A father and three children were among nine members of a family who were killed in a duck boat accident in Branson, Missouri
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Hundreds attend funeral for family members killed in boat accident
A father and three children were among nine members of a family who were killed in a duck boat accident in Branson, Missouri
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Hundreds attend funeral for family members killed in boat accident
BRANSON, Mo. (CBSNewYork/AP) — The duck boat that capsized and sank last week on a sightseeing cruise was raised from a Missouri lake Monday, more than three days after the accident that killed 17 people near the tourist town of Branson. The boat , which was submerged in 80 feet of water, went down Thursday evening after a sudden thunderstorm generated near-hurricane strength winds. Divers attached a sling to the boat, then raised the vessel. Once it was brought to the surface, it was drained, Coast Guard Capt. Scott Stoermer told reporters. The vessel will be loaded onto a vehicle and transported to a facility where the National Transportation Safety Board will take custody of it, Stoermer said. Nine of the people who died belonged to one Indiana family. Others killed came from Missouri, Arkansas and Illinois. Divers already have recovered a video-recording device that was aboard the boat, although it’s unclear whether it was working when the boat capsized or whether any data can be retrieved. The recorder is headed to the National Transportation Safety Board lab in Washington, D.C. Keith Holloway, an NTSB spokesman, said it was unclear what the recorder captured, including whether it recorded audio. The NTSB also wants to know what the captain knew about the forecasted weather and when he knew it. “The real objective is going to be to find out what kind of information they had on board when they made the decision to go out,” said Dr. Earl Weener with the NTSB. Steve Paul, owner of the Test Drive Technologies inspection service in the St. Louis area, has said he issued a written report in August 2017 for Ripley Entertainment, which owns Ride the Ducks in Branson, after inspecting two dozen boats. In the report, he explained why the vessels’ engines — and pumps that remove water from their hulls — might fail in inclement weather. Paul said he won’t know if the boat that sank is one that he inspected until it has been recovered from the lake. Ripley Entertainment, which owns Ride the Ducks in Branson, hasn’t responded to questions about Paul’s concerns. Suzanne Smagala with Ripley Entertainment, said the company is assisting authorities with the rescue effort and that the accident last week was the company’s first in more than 40 years of operation in Branson. The Missouri attorney general says there state highway patrol is also investigating to see if there was any criminal negligence, but so far no charges have been filed. (© Copyright 2018 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)
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Coast Guard Raises Duck Boat That Sank In Storm, Killing 17
Loren Smith managed to swim to safety but lost her family members when tourist boat capsized and sunk near Branson, Missouri
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Teen who lost her dad and brother describes duck boat capsizing
Loren Smith managed to swim to safety but lost her family members when tourist boat capsized and sunk near Branson, Missouri
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Teen who lost her dad and brother describes duck boat capsizing
“Today we honor the 17 lives that were lost,” Branson Mayor Karen Best said at a church service Sunday
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Community mourns Missouri duck boat victims
Investigators retrieved the black box from the amphibious tour boat that capsized and sank Thursday night near Branson, Missouri. Seventeen people were killed. Omar Villafranca reports.
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Recording device retrieved from doomed duck boat
BRANSON, Mo. (AP) — The 17 people killed when a tourist boat sank in a Missouri lake were remembered Sunday during a service attended by around 200 people in the tourism community of Branson. A church bell at Williams Chapel at College of the Ozarks chimed 17 times for those who died Thursday at Table Rock Lake, the Joplin Globe reported. “Today we honor the 17 lives that were lost,” said Branson Mayor Karen Best. “We honor the 14 survivors. And we honor the many heroes who did everything in their power to save lives.” The service was held at the college near the site of the accident, which happened as winds approached hurricane strength. The city and college hosted the remembrance for the victims. Nine of the people who died were part of one Indiana family. Online fundraisers had raised more than $400,000 for their funeral expenses by Sunday afternoon. Tia Coleman opened up yesterday about losing her husband, three children and five other family members in the tragedy. Two GoFundMe campaigns are underway for the Coleman family, who lost three generations in the duck boat accident. (credit: CNN) GoFundMe spokeswoman Katherine Cichy says it’s verified one campaign that’s raising money. Ingrid Coleman Douglas tells The Indianapolis Star a second campaign is also legitimate. Others killed were from Missouri, Arkansas and Illinois. (@Copyright 2018. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)
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Bell Chimes 17 Times At Memorial For Branson Boat Victims
BRANSON, Mo. (CBSNews/AP) — More than half of the 17 people killed when a tourist boat sank on a lake in Missouri were members of the same I ndiana family , and they likely would not have been on the ill-fated trip but for a ticket mix-up. Others who died in the accident at Table Rock Lake included a Missouri couple who had recently celebrated a birthday, a longtime Rhode Island pastor who was operating the boat, and an Indiana father and son. The Stone County Sheriff’s Department identified the Indiana family members as 45-year-old Angela Coleman, 1-year-old Arya Coleman, 69-year-old Belinda Coleman, 76-year-old Ervin Coleman, 7-year-old Evan Coleman, 40-year-old Glenn Coleman, 70-year-old Horace Coleman, 2-year-old Maxwell Coleman, and 9-year-old Reece Coleman. A relative of the family, Kim Thomas Sr., said they’re taking the news hard. “The kids are doing better than we are. We have to live in this world; they have gone to the other side,” said Thomas, 51, of Indianapolis, whose cousin, Tia Coleman, was one of two members of the family to survive the accident at Table Rock Lake near Branson. Coleman said the boat’s captain told them “don’t worry about grabbing the life jackets. You won’t need them” — so none of the family members grabbed them. “However in doing that, when it was time to grab them, it was too late and I believe that a lot of people could have been spared,” she told CBS Indianapolis affiliate WTTV . “The only thing that I would like to be done but can’t, is to bring my family back.” Others who died were 69-year-old William Asher, 68-year-old Rosemarie Hamann, 63-year-old Janice Bright, 65-year-old William Bright, and the crew member operating the boat, 73-year-old Bob Williams, all from Missouri. Also killed were 64-year-old Leslie Dennison of Illinois, and 53-year-old Steve Smith and his son, 15-year-old Lance Smith, both from Arkansas. State and federal investigators were trying to determine what sent the vessel known as a duck boat to its demise in what was the deadliest accident of its kind in early two decades. An initial assessment blamed thunderstorms and winds that approached hurricane strength, but it wasn’t clear why the amphibious vehicle even ventured into the water. The National Weather Service had issued a severe thunderstorm watch for the area Thursday, saying conditions were ripe for winds of 70 mph. It followed up at 6:32 p.m. with a severe thunderstorm warning for three counties that included Branson and the lake. The warning mentioned both locations. The boat went down about 40 minutes later, shortly after 7 p.m. Suzanne Smagala with Ripley Entertainment, which owns Ride the Ducks in Branson, said the company was assisting authorities with their investigation. She said this was the company’s only accident in more than 40 years of operation. Twenty-nine passengers and two crew members were aboard. Seven of the 14 survivors were hurt. The captain survived, authorities said. Among the injured was 14-year-old Loren Smith of Osceola, Arkansas. Her father, retired math teacher Steve Smith, and her brother died in the accident. Loren suffered a concussion. “It’s a hard thing,” Steve Smith’s father, Carroll Smith, said of losing his only child and his only grandson. “It’s a very difficult day.” Branson Mayor Karen Best said Williams, the boat driver, was known by many as “Captain Bob” and was a “great ambassador” for the city. “He was at every event. He knew everyone. He was always promoting Branson,” Best said. Williams’ family in Rhode Island, where he’d lived for decades before retiring to Branson, remembered him as a deeply religious man who founded a local church. “Pastor Bob was a prince of a man, loving, kind, and generous, whose loss to our family is incalculable,” said Williams’ son-in-law, Bishop Jeffery Williams, who now leads King’s Cathedral in Providence. “I truly believe in my heart that he died trying to save those people,” one of Williams’ neighbors, Charlie ‘Ray’ Revill, said at a vigil Friday night. “Bob Williams was the finest man I’ve ever known.” Hamann and Asher, a St. Louis-area couple killed in the accident, had been celebrating Hamman’s birthday earlier in the week. Her final Facebook photo was a selfie with Asher. He’s sticking his tongue out, and she’s smiling. Friend Russ McKay said he talked to Hamann the day before the accident to say they had just gone on a paddle boat and were planning to go again. He doesn’t know why they chose the duck boat instead. “I can only imagine what they were going through. They were so in love. It’s just heartbreaking,” McKay said. An email message seeking comment from Ripley Entertainment about Coleman’s comment was not immediately returned. Named for their ability to travel on land and in water, duck boats have been involved in other serious accidents in the past, including the deaths of more than 40 people since 1999. The Ride the Ducks tour begins in downtown Branson, where the vehicles take passengers on a tour while the captain cracks jokes and points out landmarks. Eventually, the boats pull up to the lake and slowly enter the water with a small splash. After a few minutes on the water, the vehicles return to land and to their home base, which features a store selling candy and souvenirs. (© 2018 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)
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Survivor Describes Deadly Duck Boat Accident That Killed Her Family
Officials have released the names of the 17 victims killed when a tour boat capsized near Branson, Missouri. The accident happened as winds approached hurricane strength. Omar Villafranca reports.
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Victims of fatal duck boat accident identified
More than half of the 17 people killed when a tourist boat sank on a Branson lake were members of the same Indiana family
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Indiana family and Missouri couple are among the tour boat accident victims
Branson, Missouri mayor Karen Best joins “CBS This Morning: Saturday” from Branson to discuss her community’s response to the deaths of 17 people after a tourist boat capsized and sank on Thursday, Branson’s reputation for embracing strangers and why she’s not ready to say whether duck boats should be banned or not.
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Branson mayor says it’s "too early" to make a call on banning duck boats
All but the two crew members who were on the duck boat that sank in Branson, Missouri, with 31 people on board were tourists. But Branson is a town where in some ways there are no strangers. Dana Jacboson reports.
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Branson bands together in wake of duck boat tragedy
New details are emerging about a deadly tour boat accident in Branson, Missouri. The boat sank during a violent storm, killing 17 people. CBS News correspondent Omar Villafranca reports.
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Video of duck boat’s final moments show it struggling to stay afloat
7 others hurt after Ride the Ducks boat went down in stormy weather on Table Rock Lake in Branson, Missouri
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Tourist boat capsizes on lake, sinks, killing 17
NEW YORK (CBS News) – Authorities say 17 people are dead after a tour boat carrying 31 people capsized and sank on Table Rock Lake in Branson, Missouri, during a powerful storm Thursday. The National Weather Service reported wind gusts of more than 60 mph. Tourist Trent Behr was on a nearby boat at the time. He says people jumped into the water to help save one woman. “We got one of the life carriers, one of those things we got her in there and pulled her up, and I was yelling for people to get CPR,” said Behr. Jim Pattison Jr., the president of Ripley Entertainment, which owns the duck boat tour company involved in the incident, told “CBS This Morning” on Friday the boat “shouldn’t have been in the water.” “I don’t have all the details, but to answer your question, no, it shouldn’t have been in the water if, if what happened, happened,” he said when asked why the tour continued in such rough conditions. “This business has been operating for 47 years and we’ve never had an incident like this or anything close to it. To the best of our knowledge – and we don’t have a lot of information now – but it was a fast-moving storm that came out of basically nowhere is sort of the verbal analysis I’ve got,” Pattison said. According to Pattison, the boats do have life jackets on board but passengers are not required to wear them by law. “Usually the lake is very placid and it’s not a long tour, they go in and kind of around an island and back. We had other boats in the water earlier and it had been a great, sort of calm experience,” Pattison said. He added that the captain of that particular boat had 16 years of experience with the company, Ride the Ducks. “You know, they have a very good record. So, again, this seems to be sort of almost a micro storm effect of something that no one was expecting to happen the way that it did,” Pattison said. President Donald Trump tweeted about the accident Friday morning. “My deepest sympathies to the families and friends of those involved in the terrible boat accident which just took place in Missouri,” said Trump. “Such a tragedy, such a great loss. May God be with you all!” My deepest sympathies to the families and friends of those involved in the terrible boat accident which just took place in Missouri. Such a tragedy, such a great loss. May God be with you all! — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) July 20, 2018 “Our thoughts and prayers are with these family members,” said Missouri Gov. Mike Parson on Friday. “We as a state will do everything within my powers to make sure they all have the resources here they need.” (© 2018 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.)
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Death Toll Rises To 17 In Fatal Boat Accident In Missouri