Story by U.S. Coast Guard,
8th District Public
Affairs
Barely a month passed when, on April 9,
another family of five, the Perrins, was reported missing between Grand
Isle and Venice, La. When the Perrins’ overdue report came in to
officials at Group New Orleans, it was eerie similarity to the family
from Mobile.
Search and rescue controllers at Group
New Orleans dispatched five rescue units to an area southwest of New
Orleans. Unlike the Krumm case, search planners had a more precise
location. The Perrins did file a float plan, so the Coast Guard
inundated the area with boats, helicopters and a cutter. The family’s
friends also contributed to the search.
Several hours into the search, Coast
Guard units hadn’t found anything related to the Perrin’s boat.
Coasties who were involved in the Krumm case didn’t take long to assume
the worst.
“We were starting to get frustrated
because we had so many units in the area they were reportedly in; if
they were on the surface or if something was on the surface, we
should’ve found it,” said Petty Officer 2nd Class Brian Wear,
a search and rescue controller with Group New Orleans.
Then Wear and his shipmates received
word the Perrins were located. A family friend found them, safe and all
together. But they weren’t where their float plan stated.
One of the 41-foot rescue boats crews,
who searched for the Perrin’s, met them shortly after they were located,
to discuss what happened. Kevin Perrin, the father and owner and
operator of the boat, decided to change course because of severe weather
forecasted for the area of Grand Isle and Venice, the boat crew said.
They added, Perrin failed to notify friends or family of the change, and
the family took refuge in a bay southeast of Pilottown, La.
During the boat crew’s debrief of
Perrin, they learned he didn’t have his marine radio on at all times
while underway. If Perrin had his radio on, he would have heard the
Urgent Marine Information Broadcast (UMIB), about the search for this
family, being disseminated throughout the airwaves.
In the end, the Perrins weren’t in any
danger. They had plenty of provisions for several days at sea, and were
allowed to continue fishing. But their friends back home in LaFitte,
La., were notified of the change of location for fishing and expected
time to return. The Perrin’s close friends had their updated float
plan.
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