logo
Investigators give timeline of Brooklyn Bridge ship crash that left 2 dead

Investigators give timeline of Brooklyn Bridge ship crash that left 2 dead

Yahoo20-05-2025

After several days in New York, it took less than five minutes for a Mexican Navy ship to hit the city's iconic Brooklyn Bridge, snapping the masts like matchsticks and leaving two crew members dead and over a dozen injured as crowds watched in fear from the shore.
The accident Saturday night raised a slew of questions about how the tall ship – a training vessel – was able to sail in the wrong direction up the East River, instead of out to sea, and the safety of US bridges and the risks they face.
Authorities on Monday gave a preliminary timeline leading up to the fatal crash but stressed it's too early to speculate on a cause.
'This is the start of a long process. We will not be drawing any conclusions. We will not speculate. We will also not be determining the probable cause while we're on scene,' National Transportation Safety Board member Michael Graham said at a news conference Monday.
The image of the tall ship, outfitted with long horizontal yards attached to billowing white sails, colliding Saturday night with the bridge against a shimmering Manhattan skyline left onlookers stunned.
Those who died fell from a mast, a law enforcement official told CNN. They were a cadet and sailor, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said as she offered her condolences to their families and expressed solidarity with the Mexican Navy.
Twenty-two people were hurt, the Mexican Navy initially said. Nearly 200 cadets have returned to Mexico but 94 crew members remain aboard the vessel, New York City Emergency Management said Monday afternoon.
Two crew members are still hospitalized, Aries Dela Cruz, a spokesperson for the agency, said in a social media post.
The ship will likely be repaired at a New York shipyard and return to service with the Mexican Navy, Sheinbaum said at Monday's news conference.
There was no visible damage to the bridge, which only temporarily closed. The crash caused no structural damage to the span, the NTSB and the New York City Department of Transportation, which manages the crossing, said Monday.
Here's what we know:
The Cuauhtémoc had been docked at the South Street Seaport Museum for five days of public viewing as part of a global goodwill tour. It arrived around noon on May 13 and left Manhattan's Pier 17 on Saturday around 8:20 p.m., the NTSB said.
The ship began backing away from the pier with the help of a tugboat. As it pulled away from the pier, winds were at 10 knots – around 11-12 mph – and the current was 0.3 knots toward the bridge, Brian Young, the NTSB investigator in charge, said Monday.
A westerly wind of 10 mph – gusting up to 16 mph – was reported at the same time at the Robbins Reef Lighthouse on the Upper Bay, south of the Brooklyn Bridge, in New Jersey.
The ship maintained a speed of about 2 knots for 'a bit of time' before it increased to 6 knots, he said.
But it started moving in the 'wrong direction,' a senior city official with knowledge of the investigation told CNN.
At 8:24 p.m., someone made a VHF radio broadcast requesting assistance from other tugboats in the area of the bridge, Young said. It was followed by two other requests for assistance.
At 8:24 and 45 seconds, the vessel's mast struck the underside of the Brooklyn Bridge, Young said.
Soon, 911 calls about the crash started coming in, and authorities began responding around 8:26 p.m., a New York City Police Department spokesperson said.
A crowd of people who had gathered on the Brooklyn side of the bridge to watch the ship screamed and ran for safety.
'At 8:27, the vessel came to a stop and at 8:30, both NYPD and FDNY assests were on scene,' Young said. More than 100 fire and emergency medical service personnel responded, the New York City Fire Department said.
'We could see some people being kind of dragged,' Flavio Moreira told CNN after seeing Saturday's crash. 'I believe it was some of the staff, they were on the top of the boat. And they were swinging around, back and forth as soon as the ship hit the bridge.'
The NTSB team in New York includes experts in nautical operations, marine and bridge engineering and survival factors, Graham said earlier Monday. They'll be looking into three main areas: the crew, the condition of the ship and the environment, including the weather, wind and tide.
The voyage data recorder likely will provide crucial information about what went wrong, including about the ship's mechanics, any 'control input' and when power may have been lost, said Mary Schiavo, CNN transportation analyst and former US Department of Transportation inspector general. It may also offer information about the river, such as the water's depth and its currents.
Graham noted, however, that because investigators have not boarded the ship, it is unknown whether there were any data recorders aboard.
The ship's propeller was going in reverse at the time of the crash, an official with knowledge of the investigation said Monday. The ship also had electricity, as is clear from the lit string lights that were lining the masts. But neither propulsion or electricity indicate the vessel could actually steer at the time, and that's something investigators are currently looking at.
The NTSB is working with its Mexican counterparts to gain access to the ship and eventually interview the captain and crew. They'd been hoping to get on the ship to start the investigation Monday and weren't expecting a delay, an official with knowledge of the investigation told CNN.
While they wait for the Mexican government to sign off, NTSB investigators want to speak with the docking pilot, who is American, the source said, and the tug boat captain.
They're also looking for the person who made the VHF call for help, an official with knowledge of the investigation said Monday.
The NTSB will also look at any possible problems with the ship's engine, Young said. The ship 'experienced a mechanical malfunction,' the NYPD said, citing a preliminary investigation by several agencies, though the NTSB said Monday it had not yet examined the engine and couldn't confirm whether a malfunction occurred.
The Cuauhtémoc's captain told investigators he lost steering of the vessel after the rudder stopped working, the senior official with knowledge of the investigation said.
'They had some sort of mechanical issue, they lost power. So, without being able to use the rudder, they could not steer,' the official said, cautioning all information is preliminary and subject to change.
The NTSB will also be looking into the 'policies and procedures' of the tugboat that helped the ship get off the pier and sailed alongside it leading up to the crash, Young said Monday.
Investigators are working to access CCTV footage and security video from the time of the crash, and are asking anyone who has video of the incident to email witness@ntsb.gov.
The NTSB has 30 days to issue a preliminary report, and a full investigation takes 12 to 24 months to complete, Graham said.
The families of the victims have been notified of the deaths and are working to make final arrangements to repatriate the bodies to Mexico, a spokesperson at the New York City Office of Chief Medical Examiner said Monday. Their deaths have been ruled accidental, the spokesperson said.
The sailor who was killed was identified as Adal Jair Maldonado Marcos, according to the city council of San Mateo del Mar in neighboring Oaxaca state in southern Mexico. The council expressed its 'heartfelt condolences to his family and other loved ones,' it said on Facebook.
América Yamilet Sánchez was the cadet who died, the governor of Veracruz announced, adding she 'deeply' laments the death of Sánchez, a native of Xalapa, the capital city of Veracruz.
As family and friends gathered Sunday at Sánchez's home in Xalapa to honor the 21-year-old, her loved ones demanded answers.
'It's impossible for something so serious to not be thoroughly investigated,' Gael de la Cruz, a relative of Sánchez, told Reuters. 'What happened there is illogical. There must be someone responsible.'
Sánchez's mother, Rocio Hernandez, is in communication with US authorities over the repatriation of her daughter's body, she told Reuters. 'The US coroner already told me that yes, everything is ready … and I'm waiting for that,' she said.
Meanwhile, Mexican naval and diplomatic officials are supporting the injured and the military branch, Sheinbaum said.
Of the 22 crew members who were injured, 18 have recovered enough to return to the port of Veracruz, while two remain in New York, where they are receiving specialized medical care, the Mexican Navy said Monday.
The Cuauhtémoc crash happened 16 months after a massive cargo ship plowed into Baltimore's Francis Scott Key Bridge. That Singaporean-flagged container vessel, the Dali, lost power, veered off course and smashed into the bridge, killing six construction workers.
After the Baltimore crash, the NTSB included the Brooklyn Bridge on a list of bridges whose owners 'are likely unaware of their bridges' risk of catastrophic collapse from a vessel collision and the potential need to implement countermeasures to reduce the bridges' vulnerability.'
After that, the city Transportation Department 'completed the evaluation requested by the NTSB' and calculated the probability the Brooklyn Bridge would collapse in a given year at '0.000000,' the agency told CNN on Monday.
The Cuauhtémoc, known as the 'Ambassador and Knight of the Seas,' is a training sailing ship of the Mexican Navy and a diplomatic symbol of Mexico abroad.
Named after the last Aztec emperor, who was executed by the Spanish conquerors in 1525, it was built in Spain in 1981 and acquired by the Mexican Navy to train cadets and officers.
It regularly takes part in major regattas around the world. The sailing ship was used for training by the Heroic Naval Military School, an elite military academy in Mexico, according to a news release.
The ship, as of last year, had visited 212 ports in 64 countries with 756,085 nautical miles sailed, the latter equivalent to making 35 trips around the world, the release said. It was on its yearly training tour for the graduating class of 2025 and was due to head to Iceland next.
CNN's Nouran Salahieh, Lauren Mascarenhas, Mauricio Torres, Chris Boyette, Gloria Pazmino, Diego Mendoza, Zenebou Sylla, Derek Van Dam and Helen Regan contributed to this report.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Scientist at Plymouth conservation nonprofit dies in remote Alaska crash
Scientist at Plymouth conservation nonprofit dies in remote Alaska crash

Boston Globe

time5 hours ago

  • Boston Globe

Scientist at Plymouth conservation nonprofit dies in remote Alaska crash

Schulte had traveled to Alaska to conduct conservation work, the statement said. He and the helicopter pilot were flying west from Prudhoe Bay to an area where he planned to outfit shorebirds with recording devices when the helicopter crashed on Wednesday, according to a spokesperson for Manomet Conservation Sciences. The region Schulte was visiting has become a flashpoint in the debate over balancing the nation's energy needs and confronting climate change. The oil company ConocoPhillips wants to establish an oil drilling venture known as the Advertisement Schulte had also planned to visit the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, where he was to lead a crew tracking the migratory routes of whimbrels, another shorebird, with satellite transmitters, Manomet Conservation Sciences said. The Advertisement The crash occurred on the first day of the bird study about 20 miles west of Deadhorse in North Slope, the northernmost section of the state, Clint Johnson, chief of the safety board's regional office in Alaska, said Friday. 'It's in a very remote part of Alaska,' Johnson said. 'There's nothing there. It's treeless, barren, in the middle of no place.' Earlier in the week, Energy Secretary Chris Wright, Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, and Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin toured parts of the North Slope to advocate for President Trump's desire to open parts of the Alaskan wilderness to drilling and mining. The helicopter had taken off at about 10:40 am. The pilot had received special weather clearance, known as VFR, or visual flight rules clearance, Johnson said. North-Slope Borough Search and Rescue traveled to the crash site on Wednesday and retrieved the victims' bodies and on Friday afternoon, NTSB investigators visited the scene, which is only accessible by helicopter, he said. An NTSB meteorologist and air traffic controller are working with investigators, who plan to transport the helicopter wreckage to Deadhorse to continue their work, according to Johnson. Officials plan to place the wreckage in a sling tethered to a helicopter for the journey back to Deadhorse, which has an airport, he said. Advertisement Last Saturday, Schulte shared photographs of Schulte coordinated an American oystercatcher recovery program which was launched in 2009 at Manomet Conservation Sciences. Conservation work by the program and its partners along the East Coast helped to rebuild the American oystercatcher population by 45 percent, the organization said. 'Shiloh gave his life in the service of something greater than himself, dedicating himself to preserving the natural world for future generations,' the group's statement said. In March, Schulte discussed progress in regrowing the population of the American oystercatcher, a striking shorebird with long, orange-red bills and black-and-white plumage who live along the Atlantic and Gulf coast, according to a news release from Manomet Conservation Sciences. In 2008, he said the population had dropped to fewer than 10,000 birds across the Americas, a 10 percent decline. Conservation efforts reversed that slide and there are now more than 14,000 birds. 'This success proves that when we commit to conservation, we can restore declining species,' he said in a statement on March 13. Following the devastating BP oil spill which released millions of barrels of oil into the Gulf of Mexico in 2010, Schulte led a crew of researchers enlisted by the government to document the spill's environmental impact on wildlife. Schulte's team was hired by the US Fish and Wildlife Service to locate resident oystercatchers in coastal Louisiana and outfit the oiled ones with radio transmitters to track their health, he told the Globe in 2010. Advertisement He earned a doctorate at North Carolina State University, where he studied American oystercatchers on the Outer Banks and helped to band and track the birds, according to his biography on the website for Manomet Conservation Sciences. As an undergraduate student, Schulte studied wildlife biology at the University of Vermont. He was a competitive distance runner and earned a second-degree black belt in Tae Kwon Do, the biography said. In April, he ran the Boston Marathon, finishing the race with a time of 2 hours, 52 minutes, and 50 seconds. The time placed him 137th among 2,386 men between ages 45 and 49 who competed, according to results from the Boston Athletic Association. Laura Crimaldi can be reached at

Center rescues 6 endangered Mexican wolf pups
Center rescues 6 endangered Mexican wolf pups

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

Center rescues 6 endangered Mexican wolf pups

ST. LOUIS – The Endangered Wolf Center in St. Louis announced that it rescued six endangered Mexican Wolf Pups on May 5. The Mexican wolf, according to the center, is a keystone species, as less than 300 exist in the wild. In a conservation effort for the species, the center said the pups—which were 10 days old—were flown to New Mexico. They plan for the pups to be fostered by two wild packs. Close Thanks for signing up! Watch for us in your inbox. Subscribe Now According to the Endangered Wolf Center, a pup foster is a conservation initiative that seeks to increase genetic diversity. 'This year was a special pup foster to help facilitate, because the pack is very genetically valuable. The father of these pups was actually born from artificial insemination back in 2017, so getting his genetics back into the landscape is a huge conservation win,' said Sarah Holaday, director of Animal Care and Conservation at the Endangered Wolf Center. The center hopes that the six pups will possess the essential traits needed to help the endangered species. Ever since 2016, the organization has fostered over 52 captive-born pups. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

After an American Airlines plane caught fire, the National Transportation Safety Board finds engine parts installed backward
After an American Airlines plane caught fire, the National Transportation Safety Board finds engine parts installed backward

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

After an American Airlines plane caught fire, the National Transportation Safety Board finds engine parts installed backward

On March 13, an American Airlines flight was diverted from its destination after the flight crew reported engine vibrations, and its engine caught fire once it landed. The National Transportation Safety Board said in a report this week the engine leaked fuel because of loose and improperly installed parts. Despite numerous reported aviation safety incidents, air travel is safer than it was decades ago, experts say. An American Airlines engine that burst into flames after its aircraft was diverted in March was found to have fuel leaks and improperly installed parts, the National Transportation Safety Board said in a report released Thursday. The NTSB identified a damaged fan blade on the right side of the two-engine jet, as well as a loose airflow control component that was installed backward and a loose rod end that caused fuel to leak from the fitting. The report did not give a reason for the fire, as the NTSB has not yet finished its investigation on the incident. The purpose of the document is to find the root cause of the incident, not assign blame for it. On March 13, Flight 1006 en route from the Colorado Springs Airport to Dallas Fort Worth International Airport diverted to Denver International Airport after the flight crew reported engine vibrations. The Boeing 737-823 aircraft caught fire while taxiing to the gate, incurring 'substantial damage,' according to the report. 'They thought they had what we would call the degraded engine,' Cary Grant, an associate professor of aeronautical science at Embry‑Riddle Aeronautical University, told Fortune. 'It wasn't performing. It wasn't a failed engine, but it wasn't providing all the thrust and capability that it could produce.' The jet was carrying two flight crew members, four cabin crew members, and 172 passengers, 12 of whom were hospitalized for minor injuries. According to the report, gate ramp personnel extinguished the fire on the right side of the plane one minute after it began. Passengers evacuated the aircraft onto the left overwing and a slide from the jet's right door. NTSB's photos of the evacuated aircraft show burn marks and damage from the jet's right wing, main landing gear, and landing gear wheel well. 'The safety of our customers and team members is our top priority, and we are cooperating with the National Transportation Safety Board in its investigation of American Airlines flight 1006,' an American Airlines spokesperson told Fortune in a statement. The March flight diversion was one of several highly scrutinized aviation safety incidents early in the year. In January, an American Airlines jet collided with an Army helicopter in Washington, D.C., killing 67 people. Later that month, a small, private plane crashed in Northeast Philadelphia, resulting in multiple deaths. Most recently, Newark Liberty International Airport experienced a series of radio outages, which resulted in a slew of flight delays and cancellations. These incidents can have financial repercussions for airlines. American Airlines reported in its first-quarter earnings challenges to resuscitate its corporate travel business as a result of 'economic uncertainty that pressured domestic leisure demand and the tragic accident of American Eagle Flight 5342,' referring to the January incident. Despite the multiple safety blunders, aviation experts maintain it is still safe to fly. Boeing—though it has struggled in the past couple of years with safety concerns—reported a significant decline in fatalities in 2024, saying there has been a 40% decline in total accident rates and 65% decline in fatal accident rates in the past 20 years, while the number of flights has increased 20% in that same time period. Grant said the engine issues with Flight 1006 are rare, speaking to the dependability of its CFM56-7B engine. 'The engine is extremely reliable,' he said. 'The fact that we don't see situations like this occurring frequently is testament to the reliability of the motors. It's an extremely reliable part.' He maintains the flight crew did what was 'reasonably expected' of them, given the information they had at the time—especially since they had to evacuate passengers from the jet when it was taxiing at a gate, a situation that usually necessitates deplaning procedures. Combined with statistics that aviation accidents have actually decreased, the rarity of the engine degradation points to the continued security of air travel, Grant said. 'If we go back and look from the '50s on to where we're at today, the accident trend is very, very small compared to the hundreds of thousands, millions of hours of flight time that are being flown every year,' he said. 'The data does not support that air travel is riskier. It's actually just the opposite.' This story was originally featured on

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store