BOSTON — U.S. Coast Guard officials said Monday they have identified all seven victims who perished when a commercial fishing vessel sank in the frigid waters off Gloucester, Massachusetts, with no mayday call.
The Coast Guard on Saturday suspended its search for those aboard the Lily Jean. Authorities had launched a search and rescue mission early Friday after receiving an alert from the 72-foot (22-meter) vessel about 25 miles (40 kilometers) off the historic Cape Ann peninsula. They have since launched an investigation.
Accursio ''Gus'' Sanfilippo was the captain of the boat, and the crew consisted of Paul Beal Sr., Paul Beal Jr., John Rousanidis, Freeman Short and Sean Therrien, the Coast Guard said in identifying the victims of the sinking for the first time Monday. Also aboard was Jada Samitt, a fisheries observer for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the Coast Guard and NOAA said. No one survived.
''A district-level formal investigation consists of a Coast Guard investigating officer who will receive evidence and testimony using formal rules and procedures regarding a recent marine accident,'' the Coast Guard said in a statement. ''This type of investigation is launched for incidents of significant regional importance or those that may reveal broader issues with a class of vessel or areas of technical concern. ''
Tragedy befalls fishing town
It is the latest maritime tragedy to befall Gloucester and its close-knit community of people in the fishing business. The city that inspired the book and movie ''The Perfect Storm'' is tied to 400 years of fishing history and, at times, tragedy. ''The Perfect Storm'' was inspired by the FV Andrea Gail, which went missing at sea in 1991.
Sanfilippo was well known in the community. The Lily Jean, Sanfilippo, and his crew were featured in a 2012 episode of the History Channel show ''Nor'Easter Men.'' The captain is described as a fifth-generation commercial fisherman, fishing out of Gloucester, in the Georges Bank. The crew is shown working in dangerous weather conditions for hours on end, spending as many as 10 days at sea on one trip fishing for haddock, lobster and flounder.
''We loved each other,'' Vito Giacalone, head of the Gloucester Fishing Community Preservation Fund, said about his relationship with Sanfilippo. ''He treated me like a big brother and I treated him like my younger brother. To know the tragedy of this and to know the kind of character that Gus had, he'd be mortified to know that these lives were all lost.''