SoCal yacht in fatal crash possibly hit island

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SoCal yacht in fatal crash possibly hit island

S.F. Examiner File Photo
S.F. Examiner File Photo
S.F. Examiner File Photo
Sea deaths: The Aegean accident came weeks after sailors from the Low Speed Chase, above, died in a Farallon Islands crash; the boat was later removed.

A GPS record tracing the path of a yacht that crashed mysteriously while racing from Southern California to Mexico showed the vessel sailing on a collision course into an island, Coast Guard officials said Wednesday.

Investigators are exploring whether the 37-foot Aegean, whose four crew members died when their boat was reduced to rubble last weekend, crashed into one of the Coronado Islands or collided with a larger ship, Coast Guard Lt. Bill Burwell said.

Race organizers said the Aegean disappeared from satellite tracking about 1:30 a.m. Saturday, and the Coast Guard said bodies and debris from the yacht were found near the Coronado Islands off the northwestern coast of Mexico.
The fatal wreck follows an April 14 sailboat-racing accident at the Farallon Islands off the coast of San Francisco that killed five sailors and led the Coast Guard to temporarily suspend racing in the Pacific Ocean off Northern California.

The Aegean sailors set off from Southern California on April 27 to compete in the 65-year-old Newport to Ensenada Race. Burwell said a source close to one of the Aegean sailors’ families had provided investigators with the login data for a GPS tracking device believed to be aboard the boat.

The data show the Aegean sailed for more than three hours the night of April 27 and into the next morning on a constant course and speed heading straight for North Coronado Island.

“That line points to the island,” Burwell said. “One of the possible scenarios is the boat impacted the northern Coronado Island.”

Two of the sailors killed in the crash died of blunt-force injuries, while a third crewman drowned, coroners reported. A witness who saw the damaged boat reported it looked like it had been put through a blender.

Skipper Theo Mavromatis, who owned the Aegean, was lost at sea and presumed dead.

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