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‘We don’t leave our friends behind’

December 5, 2015 — The story is as chilling as it is all too familiar here in America’s oldest fishing village, where for centuries fishermen, in pursuit of the ocean’s bounty, have fallen prey to nature’s full force and elements that inexorably overwhelm all that is human.

On Thursday, in the rushing darkness of a winter twilight, the three-man crew of the 51-foot Orin C went into the water and only two emerged safely onto the deck of the U.S. Coast Guard’s 47-foot lifesaving boat out of Station Gloucester.

David Sutherland, 47, of 10 Montvale Ave. — known to all along the waterfront as Heavy D — died in the water as the Coast Guard tried to rescue him after his slime eel boat sunk about 12 miles off Thacher Island.

“At the end of the day, we managed to save two men, but we lost one and that’s heartbreaking for his family, this community and for us,” said U.S. Coast Guard Chief Warrant Officer Robert Lepere, the commander at Station Gloucester.

The sinking is being investigated by the National Transportation Safety Board with assistance from the Coast Guard. No cause of death has been released.

The story began to unfold about 9:30 Thursday morning, when Phil Powell of Swampscott, captain of the groundfishing boat Foxy Lady, received word from Sutherland that the Orin C was taking on water and in trouble.

Read the full story at the Gloucester Daily Times

 

 

One dead, two rescued as fishing boat sinks

December 4, 2015 — One is dead but two were rescued by the Coast Guard after their fishing boat sank 12 miles off Thacher Island on Thursday night.

The deceased is identified as fisherman David “Heavy D” Sutherland of Gloucester by witnesses and friends in mourning.

A good Samaritan aboard the Foxy Lady notified watchstanders at the Coast Guard Sector Boston command center about 3 p.m. that the fishing boat Orin C was disabled and needed a tow.

The Foxy Lady, captained by Phil Powell, began towing Orin C toward shore, but high wind and waves impeded the effort, according to the Coast Guard. A large wave reportedly crashed over Orin C’s bow, causing the boat to flood.

Watchstanders at Coast Guard Sector Boston, who had been monitoring the tow on VHF radio, launched a 47-foot Motor Life Boat crew from Station Gloucester.

The crew arrived on scene, passed a pump to the Orin C crew, hooked up tow, and made way toward Gloucester against 30 knot winds and 8-foot seas, the Coast Guard said in a statement.

Read the full story at the Gloucester Daily Times

 

 

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