As Damis steered the 758-foot bulk carrier closer, Capt. George Kontos
saw a small capsized boat with seven shivering passengers on the keel. Two
others bobbed in the water, clinging to the side.
Since Fidel Castro seized power in January 1959, an estimated 500,000
Cubans have fled the island by crossing to South Florida. Hundreds have
been swallowed by the sea.
But hundreds more keep coming. Human smuggling in South Florida has
boomed recently, with boaters ferrying Haitian and Cuban migrants into the
United States on small motorboats. The recent disaster hasn't pinched the
flow: 380 Cubans have arrived in South Florida since Dec. 18.
In that incident, 23 Cubans crammed into a 29-foot Wellcraft speedboat
from a barren Bahamian islet and headed into the choppy Florida Straits.
Eight miles from shore, close enough to see Miami's glow, the boat's
captain said the motors stalled. Then a wave flipped the vessel.
Twenty-three souls plunged into 300 feet of water. Nine drowned. Five
others were swept away by the sea and never seen again. Smuggling alleged
Both Gomez and Guevara, among the rescued survivors, deny the charges.
Their trial in Miami federal court is scheduled to begin Feb. 16, though
it is likely to be delayed. The pair, both U.S. residents, could face the
death penalty if found guilty, because of the lost lives.
Some survivors, who were released to families in Miami by immigration
officials, are expected to be witnesses.
This is their story, based on taped interviews of the survivors by U.S.
Border Patrol agents; Herald interviews with their families and lawyers;
interviews and documents from the medical examiner's offices in Port St.
Lucie and Miami-Dade County; interviews with the captain and crew of the
Kavo Delfini; and the U.S. Coast Guard case file. I. THE
LAUNCH
Barbaro Rosendo Lopez was desperate to leave Cuba.
One day in December, Lopez, 28, told a friend he knew simply as Daniel
that he wanted to leave his home island for the United States. A few days
later, Daniel called Lopez at his home in Santa Clara: Be ready to leave
on Tuesday, Dec. 15. Bring 800 Cuban pesos (about $38).
Lopez packed food, a change of clothes and 1,000 Cuban pesos ($48),
just to have a little extra. Daniel was going, too.
They left with several others from Playa Sagua, in northern Cuba, on a
wooden fishing boat at daybreak Dec. 16.
The trip didn't last long. Four hours later, deeming the weather too
rough, the boat captain returned to a small key near Cuba, where they
spent the night. Trip is resumed
They got as far as Anguilla Cay, a barren islet where dozens of past
Cuban refugees have been found. The captain dropped them off, assuring
them a plane or a boat would pass soon and see them, then motored back to
Cuba.
Suddenly, 21 of them were alone on the island, 45 miles north of Cuba,
100 miles south of Key Largo. Among them were Pedro Julio Guevara's
relatives: his wife; his 9-year-old son, Yasel; his brother, Alexis, 30;
and his brother's 4-year-old daughter, Lineidys.
''We were a little worried, but we stayed,'' Lopez said. ''We never
thought that we would come directly to the U.S.''
So they stayed, with little food to keep them and wondering what divine
grace would get them off the island. Waves build up
In fact, atmospheric forces were already roiling that would make Dec.
16, 17 and 18 three of the worst days of the month to be in the Gulf
Stream. The first two days brought a cold front, followed by a
low-pressure system that built swells to 10 feet.
''The waves were higher and steeper. They had sharp edges, like a
breaking wave on a beach,'' said Jim Lushine, a meteorologist with the
National Weather Service. ''The steeper wave will give you more violent
pitching of the boat.''
Dec. 18 also marked a new moon, making the preceding days some of the
darkest of the cycle.
The Florida Straits were an ink-black abyss of ugly weather.
II. THE BOAT
OWNER
Francisco Gomez came as a rafter in 1993.
Shortly after arriving in Miami from Cuba, Gomez went to North Carolina
to study English for three years. With his family still in Cuba, he
returned to Hialeah and worked as an aviation mechanic with a local
company that overhauls landing gears.
A friend of Gomez's from their hometown of Santa Clara, Pedro Guevara
also came to Miami from Cuba, then left to work at a shipyard in Tampa,
where he had family.
But he still occasionally visited his friend at the West Dade home that
Gomez shared with girlfriend Marielesa Morffi.
Gomez and Morffi would cruise around Biscayne Bay and the Keys in
Gomez's 19-foot SeaPro boat. Speedboat purchased
Known as a ''go-fast'' boat, Gomez's Scarab could hit 65 mph, powered
by two Yamaha 225-horsepower outboard motors.
But it is a narrow boat and safely holds eight passengers, said Justin
O'Lordi, a Wellcraft-certified technician at Boat World of Florida in
Pompano Beach. ''Put too many people on there and you can very easily
capsize,'' he said.
Sometime before Dec. 17, Gomez said, Guevara told him he had received a
call from Cuba. He needed Gomez's help: His wife and son were on Anguilla
Cay.
The weather was worsening when Gomez and Guevara launched the Wellcraft
from Tavernier. Investigators still don't know where they went initially
or when. Morffi would later say she last saw Gomez on Dec. 14. It would
take only a few hours for the Scarab to reach Anguilla Cay. Surprising discovery
The group begged to go. According to witnesses, Gomez refused.
''He said he couldn't,'' Lopez said. ''But we begged and begged. And
finally, he said OK.''
''I explained to everyone how dangerous it was and how they were
putting us close to death,'' Gomez later told a U.S. Border Patrol agent
in an interview. ''Everyone wanted to come to the U.S. They said they
didn't want to suffer any more in Cuba.''
So the Scarab bounced into the choppy Gulf Stream toward Miami, packed
with 23 hopeful passengers.
''He felt he had no choice but to help these people,'' said Joaquin
Perez, Gomez's Miami lawyer. A worried reaction
Morffi said she was worried. She had not seen Gomez in three days.
''I was desperate,'' she said. ''I was afraid something was wrong.''
So, Morffi said, she headed blindly toward the Atlantic.
At 7:30 p.m., Morffi and Martin were stopped by Coast Guardsmen a few
miles off Tavernier for driving with no lights. The Guardsmen boarded and
found five gallons of water and five five-gallon tanks of gasoline. Morffi
told them they were on their way to Key West to meet a friend and decided
to turn back because of the bad weather.
Despite suspicion, the Coast Guard turned them loose.
''In the normal course of taking out a boat, I can think of no reason
for taking out 25 extra gallons of fuel,'' said Petty Officer Bob
Montague, a spokesman.
Morffi and Martin headed back to Black Point.
III. THE NIGHT
About the same time and miles to the east, Gomez, Guevara and their 21
companions bounced through worsening waves.
One engine stalled. Then started again. Stalled, sputtered, started.
The boat struggled under its unaccustomed weight. The motor stalled
again. Then the other did the same.
Stall, sputter, start. Stall. Both engines out.
The boat was about eight miles from Key Largo. Waves poured over the
sides. Next, the motorized bilge pump that had been bailing out the water
gave out. The men grabbed buckets and bailed.
For hours, they sloshed water overboard. For hours, steep waves pounded
the boat. Pounding takes toll
Gomez said he grabbed his radio and called out, ''Mayday! Mayday!''
with no answer. His cellular phone was not working.
Then, just after 11:30 p.m., a hard, fast wave hammered the boat,
flipping 19 people into the 70-degree, ink-black sea. Four others, all
women, were trapped in the boat's now-submerged cabin.
''It happened so fast, it didn't give us a chance,'' Lopez said. ''That
wave hit and suddenly we were in the water. Someone yelled, 'To the boat!'
and we swam back and held on.''
Lopez clung to a motor, stealing quick gulps of air as wave after wave
pounded over him.
It was so dark they could see only the person next to them, Lopez said.
At one point, someone floated past him and Lopez called out. There was no
answer.
''I said, 'That guy's drowned.' '' Survivors hold on
Lopez heard Daniel, his friend: ''Barbaro! Barbaro! Help me!''
Once, Lopez tried swimming to Daniel, but Lopez's neighbor grabbed
him.
''He said I was crazy, that the current would take me away,'' Lopez
said. ''That guy later drowned.''
Daniel kept shouting, saying he couldn't hang on much longer. The yells
persisted for a long time, Lopez said. Then Daniel was gone.
Others hung on. Anyone who drifted off would be grabbed and pulled
back, Lopez said. At one point, Gomez swam beneath the boat and re-emerged
with a flare gun and three flares.
The water was nearly 30 degrees below body temperature. Fatigue and
hypothermia began to settle in.
''We didn't think we were going to survive,'' Lopez said. ''Our only
hope was a passing ship.'' Unseen by passing ships
Soon after, a freighter passed so close that survivors said they
thought it would hit them. Gomez shot the final flare. The ship chugged
on.
''A lot of people lost hope then,'' Lopez said.
Dawn broke at 7:02 a.m. Friday, Dec. 18. The survivors counted heads:
11 left. No women.
They had been in the water for eight hours, clutching a bobbing boat
and swallowing salt water. The passengers were likely in a state of
moderate hypothermia. That's when shivering slows or stops, muscles begin
to stiffen, and mental confusion and apathy set in. Breathing becomes
slower and shallow. Drowsiness and strange behavior can occur. Stamina, hope fade
''We told him to not to worry, to calm down,'' Lopez said. ''But then
he said he couldn't take it anymore, pushed off from the boat and
drowned.''
Another followed him.
The men held on to the children, including Lineidys, who was starting
to fade. They tied two strands of rope to the children's waist and to the
boat.
Hope was slipping fast when they spotted a ship on the horizon.
Someone crawled atop the Wellcraft and waved a red T-shirt.
IV. SEARCH AND
RESCUE
After spotting the survivors, Capt. Kontos noted the time, called his
bosses in Athens, then called the U.S. Coast Guard.
The Kavo Delfini had come from Amsterdam and was on its way to New
Orleans to pick up 54,000 tons of soybeans. Its owners in Athens told
Kontos to rescue the migrants. He sent a 36-seat lifeboat to the capsized
boat.
''I thought the little boy and the little girl were dead,'' said
Erchimades Paiso, who steered the lifeboat. ''They were barely
moving.''
Kontos' call to the Coast Guard command center in Miami set off a
simultaneous rescue effort that would involve three 110-foot Coast Guard
cutters -- the Chandeleur, the Manitou and the Farallon -- two 41-foot
utility boats, two 25-foot shallow-water response boats, two H-65 Dolphin
helicopters and two H-60 Jayhawk helicopters.
Within 20 minutes, dozens of search-and-rescue specialists swarmed
around the capsized boat, now 25 miles southeast of the Port of Miami with
its bow sticking out of the sea. They looked for survivors. Or bodies. Bodies are recovered
At 3 p.m., the captain of the 41-foot utility boat hauling the eight
bodies called the command center. His crew was beginning to ''freak
out.''
''How would you feel if you're riding around with eight dead bodies on
board?'' Coast Guard Chief Petty Officer D.R. Jersey asked. ''This was a
particularly stressful situation for the crews as well.''
Six bodies were identified:
Carmen Luisa Rodriguez, Odalys Rodriguez Castro, Marilyn Lorenza
Marrero, Silvia Barbara Rodriguez Alvarez, Alicia Ortega Perez and Dayana
Morales Gonzalez. Two victims were never named by U.S. Border Patrol
agents. Five people were never found. Likely among them: Pedro Guevara's
wife.
The survivors: Lopez, Gomez, Francisco Alberto Palazuelos, Pedro Julio
Jimenez, Javier David Saez, the Guevara brothers, and Yasel and
Lineidys.
Dozens of Coast Guardsmen would search more than 2,000 square miles of
open sea but find no more. The search was called off at dusk Saturday,
Dec. 19.
The last body was found the next day by boaters on a pleasure craft 14
miles east of Fort Pierce -- 161 miles north of where the boat capsized.
Shark bites covered the body of Angel Luis Sanchez, 45. His right foot was
gone.
V. THE RESCUERS
Aboard the Kavo Delfini the morning of Dec. 18, the nine survivors
hugged and kissed Capt. Kontos and showered him with ''Gracias,
capitán!'' They were given dry, warm blankets, cups of beef stew
and shots of Metaxa, Greek brandy. Kontos chatted in broken Spanish.
Later, when their passengers felt stronger, crewmen grilled steaks for
them.
They were in generally good condition, Kontos said, except for
4-year-old Lineidys. She was weak and her body was covered by ''inky
splotches,'' a sign of severe hypothermia. She would later recover fully
and be delivered to family members in Miami.
She was the crew's favorite.
''We were in love with her. Everyone was talking about her,'' Kontos
said. ''She had the most beautiful black eyes. I wanted to take her with
me. I almost called my wife and asked if she wanted a daughter.''
At 2:20 p.m., the crew of the Kavo Delfini said goodbye and handed over
the Cubans to the U.S. Coast Guard, which brought them to Miami.
Kontos ordered the engines back up, and the crew headed to New Orleans,
talking most of the way about Lineidys' big, dark eyes.
Herald staff writer Rick Jervis can be reached by email at rjervis@herald.com
With Miami's glow in sight, a dream is dashed
Bad weather
intervenes
Answering pleas for
help
Engines die, waves
hit
Coast Guard
responds
Survivors give
thanks
Copyright © 1999 The Miami Herald