Categories
Disasters Tragedy

Coast Guard investigation finds Titan submersible implosion ‘preventable’




This past June marked a grim anniversary: two years since the tragic implosion of the Titan submersible with five men aboard (well, one was a teenager). The vessel was on its way to the remains of the Titanic on the Atlantic Ocean floor, as part of a somewhat macabre millionaire’s tourist excursion helmed by Stockton Rush. A billionaire himself, Rush founded his company OceanGate in 2009 to make deep sea exploration available to the masses… for the exclusive price of $250,000 a ticket. When Titan first went missing on June 18, 2023, we knew something had gone terribly wrong. Days later when it was confirmed the vessel had imploded, people with expert knowledge of ocean exploration were conveying that OceanGate’s Titan was doomed from the start. And now it’s official: the US Coast Guard has released a 300-page report on their investigation into the accident, in which they conclude that the implosion was entirely “preventable,” had OceanGate acted responsibly on many fronts.

The catastrophic implosion of the Titan submersible that killed five people in 2023 could have been prevented, a U.S. Coast Guard investigative board found on Tuesday, calling the vessel’s safety culture and operational practices “critically flawed.”

The Titan vanished during a descent to the Titanic wreck on a tourist expedition, losing contact with its support ship.

After a tense four-day search, its shattered remains were discovered strewn across the seabed 1,600 feet (488 meters) from the bow of the legendary ocean liner that sank in 1912, claiming more than 1,500 lives.

OceanGate, the U.S.-based company that managed the tourist submersible, suspended all operations after the incident.

A company spokesperson said on Tuesday the company again offered its deepest condolences to the families of those who died “and directed its resources fully towards cooperating with the Coast Guard’s inquiry through its completion.”

The chair of the U.S. Coast Guard Marine Board of Investigation, Jason Neubauer, said the accident was preventable.

“There is a need for stronger oversight and clear options for operators who are exploring new concepts outside of the existing regulatory framework,” he said in a statement with the release of the 300-page report.

Chloe Nargeolet, whose father, French oceanographer Paul-Henri Nargeolet, died on the submersible, said she was satisfied with the investigation.

“The OceanGate boss didn’t do his job properly and obviously my father didn’t know any of that,” she said. “It was not random or bad luck, it came from something. It could have been avoided.”

The board determined that the primary contributing factors were OceanGate’s “inadequate design, certification, maintenance and inspection process for the Titan.”

It also cited “a toxic workplace culture at OceanGate,” an inadequate regulatory framework for submersibles and other novel vessels, and an ineffective whistleblower process.

The report added “for several years preceding the incident, OceanGate leveraged intimidation tactics, allowances for scientific operations, and the company’s favorable reputation to evade regulatory scrutiny.”

The board found that OceanGate failed to investigate and address known hull anomalies following its 2022 Titanic expedition. It said data from Titan’s realtime monitoring system should have been analyzed and acted on during that expedition.

It also criticized OceanGate for failing to properly store the Titan before the 2023 Titanic expedition.

The report faulted the absence of a timely Occupational Safety and Health Administration investigation into a 2018 OceanGate whistleblower’s complaint combined with a lack of government cooperation, calling them a missed opportunity and added “early intervention may have resulted in OceanGate pursuing regulatory compliance or abandoning their plans.”

[From Reuters]

A few weeks ago I watched Titan: The OceanGate Submersible Disaster on Netflix. If you’re not up for reading the Coast Guard’s 300-page report, the documentary makes the same argument. Though fair warning, the material is no less infuriating when relayed on film. Truly, it was human error at every turn, solely because of one human: CEO Stockton Rush. He assembled experts for his team — in diving, mechanical engineering, every field — then used their talents to build Titan, but refused to listen when they voiced legitimate concerns. One jarring quote from the film that really stuck with me was, and I’m paraphrasing but essentially the comment was, “Titan failing was a statistical inevitability.” Aside from not listening to his team (who one by one left out of desperation, even the accountant!), other critical flaws included Rush opting to use carbon fiber to build the submersible (because it was cheaper) yet spending extra money on bribes, plus going out of his way to have Titan classified a certain way to avoid stricter regulations. I don’t understand having a dream and hiring the best to help achieve that dream, only to cut corners and not heed sage advice. A tragedy, in every sense. And another billionaire is gearing up to do it all over again.

photos credit: Balazs Gardi/Courtesy of Netflix

Categories
Tragedy Travis Kelce

The Kansas City Chiefs’ Super Bowl parade ended in gunfire & at least one death

The Kansas City Chiefs won the Super Bowl, which was staged in Las Vegas. Valentine’s Day was their big homecoming, with a huge parade and presentation for the fans and residents of Kansas City. Thousands of people came out to celebrate the Chiefs, and many of the players were still drunk and partying. Then shots rang out. A uniquely American tragedy, yet again, for the millionth time. The Kansas City Police Department said that there is at least one casualty and 22 people are wounded from gunshots. One of the shooters was jumped by Chiefs fans and held until the police got there. Travis Kelce and the Chiefs are spreading support and love to their community:

Travis Kelce offered his condolences and support following a shooting at the end of the Kansas City Chiefs’ 2024 Super Bowl victory parade on Wednesday.

“I am heartbroken over the tragedy that took place today. My heart is with all who came out to celebrate with us and have been affected. KC, you mean the world to me,” the tight end, 34, wrote on X (formerly known as Twitter).

During a second press conference on Wednesday, Kansas City Police Chief Stacey Graves confirmed there was one deceased and 22 wounded after the shooting at Union Station in Kansas City, Mo. Authorities were still working on the total number of victims and identifying the deceased victim at the time.

“Three persons were detained and under investigation for today’s incident,” Graves said. “Right now we do not have a motive. I’m angry at what happened today. The people who came to this celebration should expect a safe environment.”

The Chiefs released a statement shortly after the mass shooting.

“We are truly saddened by the senseless act of violence that occurred outside of Union Station at the conclusion of today’s parade and rally. Our hearts go out to the victims, their families, and all of Kansas City,” their statement began. The NFL team added that “all of our players, coaches, staff and their families are safe and accounted for,” while also sharing that they were in close contact with law enforcement officials and thanked first responders.

[From People]

It’s just awful. I feel so bad for the people of Kansas City, for Chiefs fans and for the team. This was supposed to be a wonderful day of community for Kansas City, coming together to see their Super Bowl champions and it ended with gunfire, ambulances and at least one woman murdered.

I am heartbroken over the tragedy that took place today. My heart is with all who came out to celebrate with us and have been affected. KC, you mean the world to me.

— Travis Kelce (@tkelce) February 15, 2024

Breaking Video of Heroic Kansas City fans tackling one of the shooters pic.twitter.com/cAxL9Kox8d

— Fantasy Fanatics (@FFB_Fanatics) February 14, 2024

Photos courtesy of Backgrid.

Categories
Tragedy

The OceanGate submersible imploded on Sunday, all five men believed to be dead

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This has been such an awful, strange, macabre and ultimately tragic story. Sunday morning, OceanGate lost contact with their tourist submarine, a vessel which carried people down to the site of the Titanic in the Atlantic Ocean. The Titanic site is and should be considered a mass gravesite, and it’s deeply inappropriate to see it become a “tourist attraction” for the idle rich, men with too much money and too little sense. That’s exactly what happened here: OceanGate’s Titan submersible went missing and lost contact, and endless resources were spent Monday through Thursday to locate the vessel and perhaps attempt a search-and-rescue mission. Then, on Thursday, some news: debris was found near the Titanic site. All five men on the submersible are presumed dead, and it’s believed that the submarine imploded on Sunday, as it descended to the Titanic mass grave site.

All five people aboard the submersible that went missing on Sunday were believed to be dead, the U.S. Coast Guard said on Thursday, ending a dayslong rescue effort that gripped much of the world.

“On behalf of the United States Coast Guard and the entire unified command, I offer my deepest condolences to the families,” Rear Admiral John Mauger said in a news conference on Thursday.

Earlier in the day, a remote-controlled vehicle located debris from the Titan submersible, including its tail cone, on the ocean floor, about 1,600 feet from the bow of the Titanic, he said.

“The debris is consistent with a catastrophic implosion of the vessel,” Admiral Mauger said.

Stockton Rush, the chief executive of OceanGate, was piloting the submersible. The four passengers were a British businessman and explorer, Hamish Harding; a British-Pakistani businessman, Shahzada Dawood, and his teenage son, Suleman; and a French maritime expert, Paul-Henri Nargeolet, who had been on over 35 dives to the Titanic wreck site.

For rescuers, the search for the pilot and four passengers aboard the submersible, the Titan, was always a race against time. When the submersible, a 22-foot-long vessel owned by OceanGate, lost contact with a chartered ship on Sunday morning, it was more than halfway into its dive to the wreck of the Titanic, and it was believed to be equipped with only four days’ worth of oxygen.

Asked what the prospects were of recovering the bodies of the victims, Admiral Mauger said he did not have an answer. “This is an incredibly unforgiving environment down there on the sea floor,” he said.

[From The NY Times]

As the NYT noted (from the Coast Guard’s presser), the possibility of a recovery operation for the remains is an open question. I hope that they do not attempt any recovery operation – let the dead bury the dead. A mass gravesite claimed five more souls. Let this be the end of this kind of Titanic tourism.

Which isn’t to say that this should be the end of the reporting or the accountability. OceanGate needs to reimburse the government for the expense of these search-and-rescue efforts, and I would imagine that the victims’ families will be suing the f–k out of OceanGate too. There should be a consensus about adding more safety regulations to these kinds of submersibles too – from what I understand, the science of this submersible never made any sense, and a tragedy like this was sadly inevitable.

Embed from Getty Images

Embed from Getty Images

Photos courtesy of Getty.

Categories
Joe Biden politics Tragedy

Nineteen children were murdered in a Uvalde, Texas elementary school

On May 14, an 18-year-old white supremacist traveled to Buffalo and murdered ten people at a supermarket frequented by Black folks. The next day, a Las Vegas murderer traveled to a church in Laguna Beach, California, where he targeted Taiwanese-Americans. One man was murdered and several were injured. On May 24, an 18-year-old man entered Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas and murdered nineteen little kids and their teacher. He also wounded several more children and the resource officer in the school. Before his rampage, he murdered his grandmother.

After Sandy Hook, nothing was done. After Parkland, nothing was done. After all of the mass shootings, nothing was done. The NRA has a f–king chokehold on American politics and the Republican Party specifically. It’s about everyday people too, people who choose not to vote for candidates who talk about gun control, who talk in real terms about children being safe in their homes and their schools. President Biden made a speech:

Here is Steve Kerr, coach of the Golden State Warriors.

Here is Connecticut Senator Chris Murphy, who has spent the past decade working with Sandy Hook parents.

Barack Obama released a statement too:

“Across the country, parents are putting their children to bed, reading stories, singing lullabies—and in the back of their minds, they’re worried about what might happen tomorrow after they drop their kids off at school, or take them to a grocery store or any other public space. Michelle and I grieve with the families in Uvalde, who are experiencing pain no one should have to bear. We’re also angry for them. Nearly ten years after Sandy Hook—and ten days after Buffalo—our country is paralyzed, not by fear, but by a gun lobby and a political party that have shown no willingness to act in any way that might help prevent these tragedies. It’s long past time for action, any kind of action. And it’s another tragedy—a quieter but no less tragic one—for families to wait another day. May God bless the memory of the victims, and in the words of Scripture, heal the brokenhearted and bind up their wounds.

[From Barack Obama]

Will something finally be done? Will common-sense gun control finally be legislated? I doubt it.

Photos courtesy of Backgrid.

Categories
Tragedy Travis Scott

Travis Scott criticized for offering a month of BetterHelp to Astroworld attendees

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Like everyone else, I am completely horrified by the tragic events of the Astroworld Festival. Any response from the organizers was going to be inadequate in the wake of the deaths and injuries that happened. However, even with that said, the response has been worse than imagined. I agree with Kaiser’s assessment that Travis Scott has been responding emotionally. That’s not saying it’s right or wrong. Obviously, he’s also being coached by his legal team, but what they are putting out is not it. Travis issued a statement in which he offered to pay for the funerals of all those who perished at the concert. This is appropriate, but also probably cold comfort to the victims’ families. In addition, Travis is refunding ticket costs and paying for a month of therapy through the app BetterHelp for attendees. This announcement did not go over well. Most people saw it as a sponsorship more than any act of service:

Did we just go from a tragedy to a BetterHelp brand partnership? https://t.co/H6SeJFMq1N

— Lthony Ratiano (@theneedledrop) November 9, 2021

Buzzfeed wrote to BetterHelp to clarify the arrangement. Within the response from BetterHelp president Alon Matas, they learned that Travis reached out to them, the offer is for one month – and not much more.

“Following the tragic event over the weekend, Travis’s team reached out to us and asked how we could provide help to those impacted.”

One of the criticisms of the offer was that it was only for one month, a relatively short period of time — especially for trauma work. Originally, the page for Astroworld read, “BetterHelp is offering one month of therapy for those impacted.”

Later on, the page appeared to change to say that The Cactus Jack Foundation — aka Travis Scott’s foundation — would be “covering one month of therapy” and that people could reach out to the foundation for additional coverage. After one month, BetterHelp typically charges between $60 to $90 per week.

In an email to BuzzFeed, Matas wrote that, “BetterHelp and Travis together will cover the costs to provide a month of free therapy by licensed therapists so people in need can get professional help.” He also denied that BetterHelp was paying Travis or “profiting by selling people’s data to advertisers or third parties.”

However, there is the question of whether or not an app like BetterHelp is even suited to help people in a situation like Astroworld. The site’s FAQ says that BetterHelp is not suitable if you are a minor — as many of the Astroworld attendees were — or if “you are in an urgent crisis or an emergency situation.” BetterHelp also cannot be used to obtain a clinical diagnosis or medication.

In response to this, Matas said that BetterHelp is “a therapy service and therapy isn’t the solution for someone who needs immediate help with an urgent crisis.” Within the same email, he also listed the other events BetterHelp reportedly offered free therapy for: “Hurricane Dorian, Hurricane Michael, Hurricane Ida, the Gilroy shooting, the El Paso shooting, the California Wildfires, the evacuations from Afghanistan.”

[From Buzzfeed]

I don’t have any issue with online therapy. But those attendees are possibly looking at PTSD. They likely have no idea what they are processing or how to come at what they are experiencing. As the article pointed out, a month is not going to be enough for many of these people. And who’s covered? There is a nine-year old attendee in a medically-induced coma, how much of their family gets a free month? Do they have to wait to see how the child fares before they start their free therapy?

But the other part of this is the app BetterHelp. It’s a good idea and nice that it’s so accessible, but many people say it’s not a great mental health source. The therapists are under qualified. People are posting text exchanges with their therapists that are mind-boggling insensitive. CB gave them a try and she found the same thing, so she dumped the service. The idea to offer therapy was not wrong. But this offering wasn’t well thought out. If they were serious, they should have set up crisis counselors in the areas or drop-in clinics. At the very least, have some dedicated PTSD counselors available just for the Astroworld attendees. My heart goes out to all the victims of Astroworld.

From BetterHelp’s Twitter on Oct. 22:

This right here 😍 pic.twitter.com/7DAjq0TJ3j

— BetterHelp (@betterhelp) October 22, 2021

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Categories
Accidents Brandon Lee Movies Tragedy

Brandon Lee’s fiancée Eliza Hutton: ‘there’s no such thing as a prop gun’

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Like many of you, I’ve read the reports of the tragic events on the set of the Rust that resulted in the death of Halyna Hutchin’s death in dread. The story keeps reaching new levels of heartbreak. The greatest tragedy is, and will always be, the loss of Halyna’s life, no matter where the blame is ultimately laid or what new report comes out. A woman died in an accident that never should have happened. Eliza Hutton, Brandon Lee’s fiancée, agrees. Eliza was just 29 when Brandon was killed by a prop gun on the set of The Crow in 1993. He was hit by the tip of a live bullet that was lodged in the gun. When Eliza heard about Halyna’s death, she issued public condolences to Halyna’s family. Then she posted a photo of herself and Brandon to Instagram with a caption that read “there’s no such thing as a prop gun.”

The fatal shooting on the set of Alec Baldwin’s film Rust has motivated Eliza Hutton, fiancée of the late Brandon Lee, to speak out for the first time about his on-set death and this “avoidable tragedy.”

In 1993, Brandon — the 28-year-old son of martial arts legend Bruce Lee — died after being shot with a prop gun that was supposed to fire blank cartridges on the set of The Crow. The tip of a .44-caliber bullet was lodged in the gun’s barrel and when the blank was fired, it was expelled. The bullet hit Brandon’s abdomen, damaged several organs and lodged near his spine. He died on March 31, 1993.

“Twenty-eight years ago, I was shattered by the shock and grief of losing the love of my life, Brandon Lee, so senselessly,” Hutton said in a statement to People. “My heart aches again now for Halyna Hutchins’s husband and son, and for all those left in the wake of this avoidable tragedy.”

Hutton went on to “urge those in positions to make change to consider alternatives to real guns on sets.”

On her private Instagram account, Hutton also shared a photo of herself with Brandon celebrating their engagement in October 1992.

“There’s no such thing as a prop gun,” she captioned it.

[From Yahoo]

I know nothing about props or how they work, especially the weapons used in filming. I took for granted that the guns used on sets were markedly different than ‘real’ guns, but I’m finding out how wrong that assumption was. I knew from Jon-Erik Hexum’s death that they had a lot of force to them, but I honestly did not know you could load a real bullet in them. Unfortunately, I’m learning a lot more than I ever wanted to from the current discussion and Eliza’s caption is appropriate. This must be awful for her to relive. The article said she and Brandon were set to be married one week after The Crow wrapped. Her happily Ever After became her worst nightmare because a safety protocol wasn’t followed. And now the Hutchins are living their nightmare for allegedly the same reason.

Brandon’s sister, Shannon Lee, also spoke out about Haylna’s death. She said that although Hollywood and fans came together in the aftermath of Brandon’s shooting, she isn’t aware that any rules or regulations had actually changed, which is nuts. There’s circulating now to ban real firearms from sets. I learned that the majority of John Wick’s gun blasts are done in post production. If John Wick can add all – and I mean all – those blasts in post, then it should be industry standard. Oh, and the director of John Wick? Chad Stahelski, who was brought in as Brandon Lee’s body double on The Crow after his death.

Eliza’s IG is private, but People has a screenshot of her post if you want to see it here.

Hollywood: It’s time to create “Halyna’s Law”, which will ban the use of real firearms on film production sets and create a safe working environment for everyone involved. – Sign the Petition! https://t.co/HH4J6EfJHG via @Change

— olivia wilde (@oliviawilde) October 24, 2021

Our hearts go out to the family of Halyna Hutchins and to Joel Souza and all involved in the incident on “Rust”. No one should ever be killed by a gun on a film set. Period. 💔

— Brandon Bruce Lee (@brandonblee) October 22, 2021

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Photo credit: Avalon Red and Twitter

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Lamar Odom: Intervention Staged By Family! NBA Star Peaces Out in a Hurry!

Desperate to help any way that they can, Lamar Odom’s family staged an intervention in New York City Friday night, according to reports.

Suffice it to say, this did not go over well.

Lamar Odom in a Daze

In response to the former NBA star’s recent troubling behavior, his family decided to step in and try to get him the help he badly needs.

A source quoted by Us Weekly confirms that the mediation took place on Friday night with several of Odom’s close family members.

Lamar’s longtime partner Liza Morales, the two children she has with Lamar, his aunt JaNean Mercer, and several cousins were involved.

Good for them for stepping up, but … it didn’t take.

“Lamar was doing really bad and his family was going to stage an intervention on Friday,” the insider tells the celebrity news magazine.

According to a separate report from Extra, the retired L.A. Lakers baller “was extremely surprised” by this and quickly “left the location.”