oldharry
Well-Known Member
Nigel, I wouldnt take too much notice of the 'headline' aspects of this - or any other - scenario. The press are always desparate to 'make' news, and any promising sounding aspect of an enquiry is going to get editors trying to make something of nothing.
How many newspaper reporters knew for example that ships carried 'black box recorders? Some editor hearing this perhaps for the first time trying to make 'news' of a minor and routine element of an enquiry that had caught the public attention?
Similarly the investigation for hull marks on PoB: IIRC PoB was one of a number of ships that was checked for evidence of possible collision with Ouzo. Only the checks on PoB were reported.
And the 2nd mate? once he had been charged there was nothing else except for the guy to go find himself a lawyer, and wait for the trial - set I believe for the autumn. Nothing else to be said and in any case his guilt or otherwise is now 'sub judice' which I understand means the press can not comment anyway.
What I find sad about the whole affair is that Ouzo is not the only yacht to have been lost presumed run down in the channel, nor were the three unfortunates aboard the first to have died as a result. The big difference is that the press latched on to this story and made headlines of it.
Sadly, unless Ouzo is found nobody will ever actually know what happened, so any report is bound to be conjectural. There is no actual evidence that the PoBs 'close encounter' was actually with the Ouzo, and not with some other boat that actually survived - the yachts lights were seen astern of the ship immediately afterwards - which was the basis for the OOWs decision not to call the skipper, or report an incident.
Maybe he was right - and poor Ouzo and crew met their end some other time and place?
How many newspaper reporters knew for example that ships carried 'black box recorders? Some editor hearing this perhaps for the first time trying to make 'news' of a minor and routine element of an enquiry that had caught the public attention?
Similarly the investigation for hull marks on PoB: IIRC PoB was one of a number of ships that was checked for evidence of possible collision with Ouzo. Only the checks on PoB were reported.
And the 2nd mate? once he had been charged there was nothing else except for the guy to go find himself a lawyer, and wait for the trial - set I believe for the autumn. Nothing else to be said and in any case his guilt or otherwise is now 'sub judice' which I understand means the press can not comment anyway.
What I find sad about the whole affair is that Ouzo is not the only yacht to have been lost presumed run down in the channel, nor were the three unfortunates aboard the first to have died as a result. The big difference is that the press latched on to this story and made headlines of it.
Sadly, unless Ouzo is found nobody will ever actually know what happened, so any report is bound to be conjectural. There is no actual evidence that the PoBs 'close encounter' was actually with the Ouzo, and not with some other boat that actually survived - the yachts lights were seen astern of the ship immediately afterwards - which was the basis for the OOWs decision not to call the skipper, or report an incident.
Maybe he was right - and poor Ouzo and crew met their end some other time and place?