Cruise ShiDDiliA nnn^-
the U.S. Army, readied for the flight out
to sea.
Taking off about 30 minutes prior to
Bonn's and Watson's HH-60 Jay Hawk
helicopter was Lt. Dan Molthen; his co-
pilot, Lt. j.g. Craig Neubecker; and res-
cue swimmer. Class Petty Officer Dar-
ren Reeves. Molthen and his crew
arrived on the scene and spotted the
SeaBreeze listing among the high winds
and waves. Amidst the brewing storm,
Molthen steadied his helicopter only
five feet above the vessel, due to the
severity of the weather conditions.
Hoisted down into the basket was diver
Reeves who was greeted by a swarm of
crewmembers, most of whom did not
speak English. He motioned to them to
form a line, trying to explain as best he
could that he would get everyone off the
stricken vessel - no one would be left
behind.
Despite his efforts to get the crew up
to Molthen's helicopter in an orderly
fashion. Reeves experienced a scenario
that was anything but. According to
Molthen. the crew would rush the bas-
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Toueh-and-Go
Rescue at Sea
Coast Guard Faced Gale, Panicky Crew
#vCA*OI.Momiju>
and CHMSTIKA A. SMTOILS
VaM^o,, Post Staff Wnitr*
The winds blew hairier and
the waves soared higher as the
Coast Guard helicopter crew
flew toward a ship in trouble
off the Virginia coast.
When they neared the pitch-
oil! deck of the cruise ship Sea-
Breeze 1, they peered through
driving rain to find dozens of
crew members soaked and ter-
rified, huddling on the stem
deck as waves as high as a four story building pounded the
An article that appeared in the Washington Post
described the grueling 45-minute rescue that
the USCG performed to bring SeaBreeze's crew
to safety.
noon to a situation that rerged
on chaos. The Coast Guard's
orderly plan to ferry 17 crew-
men in each of two helicopters
soon collapsed as panicked
sailors wrestled each other to
#?t into a rescue basket dan-
gling over the deck.
In the end, the Coast Guard
jammed 26 crew members in-
side a single helicopter de-
signed to carry six. Things
"ere so cramped that some
survivors screamed in pain on
the way to shore, rescuers said
Eight other survivors, includ-
ing the shin's
Sea Breeze's Captain, Solon Papadopoulos,
praises Lt. Dan Molthen for helping to suc-
cessfully rescue the vessel's crew, (photo cour-
tesy of USCG).
ket, sometimes 10 at a time as soon as it
was lowered. One crewmember even
had a knife discreetly wrapped in a ban-
dana, which he inevitably thought
would allow a quicker escape route.
Reeves, demonstrating his authority,
restrained the irate crewmember and
confiscated his knife — tossing it into
the vessel's pool.
Since most of the crewmembers were
not of large build, Reeves was able to
load two of them into the basket at a
time, allowing Molthen and his crew to
reach their goal of rescuing half of the
34-member crew while still having
4,000-lbs. of reserve fuel left in the heli-
copter's tank. Noticing his reserves were
running low, he radioed to Watson and
Bonn in the second helicopter, alerting
them that he was ready to turn back to
the base. The second helicopter, which
was accompanied by a C-130 search
plane, took over the helm above
SeaBreeze by lowering its rescue swim-
mer, Bob Florisi, down to the vessel's
deck. Florisi assisted the remaining pas-
sengers, which unbeknownst to him and
his crew, only amounted to eight. Figur-
ing that the first helicopter had only
taken 17, the C-130 and the helicopter
did one more thorough search around
the vessel to make sure no one was left
behind — not realizing that Molthen
and his crew had lost count in the frenzy
of the rescue and inevitably loaded 26
crewmembers onto the helicopter. This
coupled with the captain's assurance that
all of his crew were lifted off the ship's
bow, enabled the Coast Guard to pro-
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