded the vessel and found it unoccupied.
The crew downloaded GPS data indicating two stored positions, yielding a historical position of the vessel. The Coast Guard Cutter Cochito, an 87-foot patrol boat were also diverted to support search efforts.
The rescue boat crew conducted a search of the nine miles between the last known two positions. The crew later discovered the operator deceased in the water. The body was taken back to station Wrightsville Beach and transferred to the coroner.
This is the second reported death of a fisherman fishing alone without a life jacket in 5 months in North Carolina.
Being educated about safe boating could save a life. Many boating fatalities occur on boats where the operator has not completed a boating safety education course. Courses given by the Coast Guard Auxiliary and the U.S. Power Squadrons cover many aspects of boating safety, from boat handling to preparing for the weather.
According to Coast Guard statistics from 2008, 90 percent of drowning victims in the United States were not wearing life jackets. In an emergency, there may be no time to put on a life jacket, so the Coast Guard advises wearing one at all times while on the water.
To reduce the number of incidents on the water and to increase the safety of people on the water, the Coast Guard recommends the following:
For further boating safety information, check online at one of the following:
· U. S. Coast Guard Auxiliary www.cgaux.org
· Vessel Safety Checks www.vesselsafetycheck.org
· Coast Guard Boating Safety page at http://www.uscgboating.org
· National Safe Boating Council www.safeboatingcouncil.org
· U.S. Power Squadrons www.usps.org
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