#1 2024-08-20 14:19:50
Mike Lynch and Morgan Stanley’s Jonathan Bloomer missing after luxury yacht sinks off Sicily
By Hanna Ziady and Barbie Latza Nadeau, CNN
Updated: 1:44 PM EDT, Tue August 20, 2024
Source: CNN
British tech tycoon Mike Lynch, Morgan Stanley International director Jonathan Bloomer, and Chris Morvillo, a prominent American lawyer, are among six people still missing after a tornado hit a luxury yacht off the coast of Sicily.
The vessel sank Monday — killing one of the 22 people on board — after its mast, one of the world’s tallest, broke in half during the storm. Fifteen people have been rescued.
Salvatore Cocina, head of the Italian island’s Civil Protection agency, told journalists at the scene that Bloomer and Morvillo’s wives are also missing.
Bloomer is the non-executive chairman of Morgan Stanley International and also chairman of London-listed insurer Hiscox.
“We are deeply shocked and saddened by this tragedy. Our thoughts are with all those affected, in particular the Bloomer family, as we all wait for further news from this terrible situation,” a Morgan Stanley spokesperson told CNN.
Hiscox chief executive Aki Hussain said in a statement Tuesday that the company was “deeply shocked and saddened” by the “tragic” news.
“Our thoughts are with all those affected, in particular our chair, Jonathan Bloomer, and his wife Judy, who are among the missing, and with their family as they await further news from this terrible situation,” he added.
Divers with the Italian fire brigade will try again to enter the sunken ship Tuesday to search for the missing, after an unsuccessful attempt Monday, Italy’s Coast Guard said on X.
The vessel was hit by the tornado at around 5 a.m. local time Monday, according to a spokesperson for Italy’s Coast Guard. The yacht was anchored about half a mile from the port of Porticello on the Mediterranean island.
Strong storms across Sicily brought torrential rainfall late Sunday, dumping more than 4 inches (100mm) of rain in less than four hours in Brolo, east of Palermo. A report from the European Severe Weather Database revealed that a waterspout — a type of tornado that forms over water or moves from land to water — developed over the area where the yacht was anchored Monday morning.
One body was found on the hull of the vessel, and was later identified as the onboard chef Ricardo Thomas, an Antiguan citizen, according to Reuters. Lynch’s wife Angela Bacares, the captain of the yacht, and a one-year old girl are among the people rescued. Lynch’s 18-year-old daughter is still missing.
An Italian newspaper reported Tuesday that Bacares and her husband were initially unconcerned when woken at 4 a.m. local time as the boat tilted.
They only became worried when the yacht’s windows shattered and chaos broke out, she was reported as telling La Repubblica in an interview at a hospital in Sicily.
Lynch, a 59-year-old tech investor and entrepreneur, was acquitted in June in a fraud trial linked to the multi-billion dollar sale of Autonomy, the software firm he co-founded, to Hewlett Packard. Prosecutors alleged that Lynch had schemed to inflate Autonomy’s revenue prior to the sale.
Morvillo, an American lawyer at Clifford Chance, was involved in successfully defending the case against Lynch.
A Clifford Chance spokesperson said the law firm was “in shock and deeply saddened.”
“Our thoughts are with our partner, Christopher Morvillo, and his wife Neda who are among the missing. Our utmost priority is providing support to the family as well as our colleague Ayla Ronald, who together with her partner, thankfully survived the incident,” the spokesperson added.
One survivor, Charlotte, 35, described how she battled to hold onto her one-year-old daughter, Sofia, as a barrage of waves sank the yacht, according to a report from Italian news agency ANSA.
“In two seconds I lost the baby in the sea, then I immediately hugged her again amidst the fury of the waves. I held her tightly, close to me, while the sea was stormy,” she told ANSA. “Many were screaming.”
The United Kingdom’s Marine Accident Investigation Branch is deploying a team of four inspectors to Palermo to conduct a preliminary assessment of the yacht, a source familiar with the operations told CNN Monday. The source, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, did not say when the team is expected to arrive in Sicily.
The 56-meter (184-foot) yacht called “Bayesian,” which sailed under a British flag, had mostly British passengers and crew, in addition to two Anglo-French, one Irish, and one Sri Lankan, the spokesperson for Italy’s Coast Guard told CNN.
The New Zealand Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade told CNN that two of the country’s citizens were involved in the incident but were not among those still missing. The nationality of the dead person has not been disclosed.
The Bayesian had the tallest aluminum mast in the world, at 72.27 meters (237 feet), its Italian manufacturer Perini Navi said on its website.
The mast was three meters (10 feet) shorter than the world’s tallest mast, as ranked by the Guinness World Records. That 75-meter (247-foot) carbon-fiber mast belongs to the Mirabella V, a yacht built by Vosper Thornycroft in Southampton, UK, according to Guinness World Records’ website.
This is a developing story and will be updated. Kathleen Magramo and Sabrina Souza contributed reporting.
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#2 2024-08-20 17:38:40
It seems like this is the sort of thing a god would need to do to inspire belief. But, Trump's still alive, so... happy coincidence?
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#3 2024-08-20 21:15:57
If you still don't believe in a God, then how about this. Mr Lynch's Co-defendant and business partner, who was acquitted of fraud in the same Hewlett Packard case, also died in an automobile accident Monday
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#4 2024-08-21 01:28:02
I know a little about weather and accident investigations.
This is a rare accident with a very large superyacht. It's not that destructive downbursts and whirlwinds of hurricane force don't happen to ships large and small, sometimes resulting in knockdowns and foundering, it's just that, so far, it is extremely rare for this particular type of yacht.
One could say this could be due to reasonable care taken to keep these large sailboats out of dangerous wind conditions. The other take on it might be that the probability just hasn't resulted in the inevitable chance exposure happening. Since there are only a few dozen rigs and hulls of comparable design to the Bayesian, and another 300 yachts of similar class like this.
There is not a lot of exterior video of similar accidents. Posted below is something that may relate. The Encore, a 44 Meter Aluminum superyacht falling over at the pier in a severe microburst.
Knockdown in Aukland -
SY Encore, Ed Dubois design
Sloop Aluminum
265 tons
44 m length
52 m tall aluminum mast
Compare to this sinking-
SY Bayesian, Perini Navi
Sloop Aluminum
496 tons
56 m length
74 m tall aluminum mast
Though they are quite able to sail across oceans in very stiff breezes, these are not designed to be operated in greater than Gale force winds. The vessels take steps to steer clear of weather, and avoid certain routes and seasons in parts of the world. The very tall size for this type of sailboat, 50 to 70 meters tall, lengths of 48 to 60 meters and gross tonnage of 350 to 750 tons, does not make them more able to be in Hurricane force winds. There also can be downward directed bursts that affect how a vessel is knocked down and overcome its righting moment.
Either a down burst or a strong waterspout, a bare mast and rigging of such great height 74 meters tall, generates massive force pushing it over. I have seen it suggested that with 100 kts of wind, the wind force acting on the righting moment over the center of roll, would be more than 170 tons. That’s a lot pushing over a boat of ~ 500 tons. That force has a moment over the center of roll of the boat at about 37 meters. If the acting force is great enough, the righting moment can be overcome for any boat to lay down at 70 to 90 degrees of heel for a period of time. From a few seconds to multiple minutes if the wind force is strong enough. The roll period is shorter than you might expect, some seconds only.
The lifting keel of 60 tons or so would have been up to reduce draft to 4 meters at anchor. Normally this is not a problem for reduced stability with reduced or no sails. But then again they were not designing it for hurricane winds while at anchor either. The heavy keel being up changes the roll period dramatically. Quicker to lay over, more time it will spend on its side before righting.
The amount of time it lays over is key. It probably only took a few seconds to fall over past 60° with the winds > 100 kts. Flooding can occur quickly, these designs are not wholly sealed watertight at certain companionways near the centerline. They can be subject to down flooding through hatchways or possible broken windows in the center Salons. Though you might think the restricted size of the companionways would be enough of a limitation, tons of water can enter quickly. Each ton of seawater changes the righting moment, slowing how fast the boat can overcome the inertia and angular momentum to roll up. Stay over long enough and even if it rights again, the partial flooding in these designs can sink them. The most at risk is the massive central passenger compartment and staterooms, or flood an additional adjacent compartment through a hatch or bulkhead. This design has passageway watertight bulkhead doors that the crew must use at all times to traverse the vessel. They are required to be kept closed while underway, but are not always sealed when on a mooring.
The entire event only took 13 minutes from knockdown and breaking loose from the mooring, to sinking.
The wind burst may have been localized to the Bayesian and not the adjacent large topsail schooner. Though it has much smaller masts, the captain did not describe a knockdown himself, just severe wind. He dragged anchor, then launched his tender when it was over and he could no longer see the Bayesian anywhere above water. Rescuing 15 people who climbed into a life raft deployed as the Bayesian sank. The 25 man life rafts are automatically deployed as the boat submerges, but I suspect the crew was able to manually deploy the Aft Starboard life raft. They also managed to fire a single flare, possibly from the life raft.
There may be only a few dozen sailboats of this type and this tall, but these types of superyachts have been made since in the late 1990s, with most built in the mid 2000s and onward. They were made by some of foremost yacht architects of the past decades. And well regarded as safe if operated within their limits, not many have sunk and most damage has been due to grounding, fire or other issue besides weather and stability. The design style has changed somewhat, so these heavy sloops and hull forms are not made quite the same shape. And rigs are all carbon now. Any deficiency in the stability design will be interesting to hear of. At stake are many tens of billions in value of the existing fleet.
Last edited by Johnny_Rotten (2024-08-21 02:44:24)
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#5 2024-08-21 01:46:02
The Bayesian Sunday night before sinking in Porticello at 4am. Adjacent is the topsail schooner that rescued 15 people from a liferaft
Bayesian right before sinking as storm intensifies
Flare from the crew after sinking
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#6 2024-08-21 01:59:22
Bayesian - Perini 2008
And the similar masted but smaller 44m yacht Encore being knocked over at the dock in a severe wind. Note how quickly it falls over for a 300 ton sailboat.
Encore - Alloy Yachts 2004
Last edited by Johnny_Rotten (2024-08-21 02:04:13)
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#7 2024-08-21 12:22:23
Johnny_Rotten wrote:
If you still don't believe in a God, then how about this. Mr Lynch's Co-defendant and business partner, who was acquitted of fraud in the same Hewlett Packard case, also died in an automobile accident Monday
That does sound like the vindictive old cunt from the Old Testament.
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#8 2024-08-22 11:42:59
Who was Mike Lynch, the tech entrepreneur among the missing after a superyacht sank?
By Jordan Valinsky, CNN
Updated: 10:39 AM EDT, Thu August 22, 2024
Source: CNN
The body of Mike Lynch, the 59-year-old British tech investor, has been recovered from the sunken Bayesian superyacht, Italian interior ministry office Massimo Mariani told Reuters on Thursday.
Early Monday morning, a luxury yacht he was on was hit by a tornado and sunk off the coast of Sicily, Italy.
Lynch garnered much of his wealth from cofounding Autonomy, a tech company purchased by Hewlett-Packard, or HP, for $11 billion in 2011. An attorney for Lynch recently revealed that the entrepreneur’s total worth is around $450 million.
The Autonomy sale was one of the biggest British tech deals at the time but quickly went sour, with HP writing down Autonomy’s value by $8.8 billion within a year. The Autonomy acquisition was meant to fuel HP’s software business. Instead, the blockbuster sale has been bogged down by legal problems that recently culminated with a fraud trial.
Prosecutors accused Lynch and former Autonomy finance executive Stephen Chamberlain of scheming to inflate Autonomy’s revenue before selling to HP. In June, Lynch was acquitted on 15 charges — one count of conspiracy and 14 counts of wire fraud — in a San Francisco court.
The verdict came as a surprise to Lynch. “When you hear that answer, you jump universes. If this had gone the wrong way, it would have been the end of life as I have known it in any sense,” he told the Times, a UK newspaper.
Autonomy, founded in 1996, became Britain’s biggest software company and a member of the blue-chip FTSE 100 index. Lynch was lauded at the time by academics and scientists and was asked to advise the British government on technology and innovation.
The vessel Lynch was on, the Bayesian, is linked to his wife, Angela Bacares, who was among those rescued. Ownership records held by maritime information service Equasis show that the 56-meter yacht is owned by the Isle of Man-registered Revtom Limited, a company owned by his wife.
Lynch’s 18-year-old daughter Hannah is still missing, Mariani said, and divers are still searching the area where the vessel sank.
Earlier Thursday, a fifth body was brought to shore from the wreck of the boat, which sank earlier in the week. A CNN team on the ground saw Italian authorities move the body from a rescue boat to ambulances at the Sicilian port of Porticello.
–Reuters and CNN’s Barbie Latza Nadeau contributed to this report.
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#9 2024-08-28 17:30:06
Former Bayesian captain offers insight
Stephen Edwards’ Post
Sailing Superyacht Captain (Semi Retired)
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