In the wake of a duck boat accident in Branson, Mo., Attorney General
Josh Hawley on Friday filed a lawsuit against Branson Duck Vehicles, LLC
and Ripley Entertainment, Inc.
The fatal sinking of the Ride the Ducks amphibious tour boat in July
killed 17 people, including nine members of a single family.
"This tragedy should not have happened," Hawley said in a statement.
Hawley said the duck boat's owner and operator -- Branson Duck Vehicles
and Ripley Entertainment -- ignored safety protocols such as a severe
weather warning and life jacket requirements when the boat sank on Table
Rock Lake during severe weather.
The lawsuit said the defendants have "been on notice for decades of
ongoing safety hazards that posed a present and deadly danger to every
person who boarded a duck boat. Defendants kept that information from
passengers and made false promises, fraudulent statements, and
misrepresentations to consumers that safety was a top priority when in
actuality it was their own profits."
Hawley said his hope is the lawsuit will ensure "unsafe duck boats and
companies who put profits ahead of safety will not continue to operate."
The captain of the sunken boat along with another captain whose duck
boat made it to shore safely that day are part of a criminal lawsuit,
which accuses them of operating the vessels in a manner that endangered
lives as they took the boats on the water where they battled heavy winds
and strong waves.
The National Transportation Safety Board, which is conducting its own
investigation, said the captain of the sunken boat checked the weather
reports and discussed safety procedures prior to the trip.
The boat's certificate of inspection, released by the U.S. Coast Guard,
indicated it wasn't supposed to operate in water if winds in the area
reached 35 mph or if waves were higher than 2 feet.
By Susan McFarland
https://www.geezgo.com/sps/37460
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