Missouri boat accident kills 17,
including nine from one family
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[July 21, 2018]
By Brendan O'Brien and Andrew Hay
(Reuters) - Nine members of the same family
were among 17 people killed when a "duck boat" sank during a storm on
Thursday on a Missouri lake in one of the deadliest U.S. tourist
tragedies in years.
The World War Two-style amphibious vehicle was carrying 31 passengers
including children when the sudden "microburst" storm hit Table Rock
Lake outside Branson, with waves slowly swamping the vehicle before it
sank.
More than three dozen people have died in incidents involving duck boats
on land and water in the United States over the past two decades.
Tia Coleman said she and her nephew were the only survivors from 11
members of their family who went on the "Ride The Ducks" tour.
"I lost all my children, I lost my husband," Coleman told Indianapolis
television channel Fox 59 from her hospital bed in Branson. "I'm OK, but
this is really hard, just really hard."
https://bit.ly/2LB7QwJ
She said the captain of the boat told them when they were in the lake
not to put their life jackets on, an action she believed cost lives. The
crew was warned to get in and out of the lake quickly as a storm was
approaching, she said.
The 17 victims were aged between 1 and 70 and came from six U.S. states,
authorities said. The included Arkansas residents Steve Smith and his
son Lance, their church newspaper said. Smith's daughter Loren survived.
His wife opted not go on the tour, the paper said.
Missouri Governor Mike Parson said seven of the 14 survivors were
injured, one seriously.
"Emergency responders and civilian rescuers helped avert an even worse
tragedy as people rushed to help in extremely dangerous conditions,"
Parson said in a statement.
The tragedy unfolded at around 7 p.m. (0000 GMT) on Thursday when
thunderstorms rolled over the lake, churning the water into white-capped
waves. Two duck vehicles were on the lake and headed back to shore but
only one made it. The driver of the duck that sank was among those
killed, officials said.
Stone County Sheriff Doug Rader told reporters that the boat's captain
survived.
"From what I understand there was life jackets in the duck," Rader said,
but he declined to say if passengers were wearing them.
The National Transportation Safety Board and U.S. Coast Guard were
investigating, officials said.
Jim Pattison, president of Ripley Entertainment, which owns the Branson
"Ride The Ducks" tour company, said the strength of the storm was
unexpected, but the duck boat should not have been in the lake.
"It shouldn't have been in the water if what happened, happened,"
Pattison told the CBS This Morning show.
'NEVER SEEN IT LIKE THIS'
Pat Cox, owner of a marina about a half mile from where the vessel went
down, sent five boats and some 20 people to the rescue, most between the
ages of 18 and 20.
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Rescue personnel are seen after an amphibious "duck boat" capsized
and sank, at Table Rock Lake near Branson, Stone County, Missouri,
U.S. July 19, 2018 in this still image obtained from a video on
social media. SOUTHERN STONE COUNTY FIRE PROTECTION
DISTRICT/Facebook/via REUTERS
"These people showed an amazing strength maybe that we don't always
give them credit for," Cox said by telephone. "They had it and they
took action. And they were good Samaritans."
The first boat's crew was able to pull two people from the waves,
Cox said. "It was all hands on deck. We did everything we could."
Branson is a family-friendly tourist destination with attractions
like "Dolly Parton's Stampede" dinner theater, the Amazing Acrobats
of Shanghai and a Titanic museum with a model of the sunken vessel's
front half.
Rick Kettles, owner of the Lakeside Resort General Store and
Restaurant, said he had never before seen such conditions on the
lake, which is a 67-square-mile (174 sq km) reservoir on the White
River.
"I am 54 and I started coming here when I was 6 or 7 years old. I
have been on my lake most of my life and I have never seen it like
this," Kettles said. "I am trying to figure out why the boats were
out there. I don't get it, having a captain's license myself."
A microburst is a severe, localized wind gust, blasting down from a
thunderstorm, typically covering an area less than 2.5 miles (4 km)
in diameter and lasting less than five minutes.
Duck vehicles, modeled on landing craft that were used in the D-Day
invasion of World War Two, are used on sightseeing tours around the
world.
The company that builds ducks, Ride the Ducks International LLC,
agreed in 2016 to pay a $1 million fine after one of the vehicles
collided with a bus in Seattle, killing five international students.
Thirteen people died in 1999 when the duck boat in which they were
riding sank near Hot Springs, Arkansas. Afterward, the National
Transportation Safety Board warned that the boats' canopy roofs
presented a hazard, making it difficult for people, even those
wearing life jackets, to escape if one of the vessels capsized.
Two tourists died in Philadelphia in 2010 when the duck boat they
were in was struck by a tugboat on the Delaware River.
(Reporting by Andrew Hay in Taos, New Mexico and Brendan O'Brien in
Milwaukee; Additional reporting by Barbara Goldberg and Gina
Cherelus in New York and Jon Herskovitz in Austin, Texas; Writing by
Scott Malone; Editing by Toni Reinhold and Clarence Fernandez)
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