Seven people have died in the Bayesian sinking disaster. These include the six missing people who were inside the yacht when it sank, as well as a seventh person who was located shortly after the disaster. The seventh person is understood to be the yacht’s chef, Recaldo Thomas. The other six are:
British tech entrepreneur Mike Lynch, once dubbed ‘Britain’s Bill Gates’
Lynch’s 18-year-old daughter, Hannah
Morgan Stanley’s chairman, Jonathan Bloomer
Judy Bloomer, wife of Morgan Stanley chairman
Chris Morvillo, a lawyer working for London-based law firm Clifford Chance
Neda Morvillo, an American jewellery designer and Chris’ wife
It is understood that the yacht was being used to celebrate Lynch’s recent victory in a 13-year £8 billion fraud acquittal.
No one remembers the mast snapping before 56m superyacht Bayesian sunk, says crew
No one recalls seeing the mast snap on board the 56-metre Perini Navi sailing yacht Bayesian which sank off the Italian island of Sicily on 19 August. The eyewitness account of a crewmember on board the vessel, which was obtained by BOAT International, said that the boat was struck by a freak weather event which led to the yacht heeling at around 20 degrees to starboard. As crewmembers were securing items, the heeling angle began to increase rapidly until the yacht started taking on water and sank rapidly.
The crewmembers who were up on deck were able to evacuate the yacht with minor injuries. The yacht is understood to have sunk in just twelve minutes, and it is believed that a “major ingress” of water from the top down would have caused the sinking, according to a captain who wishes to remain anonymous. This is based on the fact that no breaches have been reported in the yacht’s hull, and the fact that the yacht should have been able to remain afloat with two flooded compartments.
“Very difficult to understand what could have overwhelmed a vessel of that size” says captain of sistership
The captain of the sistership to the sunken 56-metre Perini Navi sailing yacht Bayesian has said it is “very difficult to understand what could have overwhelmed a vessel of that size” and called the 56-metre Perini Navi series “bulletproof”.
David Hutchinson, captain of Rosehearty, said he had taken the yacht around the world multiple times and he had “total faith in the boat”. “We’ve been to Antarctica and Chile, and we’ve had her in 70 knots of wind,” he says, and the vessel had never put them in a situation that felt unmanageable.
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