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21 die as tour boat capsizes on US lake
A glass-enclosed boat carrying tourists on a senior citizens' cruise overturned Sunday on a calm lake in upstate New York, killing at least 21 people and sending more than two dozen cold and wet passengers to a hospital.
The 40-foot Ethan Allen capsized around 3 p.m. on Lake George about 50 miles north of Albany in the Adirondack Mountains. The accident apparently happened so fast that none of the passengers was able to put on a life jacket, Cleveland said. Patrol boats that reached the scene within minutes found other boaters already pulling people from the water. All passengers had been accounted for within two hours. Twenty-seven people were taken to a hospital in nearby Glens Falls. Some suffered broken ribs and some complaining of shortness of breath. Five people were to be admitted, hospital spokesman Jason White said. Police investigators were at the hospital late Sunday. Dorothy Warren, a resident who said she brought blankets and chairs to shore for survivors, said one passenger told her "she saw a big boat coming close and she said, 'Whoop-dee-doo. I love a rocking boat.'" Warren said the woman did not know how she got out of the water but said her mother was killed. Many of the bodies were laid out along the shore, and the site was blocked off by police with tarps. A hearse, police vehicles and several sport utility vehicles later began taking the dead from the scene. At the time of the accident, the weather was clear and in the 70s at Lake George, a long, narrow body of water that is a popular tourist destination in the summer and quiets down after Labor Day. The water temperature was 68 degrees. "This was as calm as it gets," said Jerry Thornell, a former Lake George Park Commission patrol officer and a lake enforcement officer for the county sheriff's department. Representatives of Shoreline Cruises, which operates the boat, could not immediately be reached for comment. The boat's owner, Jim Quirk, whose family has operated Shoreline Cruises for decades, told the Glens Falls Post-Star: "It is a tragedy and it's very unfortunate." Authorities initially said the boat was carrying a tour group from Canada, but state Assemblywoman Betty Little later said the tourists were from Trenton, Mich. The sheriff said a language barrier was slowing the process of notifying victims' families. "Nothing of this magnitude has ever happened," state police Superintendent Wayne Bennett said. "It's unprecedented." As dusk fell, several police boats were on the water, and at least half a dozen divers were in a small cove on the west side of the lake. The Ethan Allen lay at the bottom of the lake in 70 feet of water. Cleveland said the captain, who was well known and well liked by law
enforcement officials, survived. He was the only crew member
aboard.
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