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Captain of Santa Barbara Dive Boat That Burned and Sank Killing 34 People Sentenced to Four Years

Posted on May 2, 2024

            LOS ANGELES 

The captain of the P/V Conception, a Santa Barbara-based dive boat that sank near Santa Cruz Island on Labor Day in 2019 after catching fire, was sentenced Thursday to 48 months in federal prison. The tragic incident led to the deaths of 33 passengers and one crew member.

U.S. District Judge George H. Wu sentenced  Jerry Nehl Boylan, 70, of Santa Barbara.

A restitution hearing was scheduled for July 11.

After a 10-day trial, a jury found Boylan guilty in November 2023 of one count of misconduct or neglect of ship officer—an offense commonly called “seaman’s manslaughter.”

            The Conception was a 75-foot, wood-and-fiberglass passenger vessel that docked in Santa Barbara Harbor. During a Labor Day weekend dive trip in 2019, the boat carried 33 passengers and six crew members, including Boylan.

A fire broke out early on September 2, 2019, while the boat was anchored in Platt’s Harbor near Santa Cruz Island.

brown mallet on gray wooden surfaceThe fire, which engulfed the boat and led to its sinking, resulted in the deaths of 34 people who had been sleeping below deck. Five crew members, including Boylan, were able to escape and survive.

            “The defendant’s cowardice and repeated failures caused the horrific deaths of 34 people,” said United States Attorney Martin Estrada. “The victims’ families will be forever devastated by this needless tragedy. While today’s sentence cannot fully heal their wounds, we hope that our efforts to hold this defendant criminally accountable brings some measure of healing to the families.”

           “The fate of the victims on the Conception might have been different were it not for the negligence of the defendant,” said Mehtab Syed, the Assistant Director in Charge of the FBI’s Los Angeles Field Office. “I want to commend the collaborative effort by investigators and prosecutors that led to today’s sentence and hope that it delivers a measure of justice to the victims’ families as they continue to heal from this tragedy.”

As captain of the Conception, Boylan committed a series of failures, including abandoning his ship instead of rescuing passengers, which resulted in the disaster.

Such conduct constituted misconduct, gross negligence, and inattention to his duties and led to the deaths of 34 victims, prosecutors argued.

            As the ship’s captain, Boylan was responsible for the safety and security of the vessel, its passengers, and its crew. Federal prosecutors argued he failed in his responsibilities in several ways, including:

  • failing to have a night watch or roving patrol;
  • failing to conduct sufficient fire drills and crew training;
  • failing to provide firefighting instructions or directions to crew members after the fire started;
  • failing to use firefighting equipment, including a fire ax and fire extinguisher that were next to him in the wheelhouse, to fight the fire or attempt to rescue trapped passengers;
  • failing to perform any lifesaving or firefighting activities whatsoever at the time of the fire, even though he was uninjured;
  • failing to use the boat’s public address system to warn passengers and crew members about the fire; and
  • becoming the first crew member to abandon ship even though 33 passengers and one crew member were still alive and trapped below deck in the vessel’s bunkroom and in need of assistance to escape.

“There are no winners when lives are lost at sea, but there is justice in bringing those accountable to answer for their crimes. Today is an example of that.” said Coast Guard Investigative Service Director, Jeremy Gauthier. “This was in its truest form, a joint effort by our hard-charging CGIS Special Agents, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives.”

The FBI, the Coast Guard Investigative Service, and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives investigated this matter.

Assistant U.S. Attorneys Mark A. Williams, Matthew W. O’Brien and

Juan M. Rodríguez of the Environmental Crimes and Consumer Protection Section, Brian R. Faerstein of the Public Corruption and Civil Rights Section, and Alexander P. Robbins of the Criminal Appeals Section prosecuted this case.

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