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WEEK IN REVIEW
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Associated Press  (click to enlarge)
The Alaska Ranger is shown at a port in Dutch Harbor, Alaska, in January 2006.
 
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Published: Monday, March 24, 2008

Seattle-based fishing boat sinks in Alaska; 4 die

The Coast Guard searches for a missing crew member after rescuing 42 others from the Seattle-based fishing boat Alaska Ranger.

ANCHORAGE, Alaska -- Four crew members died Sunday and another was missing after a Seattle-based fishing boat sank in high seas off Alaska's Aleutian Islands, the Coast Guard said.

The dead were among 47 crew members who abandoned ship after the 184-foot Alaska Ranger developed problems. Forty-two crew members were recovered safely, but a search was continuing for the missing person, said Chief Petty Officer Barry Lane.

The dead were identified by vessel owner, the Fishing Company of Alaska, as ship's captain Eric Peter Jacobsen, chief engineer Daniel Cook, mate David Silveira and crewman Byron Carrillo.

"They were incredibly brave, hard working men. Our hearts are broken," the company said in a prepared statement. Ages and hometowns of the men were not released.

The vessel started taking on water shortly before 3 a.m. after losing control of its rudder 120 miles west of Dutch Harbor, which is on Unalaska Island. In its statement, the Fishing Company of Alaska said it did "not have sufficient information to determine why the vessel foundered."

Seas with up to 8-foot waves and 25-knot winds were reported at the time of the sinking, Lane said. The Coast Guard is investigating the cause of the accident, he said.

State environmental regulators were notified that the ship was carrying 145,000 gallons of diesel when it sank in deep seas, according to Leslie Pearson, emergency response manager for the Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation.

A Coast Guard C-130 crew reported an oil sheen that covered an area of a quarter mile by a half mile, Coast Guard spokesman Ray Dwyer said. Because of the strong winds, however, any cleanup effort is unlikely, although those conditions would disperse a spill much more quickly than calm weather, Pearson said.

Some of those onboard the Alaska Ranger were heading to Dutch Harbor in the doomed vessel's sister ship, the Alaska Warrior, with arrival expected around midnight or early Monday. The vessel took part in the rescue operation along with two Coast Guard helicopters that were used to pluck crew members from life rafts, Lane said.

Other survivors were on board the Coast Guard cutter Munro, which remained at the scene to search for the missing crew member, whose name was not immediately released.

A C-130 also remained to help search for the missing crew member.

Coast Guard Lt. Eric Eggan said it was unknown how or when the four died.

Chuck Harvey, a harbor officer on duty in Dutch Harbor, said his office was notified by the Coast Guard to clear a dock for its arrival. The Coast Guard also told harbor officials to have an ambulance ready, but didn't specify the degree or nature of any injuries, Harvey said.

"I figure there's quite a bit of hypothermia going on," he said.

Coast Guard Petty Officer Levi Read said the Fishing Company of Alaska sent an insurance adjuster to Dutch Harbor.

In December, an engine fire damaged the Alaska Patriot, a trawler owned by the company, while it was docked near Dutch Harbor.

No one was hurt. Roger Deffendall, fire captain with the Unalaska Department of Public Safety, told radio station KIAL that a crew member extinguished the worst of the fire before he and the rest of the crew fled the ship.

The Fishing Company of Alaska was among entities slapped with a $254,500 fine and permit sanctions in 2006 in connection with the fishing vessel Alaska Juris, a catcher-processor fishing vessel managed by the Seattle company. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Fisheries Service said the company -- as well as the boat's owner, Alaska Juris Inc., and its captains -- committed numerous violations, such as tampering with or destroying equipment used by industry observers and failing to provide observers a safe work area.

The captains, Alaska Juris and the Fishing Company of Alaska each were assessed a portion of the penalty.

Federal officials said the case stemmed from a multiyear investigation that documented a range of federal violations, including keeping inaccurate information on required reports and fishing contrary to seasonal closures.

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