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Divers Recover Body of 5th Victim of Sicily Bayesian Superyacht Tragedy

Divers Recover Body of 5th Victim of Sicily Bayesian Superyacht Tragedy
  • PublishedAugust 22, 2024

Divers have recovered the body of a fifth victim from the wreck of the Bayesian superyacht, CBS News reports, citing Sicily’s Civil Protection.

 Meanwhile, rescue operations continue to find the sixth body from the inside of the 184-foot luxury yacht that sank early Monday morning off the coast of Palermo, Sicily, during a severe thunderstorm.

Witnesses earlier told several news agencies that a sixth body bag had been brought ashore, but authorities never confirmed the recovery of the final victim.

Four bodies were retrieved Wednesday from the Bayesian, which was on a 90 degree angle on the seafloor at a depth of over 160 feet. The vessel’s position and items that moved around inside the ill-fated yacht made recovery efforts slow and hazardous.

Italian authorities have not officially identified the remains recovered  from the Bayesian, which belonged to the wife of British tech magnate Mike Lynch. Lynch’s wife, Angela Bacares, was among the 15 people who managed to escape from the boat as it sank quickly on Monday, but he and his 18-year-old daughter Hannah were believed to be among the people whose bodies have been recovered.

Another victim, the Bayesian superyacht’s chef, was found dead soon after the boat capsized. Along with Lynch and his daughter, the technology mogul’s American lawyer Chris Morvillo and his wife Neda, and British banker Jonathan Bloomer and his wife were believed to have been trapped in the yacht when it sank.

Questions as to how the state-of-the-art boat could have gone down so quickly have mounted steadily since the accident.

Italian media were reporting Thursday that, after questioning survivors and witnesses, Italian prosecutors had opened an official investigation into a possible “culpable shipwreck.” No individuals had been named as potential suspects.

One possible factor could have been that the ship’s keel — a fin-like structure that sticks out from the bottom of the boat, designed to provide stability and counterweight to the huge mast — was not fully deployed. The yacht had a retractable keel that could be raised for entry into shallow harbors. But a raised keel at sea would have made the ship much more vulnerable to instability in the strong winds that struck early Monday morning.

Written By
Michelle Larsen