Friday, November 22, 2024

Titan sub hearings live: OceanGate CEO ‘knew it would end like this,’ says friend

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Long-time friend of OceanGate CEO Stockton Rush said Titan sub explosion was ‘expected’

The hearings into the Titan submersible disaster will resume today after a friend of the OceanGate CEO who said the boss “knew it was going to end like this” testified yesterday.

Karl Stanley, the owner of a diving expedition company in Honduras and a close friend of Stockton Rush, went on the doomed submersible with his friend in April 2019. The Titan sub imploded last June, killing all five people on board, including Rush.

In a previous interview after the disaster, Stanley said: “[Rush] definitely knew it was going to end like this. He quite literally and figuratively went out with the biggest bang in human history that you could go out with.”

Yesterday Stanley testified hearing cracking noises on the submersible and that he could pinpoint where they were coming from. He told the board that Rush was “scared” during the 2019 dive.

“It was unnerving and then when it kept happening,” Stanley testified, referring to the noises. “It’s also a clue to me about Stockton’s psychology…he was scared,” he added.

Today’s hearing will feature testimony from Don Kramer, National Transportation Safety Board engineer, and other specialists.

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Recap: Testimony of Karl Stanley who said ‘there were a lot of red flags’ with Titan

Yesterday Karl Stanley testified that there were “a lot of red flags” when he accompanied Stockton Rush on a dive in the Titan sub in 2019.

Stanley was a childhood friend of Rush’s.

“He told us to be prepared for noises. He had recently done the solo dive on his own, and basically just said, ‘this is going to make noise’ and ‘brace yourselves,’” he told the hearing.

“Another clue in retrospect, is he didn’t tow out,” Stanley said, adding that not towing out deeper showed Rush did not have “a lot of faith” in the sub.

Stanley also noted Rush did not drive the sub.

“He didn’t do any of the driving…I believe I was the first one to drive, but he basically insisted it was his idea,” he said. “Nobody asked to drive…I think that was his kind of sick way of if we had imploded, we were a little bit in control of our own destiny.”

Karl Stanley testifies before the Coast Guard Marine Board of Investigation
Karl Stanley testifies before the Coast Guard Marine Board of Investigation (US Coast Guard)

Rhian Lubin25 September 2024 12:40

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Welcome back to live coverage

Welcome back to our live coverage of the hearings.

Proceedings are due to resume at 8.30am ET, with the first witness scheduled to testify at 9am ET.

The US Coast Guard will hear from Don Kramer, an engineer with the National Transportation Safety Board.

Rhian Lubin25 September 2024 12:13

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Hearing to resume tomorrow

The Titan submersible hearing will begin again on Wednesday, September 25.

Wednesday’s hearing will feature testimony from Don Kramer, National Transportation Safety Board engineer; William Kohnen of Hydrospace Group Inc.; and chairman of the Manned Underwater Vehicles Committee; and Bart Kemper, prinicpal engineer of Kemper Engineering.

This blog will resume on Wednesday morning.

Katie Hawkinson25 September 2024 02:00

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Video: Newly released footage reveals more Titan sub debris post-implosion that killed five

Newly released footage reveals more Titan sub debris post-implosion that killed five

Katie Hawkinson25 September 2024 01:45

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OceanGate’s Titan submarine relied on ‘idiotic’ Excel spreadsheet

A hearing into OceanGate’s Titan sub, which imploded during an expedition to the wreck of the Titanic last year, revealed that its navigation system allegedly relied on team members manually inputting the coordinate data into a spreadsheet in order to track the vessel.

The incident last July killed all five people on board, including OceanGate’s CEO and co-founder Stockton Rush.

Anthony Cuthbertson25 September 2024 00:45

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Close friend of Stockton Rush provides insight into former OceanGate CEO’s mind

Karl Stanley, a long-time friend to former OceanGate CEO Stockton Rush, described his fears and why he was interested in submersibles.

Stanley testified hearing cracking noises on the submersible when he was on board in 2019 and that he could pinpoint where they were coming from.

“It was unnerving and then when it kept happening,” Stanley testified, referring to the noises. “I remember I was the one that was able to isolate the area where it was coming from and told them, ‘this, this is the area,’ and was listening right there.”

Stanley said Rush was likely scared during that dive.

“It’s also a clue to me about Stockton’s psychology…he was scared. Because if he wasn’t scared, he would have already isolated where the noises were coming from him on his first dive,” he continued.

He also claimed Stockton kept diving because he wanted to go down in history.

“The entire reason this whole operation started was Stockton had a desire to leave his mark on history,” Stanley testified.

“I think that’s why he kept diving, and he knew that eventually it was going to end like this and he wasn’t going to be held accountable, but he was going to be the most famous of all his famous relatives,” he continued.

Katie Hawkinson24 September 2024 23:45

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ICYMI: Final messages revealed from the Titan sub before tragic implosion

Those were some of the final words that the doomed Titan submersible crew communicated before the submersible imploded on its mission to the Titanic wreckage site in June 2023.

Read more on the chilling last messages from the Titan sub ahead of Wednesday’s hearing:

Katie Hawkinson24 September 2024 22:45

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ICYMI: OceanGate specialist sobs as she remembers last time seeing Titan submersible crew

OceanGate specialist sobs as she remembers last time seeing Titan submersible crew

Katie Hawkinson24 September 2024 21:45

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ICYMI: Former OceanGate director of administration says she was asked to let contractor go over ‘erratic’ behavior

Amber Bay, former director of administration for OceanGate, said a former contractor who raised safety concerns was released from her contract because Stockton Rush said she acted erratically.

“I was asked by Stockton to release her from her contract, as she had acted erratically, unprofessionally, and had disturbed our crew during a challenging situation in the communications pit,” Bay testified on Tuesday morning.

She was referring to Antonella Wilby, who testified last week that she reported a customer’s safety concerns following a dive in 2022, PEOPLE reports.

“I felt the customer’s concerns were not taken particularly seriously at that meeting,” Wilby said. “So, following the debrief, I went to Amber Bay, the director of administration, to raise my concerns about what I had just heard. I told her, ‘I am really concerned about what this customer just said and that there was a bang as loud as an explosion.’ I asked, ‘What’s being done?’”

Wilby claimed Bay responded with: “Yes, many people are concerned about you. You don’t seem to have an explorer mindset.”

“I was kind of taken aback by that because she didn’t acknowledge what I had just said and what was going to be done,” Wilby added.

Katie Hawkinson24 September 2024 20:45

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Tuesday’s hearing ends

Today’s Titan submersible hearing has come to a close after testimony from Stockton Rush’s close friend, Karl Stanley, and OceanGate’s former director of administration Amber Bay.

Katie Hawkinson24 September 2024 20:11

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