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Probe of crash of Mexican tall ship into Brooklyn Bridge centres on engine, World News

Probe of crash of Mexican tall ship into Brooklyn Bridge centres on engine, World News

AsiaOne20-05-2025

NEW YORK — The investigation into why a Mexican Navy training ship struck the Brooklyn Bridge on Saturday (May 17), shearing the top of its masts, will look into a possible engine failure and the role of a tug boat that assisted it in backing out of its pier, officials said on Monday.
The ship's engine was the key focus for the National Transportation Safety Board, said Brian Young, who is leading the agency's investigation.
"We will look at the status of the engine, we will look for any failures, we will look for engine inspections and we'll talk to the crew on what may have possibly happened with the engine," Young said at a preliminary NTSB briefing. He said investigators would also look for any electronic control data.
The accident occurred when the majestic white training vessel Cuauhtemoc was departing from lower Manhattan's Pier 17 on the East River shortly after sunset on Saturday.
The ship's planned route was southward, away from the Brooklyn Bridge and toward New York Harbour and her next destination in Iceland.
As it backed out of the pier, the ship was accompanied by a tug boat operated by McAllister Towing. As it cleared the dock, the ship pivoted but continued to move swiftly in reverse in the direction of the bridge.
Minutes later, its three 147-foot (44.8-metre) masts hit the underside of the iconic 142-year-old bridge, causing them to partially collapse.
The strike knocked dozens of white-uniformed naval cadets off the ship's crossbeams, where they were standing ceremoniously for her exit from the harbour. They could be seen dangling from their harnesses high above the ship's deck.
Two people aboard the ship — a cadet and a sailor — were killed, and around 20 were injured, two of them critically.
Salvatore R. Mercogliano, a maritime historian at Campbell University, said it appeared that an engine malfunction caused the accident.
"Without the engine failure, the ship would have maybe drifted into the bridge, but it wouldn't have hit it at speed," Mercogliano said. "The engine failure drove the ship into the bridge. And it's not exactly clear what role the tug could have done to prevent that from happening."
Videos posted online showed the tug first pushing the bow of the ship, then separating from it as the vessel moved closer to the bridge. It then appeared to rush toward the stern as if it intended to stop the ship from striking the bridge.
After the masts collapsed, the ship kept sailing under the bridge until it was stopped at an embankment on the Brooklyn side of the river, videos showed.
NTSB board member Michael Graham said the board had not yet conducted any interviews and intended to talk with the tug boat pilot, harbour pilot, ship captain and other crew members.
"We will be looking into three main areas... the crew and the operation of the crew, the vessel and the condition of the vessel, and finally, the environment, and that includes the weather, the wind, the current, the tide and the operating environment," Graham said.
Investigators are asking the public for additional video of the incident and have yet to determine if the Mexican naval vessel had a data recorder.
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Mexican ship in Brooklyn Bridge crash made no distress calls, Mexico navy chief says, World News
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Mexican ship in Brooklyn Bridge crash made no distress calls, Mexico navy chief says, World News

MEXICO CITY — The Mexican Navy ship which crashed into New York's Brooklyn Bridge over the weekend made no distress calls before the accident but called for support instead, Mexico's Navy chief Raymundo Morales said on Tuesday (May 20). The port pilot manoeuvring the Cuauhtemoc sailing vessel had little time to stop it because it was docked a short distance from the bridge, Morales said at Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum's morning press conference. "We cannot speculate at this time whether the port pilot properly used all measures available." The accident, which left two dead and 20 injured, occurred when the majestic white training vessel was leaving lower Manhattan's Pier 17 on the East River shortly after sunset on Saturday. A US investigation into the accident will look at possible engine malfunction and the role of a tugboat that assisted the ship in backing out of its pier, US officials said on Monday, adding that the probe will take at least 30 days. "Of course, it will count on the collaboration and support of the Navy and the insurance company responsible for the ship," Sheinbaum said. Two cadets with severe injuries are in New York hospitals and their families have travelled there to be with them, Morales said. "Their lives are not in danger and they will probably be released from the hospital on Wednesday," he said. "The two cadets that unfortunately died were transferred back to Mexico on Monday and their bodies are now with their families." [[nid:718186]]

Mexican ship in Brooklyn Bridge crash made no distress calls, Mexico navy chief says
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Mexican ship that crashed into Brooklyn Bridge made no distress calls, Mexico says
Mexican ship that crashed into Brooklyn Bridge made no distress calls, Mexico says

Straits Times

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