
Tragic update for Texas family who went missing at sea last summer
Authorities finally located a missing Texas family's boat nearly a year after they disappeared in 180 feet of water off the coast of Alaska.
The Alaska Department of Public Safety announced on Wednesday that authorities located the family's boat and potential human remains in early May.
The tragic update comes after David Maynard, 42, Mary Maynard, 37, and their sons Colton, 11, and Brantley, 8, disappeared at sea last August.
The family of four was on board a 28 foot aluminum vessel with four others when it began taking in water.
The four other individuals were rescued from a life raft, but the family was on board the ship when it capsized and sank in the freezing Alaskan waters.
A massive search ensued, led by the Coast Guard and Alaska Wildlife Troopers. Authorities used helicopters and sonar equipment to find the family, but the search was suspended the following evening.
An update came in April when Support Vessels of Alaska, Vision Subsea, and Benthic Geoscience contacted the Alaska Wildlife Troopers with additional resources to assist in the search, according to the Alaska Department of Public Safety.
'In early May, the group was able to locate the vessel in 180 feet of water and utilizing a remotely operated vehicle, they were able to positively identify it as the missing boat with potential human remains onboard,' the Alaska Department of Public Safety said.
After the companies located the sunken ship, divers conducted operations to recover the remains on board.
There were three sets of remains found that have been transported to the State Medical Examiner's Office to confirm the identities.
The family had been presumed dead after search efforts were suspended last year.
At a presumptive death hearing in September, one of the survivors spoke and tearfully recalled the moment the boat began to sink, audio obtained by local NBC affiliate, KCEN-TV revealed.
'They were just gone,' one survivor recounted.
'It had to have been, I mean it was 10 minutes, maybe 10 minutes from us having fun to the boat - the boat rolled like this, tipped on its side and then the engines went down and just the nose up,' she added.
The captain of the boat said that the engine had sputtered, and he anchored the vessel after seeing another fishing boat nearby.
'At one point, David asked me, got my attention, and he pointed to the back corner of the deck where there was a drain hole for water that would come up, get on deck,' the captain said.
'He pointed to it and he said, "Is that normal?" and I said "no."'
The captain, who wasn't identified, said that he tried to fire up the engine, but it wouldn't start. David then tried to use the radio to call for help.
When help arrived, the four survivors had escaped, but the Maynards didn't make it off the capsized boat.
A ship called the Salty Sea rescued the survivors, and the ship's captain said their rescuers, 'asked if there was anybody else, and I told him there were, but they didn't make it out of the boat.'
The presumptive death jury then determined that the family of four died as a result of accidental drowning.
The family was from Troy, Texas, and was on vacation in Alaska when their boat tragically sank.
A family friend told the Anchorage Daily News at the time that their sons, Colton and Brantley, both played soccer and baseball.
Mary worked as a traveling nurse, and David had a lawn care business and stayed home with the kids.
A fundraiser was set up to support the family on GoFundMe, and donations passed the original goal.
'The Maynard's left a huge imprint on many people, from the laughter they brought to us, the love and family-oriented connection they provided, It is indescribable the void that will be left behind but I know if we come together as a family and a community they would know how much they meant to everyone,' the description on the fundraiser read.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
Hunter Goodman, Rockies eye first series win of season
June 3 - Hunter Goodman has been a shining light in a dark season for the Colorado Rockies. After the catcher socked two homers in Colorado's 6-4 road victory over the Miami Marlins on Monday, the Rockies will shoot for their first series win of the season on Tuesday. On Sunday, the Rockies became the first team in modern major league history (since 1901) to lose 50 times before earning 10 wins. Defeat No. 50, against the New York Mets, was Colorado's eighth setback in a row. The Rockies ended the skid while finally getting win No. 10 in the opener of a three-game series at Miami. If the Rockies win Tuesday or Wednesday to take the three-game set, they would end their season-opening run of losing 19 straight series -- a modern major league record. A victory on Tuesday would give Colorado its second two-game winning streak of the season, matching the results of April 30-May 1. Despite the team's results, Goodman is having an impressive campaign. After going 3-for-5 with three RBIs on Monday, the 25-year-old is leading the team with a .273 batting average, nine home runs, 34 RBIs and 59 hits in 58 games. His 11 doubles are second on the team, and he has a .780 OPS, much better than his career .642 OPS entering 2025. Goodman has taken over the catching job for Colorado after being used mostly as an outfielder and first baseman since being drafted in 2021. However, he has always wanted to be a catcher, so he pushed to get back behind the plate this spring. He has started 32 games as a catcher this season and 23 as a designated hitter. Goodman has been the Rockies' cleanup hitter for 32 games. "Catching is something you have to embrace because it is so tough, especially at this level, but that is what I want," Goodman said this spring, according to the Denver Post. "I think catching helps me at the plate, for sure. I think just the consistent at-bats and being able to relax a little more this year and feel more comfortable in the box has been big." Unfortunately for Colorado, Goodman's breakout season has not added up to many wins. Even with the win on Monday, the Rockies are on pace for 135 losses this year. The Chicago White Sox set the modern day record with 121 losses last season after a 17-50 start -- significantly better than Colorado's current 10-50 start. The Rockies had not officially named a starter for the Tuesday game as of late Tuesday night, but it might be right-hander Tanner Gordon (1-2, 4.24 ERA). The rookie has yet to oppose the Marlins. Miami is scheduled to counter with right-hander Sandy Alcantara (2-7, 8.47 ERA). His last time out, Alcantara received a no-decision, a positive result considering he lost each of the prior seven starts. During the eight-game winless run, he has a 10.09 ERA, having walked 21 and struck out 28 in 35 2/3 innings. Alcantara won the National League Cy Young Award in 2022 when he went 14-9 with a 2.28 ERA. However, he has struggled since, going 7-12 with a 4.14 ERA in 2023 and sitting out all of 2024 after Tommy John surgery. The slow start to 2025 has not helped. "It's tough. You've got to be strong," he said last week, according to The Athletic. "Watching people's comments, hearing people talk very bad about you. It's something that you have to not pay attention to. But I'm strong, man. I believe in myself." Alcantara has started four games against the Rockies in his career, going 2-2 with a 5.11 ERA. --Field Level Media


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Adolescence star, 15, wins big at Gotham TV Awards after getting the day off school
Adolescence star Owen Cooper won big for his portrayal of a young murder suspect. On Monday, Cooper, 15, became the winner of the Gotham TV Award for Outstanding Supporting Performance in a Limited Series. Cooper, who got the day off from school before attending the show, tied for the award with Dying of Sex star Jenny Slate, 43. Taking the stage to accept the gong on Monday at New York City, Cooper drew laughter as he thanked his parents for 'creating' him and heaped praise on his co-star Erin Doherty, 32, who played psychologist Briony Ariston and was also nominated for the same award. 'Main person that I have to thank is Erin, who is also nominated for this award. That episode that we did together, it was easy to do it with you and it was such an honor to share this, share this award with you. You deserve this award just as much as I do, so round of applause for Erin please,' he said, getting the crowd to clap. 'And I also want to thank Philip Barantini, Joe Johnson, Stephen Graham and I want to thank Hannah Walters. I just want to thank everyone that was part of the Adolescence cast and crew, everyone that was there,' he said. 'Who else, my parents for creating me. Yeah but that's about it. Thanks to Gotham awards for handing me this award.' Adolescence was nominated for four Gotham awards and won three of them -Breakthrough Limited Series, Outstanding Lead Performance in a Limited Series for Stephen Graham, and Outstanding Supporting Performance in a Limited Series for Owen (the fourth nomination was for Erin, who lost to her co-star). It's not the first award Cooper has received for his portrayal of the troubled young teen, with the actor also winning the Breakthrough Award from the IndieWire Honors. Cooper's role has also earned him a nomination for one of the biggest honors in TV - the Emmy Award for Best Supporting Actor. If he wins, the sensation would be the youngest ever male winner in the 76-year-old history of the 'TV Oscars'. Experts hailed the 'genius move' of placing Cooper in Supporting, as opposed to Best Actor, which they said would massively boost his chances of winning. Despite experts calling Owen a 'lock-in' for the award, the modest teenager recently said he was just focused on succeeding at school rather than winning awards. Owen Cooper accepts the #GothamAward for Outstanding Supporting Performance in a Limited Series: "I want to thank my parents for creating me." — Variety (@Variety) June 3, 2025 'That's, like, next-level. This time last year, I didn't know what I'd be doing. It's just crazy how fast it's come around. It's an honour to be even in that conversation for an Emmy. 'I just focus on what I've gotta do at the moment, you know? I'm focusing on school, so that's just all outside noise for me at the minute,' he told Extra TV. The Brit's main competition in his category is Javier Bardem, who starred in Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story and was initially the bookies' favourite. Speaking to Gold Derby last month about the prospect of gaining recognition with awards, Owen said: 'If that was to be the case, it's definitely a massive achievement and it's the next step in my life. I'll just take it and move on. 'It's one of them things that will forever be there and I'll never forget it for the rest of my life.' And he deflected the praise back to the team who surrounded him on the show. 'It's all rooted from Stephen [Graham], Hannah [Walters, the producer], Phil [Barantini, the director], Jo Johnson the producer, it's all from them. I couldn't have done it without them,' he said. Cooper, who hails from a proudly working class estate in central Warrington, was chosen from 500 candidates for the role of Jamie. It was his first-ever acting job and no one in his family has a background in the industry. He is being supported on his meteoric rise by dad Andy, an IT worker, and mum Noreen, a carer. Brand and culture expert Nick Ede predicted Owen could follow in Timothée Chalamet's footsteps and become 'the toast of Hollywood'. He told MailOnline: 'The phenomenal success of Adolescence has taken the TV world by storm and critics have been raving about Owen's stand-out performance. 'The Hollywood elite love a rags-to-riches story and, at 15 and his first ever role, this young actor who was brought up in humble surroundings could soon become Hollywood's hottest property and follow the path of many other child stars who have become household names, like Millie Bobby Brown or Timothee Chalamet. 'I'm sure writers will already be presenting his agents with scripts and synopsis that will feature him. 'As he's so young I am sure he will be looked after and not thrust into the limelight without any support. 'Being a star in the UK is very different from being an international phenomenon. I am sure the offers will be rolling in from feature films to brand deals and beyond. 'He will probably feel a lot of pressure, but also feel a massive sense of achievement from where he has come from to where he is now.' The Emmy awards ceremony will take place in LA in September.


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
North Dakota's historic sites will finally have toilets that flush
Lawrence Welk didn't have a flush toilet where he grew up, but visitors to his childhood home in rural North Dakota now do. The bandleader's childhood family home marks the latest step in the State Historical Society of North Dakota's nearly completed goal of installing flush toilets at its dozen most popular, staffed sites. The most recent success, with the final three planned to be completed soon, came before the unveiling of a statue of Welk at a site that draws fans who recall 'The Lawrence Welk Show,' which ran on TV for decades starting in the 1950s. The North Dakota group's goal of replacing pit toilets with flush units may seem like a humble aspiration to some, but it's an important milestone, said Chris Dorfschmidt, a historic sites manager. 'A lot of our sites are kind of in the middle of nowhere. As I like to put it, history didn't happen where it's convenient,' he said. 'Because of that, if you've driven all the way out there, and that's the best we can do to kind of accommodate you, it's not the most pleasant experience.' North Dakota has 60 state historic sites — everything from museums and an underground nuclear launch facility to plaques mounted on boulders in fields. 'All of our sites, they really do help share a story of us as a state,' Dorfschmidt said. Two other facilities are slated to be finished by June 30: at Whitestone Hill, the site of a deadly 1863 attack by U.S. troops against Native Americans; and Fort Buford, a military fort near the Missouri-Yellowstone river confluence. The Historical Society also is eyeing the Chateau de Mores for flush toilets. The wealthy Marquis de Mores built the 26-room home in 1883 near Medora, a present-day tourist town in the state's scenic Badlands where a young President Theodore Roosevelt once roamed. Less-visited sites that aren't staffed likely won't receive a restroom upgrade, which costs about $150,000 each. At the Welk Homestead, about 50 miles (80.5 kilometers) southeast of Bismarck, workers matched the color scheme of the restroom to the house and farm buildings, including interior colors. 'We made it to fit into the site and harmonize with the site and just be a pleasant part of the experience,' Historic Sites Manager Rob Hanna said.