The attorneys for the family of a woman who was killed last month in a parasailing accident off the coast of Marathon is holding a news conference Tuesday to announce that they are filing a lawsuit against the parasail operator.
“The boat captain allowed the group to parasail in terrible weather and ultimately made the decision to cut the parasail line tethering (Supraja) Alaparthi, 33, and the two children when he lost control of the boat,” a news release from The Haggard Law Firm stated.
The accident happened May 30 as Alaparthi was parasailing with her 10-year-old son, Sriakshith Alaparthi, and her 9-year-old nephew, Vishant Sadda.
The family’s lawyers say nine other relatives, including Alaparthi’s 6-year-old daughter, watched from the 31-foot boat as their loved ones were dropped into the water and then dragged by strong winds before they crashed into the Old Seven Mile Bridge near Pigeon Key.
Alaparthi was pronounced dead at the scene and the two boys were hospitalized.
John Callion, who works as a fishing guide and was out on his boat at the time, witnessed the tragedy unfold.
“I thought they had it under control first. But for a minute, my customers were like, ‘What’s going on? What are they doing?’” he told ABC’s Good Morning America. “I’m like, ‘It looks like they’re trying to figure out a plan to rescue these people.’ And then, you know, 30 seconds goes by, which seemed much longer and nothing was changing. So then that’s when we sprung into action.”
According to a report from the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, “The captain cut the line tethered to the three victims” because the parasail was “pegging.”
That is a phrase used to describe when a parasail turns into a sail in high winds and could potentially drag the boat.
The woman and two children were dropped and “dragged through the water by the inflated parasail...through and across the surface of the water” before colliding with the bridge, the report stated.
Callion and the passengers on his boat pulled the victims from the water. The passengers performed CPR on them as Callion raced everyone to the docks at the nearby Sunset Grille restaurant, where they were met by first responders.
“The kid… he was letting me know, ‘Help me, help me.’ And we got him in the boat immediately. And then we got the other kid that was unconscious. And then we got his mom in the boat,” Callion said.
The report identified the captain of the parasailing boat as Daniel Couch, 49, who works for Lighthouse Parasail Inc., which is based in Marathon.
Local 10 News reached out to Lighthouse Parasail Inc. after the accident, and a co-owner said over the phone that they are “devastated” by what happened.
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“The boat captain allowed the group to parasail in terrible weather and ultimately made the decision to cut the parasail line tethering (Supraja) Alaparthi, 33, and the two children when he lost control of the boat,” a news release from The Haggard Law Firm stated.
The accident happened May 30 as Alaparthi was parasailing with her 10-year-old son, Sriakshith Alaparthi, and her 9-year-old nephew, Vishant Sadda.
The family’s lawyers say nine other relatives, including Alaparthi’s 6-year-old daughter, watched from the 31-foot boat as their loved ones were dropped into the water and then dragged by strong winds before they crashed into the Old Seven Mile Bridge near Pigeon Key.
Alaparthi was pronounced dead at the scene and the two boys were hospitalized.
John Callion, who works as a fishing guide and was out on his boat at the time, witnessed the tragedy unfold.
“I thought they had it under control first. But for a minute, my customers were like, ‘What’s going on? What are they doing?’” he told ABC’s Good Morning America. “I’m like, ‘It looks like they’re trying to figure out a plan to rescue these people.’ And then, you know, 30 seconds goes by, which seemed much longer and nothing was changing. So then that’s when we sprung into action.”
According to a report from the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, “The captain cut the line tethered to the three victims” because the parasail was “pegging.”
That is a phrase used to describe when a parasail turns into a sail in high winds and could potentially drag the boat.
The woman and two children were dropped and “dragged through the water by the inflated parasail...through and across the surface of the water” before colliding with the bridge, the report stated.
Callion and the passengers on his boat pulled the victims from the water. The passengers performed CPR on them as Callion raced everyone to the docks at the nearby Sunset Grille restaurant, where they were met by first responders.
“The kid… he was letting me know, ‘Help me, help me.’ And we got him in the boat immediately. And then we got the other kid that was unconscious. And then we got his mom in the boat,” Callion said.
The report identified the captain of the parasailing boat as Daniel Couch, 49, who works for Lighthouse Parasail Inc., which is based in Marathon.
Local 10 News reached out to Lighthouse Parasail Inc. after the accident, and a co-owner said over the phone that they are “devastated” by what happened.
Continue reading...