Findings on boat sinking distress Hingham woman
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A fishing boat that sank off the Alaska coast last year most likely
lost its rudder, then flooded and went down, killing five crew members,
federal safety officials said Wednesday.
The National Transportation Safety Board said the 35-year-old boat
did not have internal controls that would have prevented flooding in
the so-called rudder room from spreading into other areas of the
189-foot vessel. In a report, the board said uncontrolled flooding was
the probable cause of the tragedy, but conceded that much about the
ship's sinking is unknown.
The Alaska Ranger sank in March 2008 in the Bering Sea, west of
Dutch Harbor, Alaska. Five of the boat's 47 crew members -- including
the captain, chief engineer and mate -- were among the dead.
Read the complete story at The Boston Globe.
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