1 00:00:02,000 --> 00:00:07,000 Downloaded from YTS.MX 2 00:00:06,100 --> 00:00:08,000 We begin tonight with the urgent search 3 00:00:08,000 --> 00:00:09,867 for a deep sea submersible vehicle 4 00:00:08,000 --> 00:00:13,000 Official YIFY movies site: YTS.MX 5 00:00:09,867 --> 00:00:11,367 missing in the Atlantic Ocean 6 00:00:11,367 --> 00:00:13,900 with five people on board. 7 00:00:13,900 --> 00:00:15,367 Developing story that's really capturing 8 00:00:15,367 --> 00:00:16,900 the world's attention right now. 9 00:00:16,900 --> 00:00:19,767 [male reporter 2] The Titan bound for the wreckage of the Titanic 10 00:00:19,767 --> 00:00:21,100 two miles below the surface. 11 00:00:21,100 --> 00:00:23,900 [male reporter 3] Passengers paying up to $250,000. 12 00:00:23,900 --> 00:00:27,400 Tonight, the families of the crew are waiting for word. 13 00:00:27,400 --> 00:00:31,667 The idea that passengers were going to be aboard was insane to me. 14 00:00:32,667 --> 00:00:34,100 [Stockton Rush] This is an experimental sub. 15 00:00:34,100 --> 00:00:35,567 It's very dangerous down there. 16 00:00:36,500 --> 00:00:39,367 You're in the dark. Just enough light to see. 17 00:00:42,900 --> 00:00:43,900 Breaking news. 18 00:00:43,900 --> 00:00:45,967 The tragic end to that deep sea dive. 19 00:00:45,967 --> 00:00:49,667 All five men on board the craft lost at sea. 20 00:00:49,667 --> 00:00:55,266 This was a moment in time when their sub was there, and then it was not. 21 00:00:55,266 --> 00:00:58,166 The one person that should not have been on the Titan 22 00:00:58,166 --> 00:00:59,400 was the teenage son. 23 00:01:00,800 --> 00:01:02,867 I've gone back and forth a lot, 24 00:01:02,867 --> 00:01:04,266 like whether I should have done more. 25 00:01:04,266 --> 00:01:08,066 You know, whether there's some moral obligation to do more. 26 00:01:08,066 --> 00:01:10,867 Do you solemnly swear that the testimony you're about to give... 27 00:01:10,867 --> 00:01:14,200 Shocking new details about what led up to the deadly implosion 28 00:01:14,200 --> 00:01:15,467 of the Titan submersible. 29 00:01:15,467 --> 00:01:18,166 Everyone in the world wants to know what happened to Titan. 30 00:01:18,166 --> 00:01:23,767 When you're outside the box, it's really hard to tell how far outside the box. 31 00:01:23,767 --> 00:01:26,567 I've spent a great deal of time trying to figure that out. 32 00:01:26,567 --> 00:01:28,367 If it wasn't an accident, 33 00:01:28,367 --> 00:01:30,767 it then has to be some degree of crime. 34 00:01:58,166 --> 00:01:59,567 Thanks very much. 35 00:02:01,900 --> 00:02:04,567 You may have seen in the write up of this, 36 00:02:04,567 --> 00:02:07,367 that I wanted to be an astronaut. 37 00:02:07,367 --> 00:02:08,867 It's why I got an engineering degree, 38 00:02:08,867 --> 00:02:12,266 I watched Star Trek, Star Wars. 39 00:02:12,266 --> 00:02:14,700 And I wasn't going to get to Jupiter or Mars, 40 00:02:14,700 --> 00:02:20,367 but I did realize that all the cool stuff that I thought was out there 41 00:02:20,367 --> 00:02:21,667 is actually underwater. 42 00:02:23,500 --> 00:02:26,600 [Tym Catterson] Stockton was a very strong personality. 43 00:02:27,567 --> 00:02:32,166 He had a a trajectory of what his plans were. 44 00:02:32,166 --> 00:02:34,667 Why were there only four submersibles 45 00:02:34,667 --> 00:02:37,100 that could go to the average depth of the ocean? 46 00:02:37,100 --> 00:02:40,867 I don't think Stockton started this whole project 47 00:02:40,867 --> 00:02:44,900 knowing that it would end in total disaster. 48 00:02:44,900 --> 00:02:49,367 He believed in having people have better access to the deep ocean. 49 00:02:50,800 --> 00:02:52,266 [Catterson] He wanted to support science, 50 00:02:52,266 --> 00:02:54,900 and he wanted to support educational outreach. 51 00:02:54,900 --> 00:02:58,967 Make this kind of adventure 52 00:02:58,967 --> 00:03:02,967 more approachable to the public. 53 00:03:02,967 --> 00:03:05,100 That's basically why I stayed around. 54 00:03:05,100 --> 00:03:08,000 The goal was, "Where do you want to go in the ocean? 55 00:03:08,000 --> 00:03:10,567 "What is the most known site in the ocean?" 56 00:03:17,266 --> 00:03:18,700 And it's clearly the Titanic. 57 00:03:22,300 --> 00:03:24,867 It always has been a challenge to explain to people 58 00:03:24,867 --> 00:03:26,066 why they would go in a sub 59 00:03:26,066 --> 00:03:27,700 'cause they're typically nervous. 60 00:03:27,700 --> 00:03:30,266 But when you say you're going to the Titanic, they don't care. 61 00:03:30,266 --> 00:03:32,066 They've seen the pictures in the movie. 62 00:03:32,066 --> 00:03:33,567 They want to go see the Titanic. 63 00:03:33,567 --> 00:03:36,467 And so, from a business perspective, it was very appealing. 64 00:03:41,000 --> 00:03:44,600 And to go to the Titanic, which is at 3,800 meters, 65 00:03:44,600 --> 00:03:46,867 requires a special sub. 66 00:03:48,967 --> 00:03:54,000 Level. Do a good cleaning, check the surface out and take measurements. 67 00:04:01,767 --> 00:04:06,300 [Rush] Today is a critical joining of the titanium and the carbon fiber. 68 00:04:06,300 --> 00:04:11,300 That seal needs to be uniform and small, but not too small. 69 00:04:12,867 --> 00:04:16,200 [Josh Gates] Stockton wanted to bring people to Titanic, 70 00:04:16,200 --> 00:04:20,000 so he built a vehicle that had a totally different shape. 71 00:04:20,000 --> 00:04:21,433 Toilet paper tube. 72 00:04:22,800 --> 00:04:26,867 [Rush] It'll be the deepest diving carbon fiber sub ever built. 73 00:04:26,867 --> 00:04:29,667 But if we mess it up, there's not a lot of recovery. 74 00:04:29,667 --> 00:04:32,567 I'm good already north-south. Just east-to-west. 75 00:04:32,567 --> 00:04:34,300 [Gates] This carbon fiber hull 76 00:04:34,300 --> 00:04:37,500 that was built to be lighter and stronger from the space age material, 77 00:04:37,500 --> 00:04:40,867 it had these big titanium end caps that would seal this cylinder. 78 00:04:42,400 --> 00:04:45,266 You can get more people inside that shape. 79 00:04:45,266 --> 00:04:48,100 When I first saw it on the dock, it was kind of this marvel. 80 00:04:49,667 --> 00:04:53,066 [Rush] This technology is what we need to explore the ocean depth. 81 00:04:53,066 --> 00:04:55,066 We're going to go to 4,000 meters 82 00:04:55,066 --> 00:04:57,266 after our testing in the Bahamas. 83 00:04:57,266 --> 00:05:00,166 What he's doing is experimental, 84 00:05:00,166 --> 00:05:02,500 and it involves exploration, and it's a business. 85 00:05:02,500 --> 00:05:05,500 And with this, I thee christen, Titan. 86 00:05:07,066 --> 00:05:10,266 [cheering and applause] 87 00:05:10,266 --> 00:05:12,600 [Gates] If you're starting a submarine company, 88 00:05:12,600 --> 00:05:15,867 is there a more famous destination 89 00:05:15,867 --> 00:05:18,000 in the world than Titanic? No. 90 00:05:18,000 --> 00:05:20,166 By the time we're done testing it, 91 00:05:20,166 --> 00:05:21,767 I believe it's pretty much invulnerable. 92 00:05:21,767 --> 00:05:24,467 And that's pretty much what they said about the Titanic. 93 00:05:24,467 --> 00:05:26,100 -That's right. -[chuckles] 94 00:05:28,166 --> 00:05:30,100 [news anchor] And we begin tonight with breaking news. 95 00:05:30,100 --> 00:05:32,467 The tragic end to that deep sea dive 96 00:05:32,467 --> 00:05:34,100 to the wreckage of the Titanic. 97 00:05:35,300 --> 00:05:38,000 The Coast Guard reporting that pieces of the sub 98 00:05:38,000 --> 00:05:41,066 have been found in a debris field near the Titanic. 99 00:05:57,100 --> 00:06:01,266 Seeing all of the gear that came up, 100 00:06:01,266 --> 00:06:05,166 the sheared off rings and the metal and the bent penetrators... 101 00:06:06,967 --> 00:06:08,867 I was gutted. Um... 102 00:06:10,367 --> 00:06:12,300 [R. Adm. John Mauger] Over the past week, 103 00:06:12,300 --> 00:06:15,967 the world has followed the story of the sub Titan 104 00:06:15,967 --> 00:06:19,567 and the five people who perished in the terrible tragedy. 105 00:06:19,567 --> 00:06:22,400 The Coast Guard has officially convened 106 00:06:22,400 --> 00:06:24,567 a Marine Board of Investigation 107 00:06:24,567 --> 00:06:28,567 led by Chief Investigator, Captain Neubauer. 108 00:06:29,567 --> 00:06:32,166 Thank you, Admiral Mauger. 109 00:06:32,166 --> 00:06:35,567 This is the highest level of investigation the Coast Guard conducts 110 00:06:35,567 --> 00:06:37,900 to determine the cause of this tragic incident. 111 00:06:39,867 --> 00:06:42,200 The Coast Guard investigation can make recommendations 112 00:06:42,200 --> 00:06:46,000 to pursue civil or criminal sanctions, as necessary. 113 00:06:48,066 --> 00:06:51,767 Seeing the debris, the pieces that were left over, 114 00:06:51,767 --> 00:06:54,300 kind of replaying what must have occurred, 115 00:06:54,300 --> 00:06:57,133 that races through your mind over and over. 116 00:06:59,567 --> 00:07:02,600 [Catterson] Three of my friends were in the sub, and disappeared. 117 00:07:02,600 --> 00:07:05,767 Do I feel bad about it? Absolutely. 118 00:07:07,367 --> 00:07:10,100 Stockton was a friend of mine. Now he's gone. 119 00:07:11,266 --> 00:07:15,867 PH was one of the godfathers of diving. 120 00:07:17,300 --> 00:07:21,400 And Hamish, they were all in there to get something out of this. 121 00:07:22,567 --> 00:07:24,867 Do I miss them? Yeah. 122 00:07:26,800 --> 00:07:28,467 I miss all of them. 123 00:07:28,467 --> 00:07:31,367 Suleman knew nothing about it. 124 00:07:31,367 --> 00:07:33,700 This was just his grand adventure. 125 00:07:33,700 --> 00:07:37,033 And it was the same for his father. 126 00:07:39,467 --> 00:07:41,867 [Christine Dawood] This is the life of my son and my husband 127 00:07:41,867 --> 00:07:43,700 they are talking about. 128 00:07:43,700 --> 00:07:48,567 This is the life of Hamish and two others who died there. 129 00:07:48,567 --> 00:07:52,166 It was deeply personal. It can't get more personal. 130 00:07:55,800 --> 00:07:57,266 They're never gonna come back. 131 00:07:58,967 --> 00:08:01,100 Their voices are still in the house. 132 00:08:02,800 --> 00:08:04,400 Their memories are in the house. 133 00:08:08,500 --> 00:08:10,867 No matter what the investigation is, 134 00:08:10,867 --> 00:08:13,100 the rooms are still empty. 135 00:08:15,567 --> 00:08:17,867 Do I need to know exactly what happened 136 00:08:17,867 --> 00:08:23,400 in order to come to terms with these empty rooms or not? 137 00:08:23,400 --> 00:08:26,000 And I don't know the answer yet. 138 00:08:26,000 --> 00:08:27,567 It's a process. 139 00:08:51,767 --> 00:08:54,667 Mr. Stanley, the board's recorder Lieutenant Steele 140 00:08:54,667 --> 00:08:56,800 will now administer your oath. 141 00:08:56,800 --> 00:09:00,066 Do you solemnly swear that the testimony you're about to give 142 00:09:00,066 --> 00:09:01,767 will be the truth, the whole truth 143 00:09:01,767 --> 00:09:03,300 and nothing but the truth, so help you God? 144 00:09:03,300 --> 00:09:04,767 I do. 145 00:09:04,767 --> 00:09:06,166 [Lt. Steele] Thank you. You may be seated. 146 00:09:07,767 --> 00:09:13,266 Mr. Stanley, if you would, explain your background and training 147 00:09:13,266 --> 00:09:16,166 that relate to submersible operations. 148 00:09:16,166 --> 00:09:19,300 I read a book when I was nine years old, 149 00:09:19,300 --> 00:09:23,100 and started researching how to make a submersible. 150 00:09:23,100 --> 00:09:25,500 This is the vehicle I operate now. 151 00:09:25,500 --> 00:09:28,467 She's named Idabel after the town in Oklahoma, 152 00:09:28,467 --> 00:09:30,367 and it's made out of one of the approved steels. 153 00:09:30,367 --> 00:09:36,100 Actually, the US Navy was making their own submarines out of that steel. 154 00:09:36,100 --> 00:09:40,200 [Capt. Neubauer] The public hearings are such an important process to have. 155 00:09:40,200 --> 00:09:44,166 These are traumatic events with unexpected loss of life. 156 00:09:44,166 --> 00:09:48,000 It's not a surprise to me when witnesses are deeply impacted. 157 00:09:49,266 --> 00:09:52,100 Mr. Stanley, is there anything that you think would be valuable 158 00:09:52,100 --> 00:09:53,900 for the board to consider? 159 00:09:53,900 --> 00:09:57,066 I wish that you would indulge me a few minutes 160 00:09:57,066 --> 00:09:59,467 to lay out what I think about this, 161 00:09:59,467 --> 00:10:05,700 seeing that OceanGate came very, very close to killing me 162 00:10:05,700 --> 00:10:09,667 and has had a severe impact on my business, 163 00:10:09,667 --> 00:10:11,367 as well as an entire industry. 164 00:10:12,867 --> 00:10:16,867 The definition of an accident is something that happened unexpectedly, 165 00:10:18,867 --> 00:10:20,967 and by sheer chance. 166 00:10:20,967 --> 00:10:23,367 There was nothing unexpected about this. 167 00:10:23,367 --> 00:10:26,500 This was expected by everybody 168 00:10:26,500 --> 00:10:29,867 that had access to a little bit of information. 169 00:10:29,867 --> 00:10:33,300 And I think that if it wasn't an accident, 170 00:10:35,000 --> 00:10:38,266 it then has to be some degree of crime. 171 00:10:41,900 --> 00:10:44,767 Continuing coverage of the Titan submersible hearings. 172 00:10:44,767 --> 00:10:46,367 Today we heard the testimony from a man 173 00:10:46,367 --> 00:10:49,166 who went to the bottom of the ocean with OceanGate 174 00:10:49,166 --> 00:10:51,300 and resurfaced with red flags. 175 00:10:51,300 --> 00:10:56,266 Stockton Rush invited him on the deepest dive he had ever been offered, 176 00:10:56,266 --> 00:10:58,266 and he just couldn't pass it up. 177 00:10:59,867 --> 00:11:01,567 [Stanley] I got an email saying, 178 00:11:01,567 --> 00:11:04,266 "Come out to Marsh Harbour, Bahamas, 179 00:11:04,266 --> 00:11:06,100 and I have a spot open for you." 180 00:11:06,100 --> 00:11:08,266 -[man] Yup, yup. -Looking good. 181 00:11:08,266 --> 00:11:10,166 Looking good. Hold that line. 182 00:11:10,166 --> 00:11:13,266 That was an extremely unique opportunity. 183 00:11:14,567 --> 00:11:16,467 Kenny, do you hear that from Titan? 184 00:11:17,266 --> 00:11:19,400 [man] That's affirmative. Stand by. 185 00:11:20,000 --> 00:11:21,367 4,000 meters, we're there. 186 00:11:21,367 --> 00:11:23,066 [people chuckle] 187 00:11:27,100 --> 00:11:29,667 All of our test program has been about incremental testing. 188 00:11:29,667 --> 00:11:32,166 Out here, we're really focused on one thing, 189 00:11:32,166 --> 00:11:33,367 and that's the pressure vessel, 190 00:11:33,367 --> 00:11:35,367 and making sure that that component, 191 00:11:35,367 --> 00:11:38,266 which is clearly the most critical component of the sub, 192 00:11:38,266 --> 00:11:41,667 is safe and capable of handling depths 193 00:11:41,667 --> 00:11:44,100 down to 4,000 meters repeatedly 194 00:11:44,100 --> 00:11:45,867 with people on board. 195 00:11:54,367 --> 00:11:57,166 [woman] Rocks around. We've got two different directions... 196 00:11:59,600 --> 00:12:02,667 -[man on radio] Go ahead. -[woman] Just checking on your progress. 197 00:12:16,667 --> 00:12:19,266 [Stanley] When we were doing that dive, 198 00:12:19,266 --> 00:12:24,867 I did not even come close to appreciating the real danger. 199 00:12:26,300 --> 00:12:29,266 I was the one that was like, "Hey, capture this moment." 200 00:12:29,266 --> 00:12:32,333 Like, I was happy to be there. 201 00:12:34,767 --> 00:12:39,066 [Petros Mathioudakis] In 2019, I got invited to go down to the Bahamas. 202 00:12:40,100 --> 00:12:43,200 OceanGate purchased a laser scanner, 203 00:12:43,200 --> 00:12:47,467 and the intent was, at the time, to mount that on Titan 204 00:12:47,467 --> 00:12:51,367 to be able to make a 3D model of the Titanic. 205 00:12:53,000 --> 00:12:54,867 And they basically wanted someone there 206 00:12:54,867 --> 00:12:56,800 to ensure that it was operating correctly. 207 00:12:58,967 --> 00:13:04,200 I had never been involved in any submersible operations before, 208 00:13:04,200 --> 00:13:06,266 so it was a lot to take in. 209 00:13:06,266 --> 00:13:09,300 You know, being in the Bahamas and feet in the sand, 210 00:13:10,467 --> 00:13:14,900 getting to work on underwater robotics and submersibles. 211 00:13:16,166 --> 00:13:18,467 I mean, I couldn't think of a more fun thing to do. 212 00:13:19,266 --> 00:13:20,867 You know, he was young and naive. 213 00:13:20,867 --> 00:13:25,967 Kind of crazy for somebody in their 20s to be going that deep 214 00:13:25,967 --> 00:13:28,166 with, really, no specific background. 215 00:13:29,967 --> 00:13:32,967 Okay, I'm good. Lock me up. 216 00:13:32,967 --> 00:13:38,066 Stockton had mentioned that it's really tough to test 217 00:13:38,066 --> 00:13:41,367 the hull of Titan correctly. 218 00:13:41,367 --> 00:13:43,400 It was just not feasible, not possible. 219 00:13:43,400 --> 00:13:45,500 It fell outside the boundaries of normal testing. 220 00:13:46,867 --> 00:13:49,567 I was aware that this was extremely risky, 221 00:13:49,567 --> 00:13:51,200 and Stockton was very clear. 222 00:13:52,266 --> 00:13:55,000 He said, "Do you have a wife?" 223 00:13:55,000 --> 00:13:57,400 And I said, "No." 224 00:13:57,400 --> 00:14:00,600 "Do you have kids?" And I said, "Nope." 225 00:14:00,600 --> 00:14:02,000 He said, "Okay, you're in." 226 00:14:02,000 --> 00:14:03,800 [laughs] 227 00:14:12,467 --> 00:14:14,200 When you're inside of Titan, 228 00:14:14,200 --> 00:14:16,967 on your descent, you're just freefalling. 229 00:14:16,967 --> 00:14:19,800 You're just heavy and your, you know, gravity is pushing you down. 230 00:14:24,467 --> 00:14:27,467 You're essentially in the dark. 231 00:14:27,467 --> 00:14:29,066 Just enough light to see. 232 00:14:29,066 --> 00:14:32,500 [Rush] Uh, no. Left is forward is down. On the left stick. 233 00:14:32,500 --> 00:14:33,967 -[Stanley] This is down? -[Rush] That's up. 234 00:14:33,967 --> 00:14:34,967 -[Stanley] That's up? -[Rush] Yup. 235 00:14:34,967 --> 00:14:36,567 -[Stanley] That's down? -[Rush] Yup. 236 00:14:36,567 --> 00:14:40,567 I remember driving for a large amount of the time. 237 00:14:40,567 --> 00:14:41,700 [Stanley] Okay. 238 00:14:42,700 --> 00:14:44,100 [Rush] You don't check down. 239 00:14:44,100 --> 00:14:46,200 [laughter] 240 00:14:46,200 --> 00:14:50,567 The first time the carbon fiber made a noise in that hull, 241 00:14:50,567 --> 00:14:51,800 it was extremely loud. 242 00:14:51,800 --> 00:14:53,166 It was like a gunshot. 243 00:14:54,100 --> 00:14:55,300 [muffled thud] 244 00:14:55,300 --> 00:14:58,000 Any noise would have been loud, but that was loud. 245 00:15:01,567 --> 00:15:02,700 You don't want to be in a submarine 246 00:15:02,700 --> 00:15:03,800 and hear those kinds of sounds. 247 00:15:08,367 --> 00:15:10,467 Everyone stops talking for a little bit and... 248 00:15:14,867 --> 00:15:18,800 That loud, sudden noise 249 00:15:18,800 --> 00:15:24,100 that you know is essentially part of your pressure vessel breaking 250 00:15:24,100 --> 00:15:27,800 when you're sinking in the near pitch blackness and silence, 251 00:15:27,800 --> 00:15:29,500 I think that's going to scare anybody. 252 00:15:33,367 --> 00:15:37,066 Just how much noise do I hear before we all die? 253 00:15:40,400 --> 00:15:41,867 [muffled thud] 254 00:15:51,367 --> 00:15:56,600 [Stanley] Took a while, let's say maybe like five or ten cracking incidents. 255 00:15:56,600 --> 00:16:00,367 That was when I think I was composed enough 256 00:16:00,367 --> 00:16:02,467 to isolate 257 00:16:02,467 --> 00:16:04,567 where the cracking sounds were coming from. 258 00:16:06,500 --> 00:16:12,000 Stockton saw this, but still he pushed on. 259 00:16:12,000 --> 00:16:15,166 And you really have to ask yourself why. 260 00:16:18,867 --> 00:16:20,667 [Mathioudakis] It didn't faze Stockton. 261 00:16:20,667 --> 00:16:22,667 He's like, "Yep, that's normal. 262 00:16:22,667 --> 00:16:24,400 "Like, you know, that happened before." 263 00:16:28,400 --> 00:16:30,767 We're slightly negative. 264 00:16:30,767 --> 00:16:33,700 Like, we're getting closer to it, but we're not touching it. 265 00:16:33,700 --> 00:16:36,767 When we got almost to the bottom, or at the bottom, 266 00:16:36,767 --> 00:16:40,300 the lights on the exterior of the sub powered down. 267 00:16:42,767 --> 00:16:45,600 [Rush] I see the bottom. I don't think we're touching it. 268 00:16:47,100 --> 00:16:50,166 We had a bit of issue with one of the battery banks. 269 00:16:50,166 --> 00:16:56,133 Stockton had mentioned we're not seeing full vertical thruster availability. 270 00:16:58,567 --> 00:17:00,900 [Stanley] Who wants to be the first one to say 271 00:17:00,900 --> 00:17:03,467 that they're scared and they want to go back up, 272 00:17:03,467 --> 00:17:07,467 canceling the trip for everybody because you got scared? 273 00:17:12,100 --> 00:17:15,266 The supposed goal was to test it 274 00:17:15,266 --> 00:17:17,600 to the exact depth of the Titanic. 275 00:17:18,567 --> 00:17:21,166 We got 96% of the way there. 276 00:17:23,100 --> 00:17:26,400 But because the cracking sounds were continuing, 277 00:17:27,667 --> 00:17:32,100 at some point, collectively, we came to a decision of, 278 00:17:32,100 --> 00:17:35,000 "Well, that's good enough. Let's call it a day." 279 00:17:35,000 --> 00:17:39,867 I'm sure we were within a few percentage points of implosion. 280 00:17:47,100 --> 00:17:52,467 You sent an email in April 18, 2019 to Mr. Rush. 281 00:17:52,467 --> 00:17:55,000 You say, "The sounds we observed yesterday 282 00:17:55,000 --> 00:17:57,400 sounded like a flaw/defect in one area 283 00:17:57,400 --> 00:18:00,066 being acted on by the tremendous pressures 284 00:18:00,066 --> 00:18:02,567 and being crushed/damaged. 285 00:18:02,567 --> 00:18:04,700 "Would indicate there is an area of the hull 286 00:18:04,700 --> 00:18:08,400 that is breaking down/getting spongy." 287 00:18:10,367 --> 00:18:14,667 In my email, I tell him that the hull is yelling at him 288 00:18:14,667 --> 00:18:16,567 and he needs to listen. 289 00:18:16,567 --> 00:18:18,667 You'd literally see it on a graph of paper, 290 00:18:18,667 --> 00:18:20,166 and he still chose to ignore that. 291 00:18:21,667 --> 00:18:24,567 This exchange of emails strained our relationship. 292 00:18:24,567 --> 00:18:26,700 I felt like I kind of pushed things as far as I could 293 00:18:26,700 --> 00:18:28,967 without just him telling me to... 294 00:18:30,567 --> 00:18:33,166 shut up and never talk to him again. 295 00:18:33,166 --> 00:18:35,967 Mr. Stanley, within those emails, were you made aware 296 00:18:35,967 --> 00:18:37,867 that a crack was identified in the hull? 297 00:18:37,867 --> 00:18:41,567 According to the maintenance log, it was on May 29, 2019. 298 00:18:41,567 --> 00:18:44,467 -I learned about the crack quite recently. -Quite recent. 299 00:18:51,266 --> 00:18:54,200 [Stanley] It's like you're paying somebody to play Russian Roulette, 300 00:18:54,200 --> 00:18:57,100 and there's really three bullets in the chamber, 301 00:18:57,100 --> 00:18:58,767 but you're told there's only one. 302 00:18:59,967 --> 00:19:00,967 That's not right. 303 00:19:05,800 --> 00:19:09,700 [Capt. Neubauer] We will now hear testimony from Mr. Tony Nissen, 304 00:19:09,700 --> 00:19:12,700 the former OceanGate Director of Engineering. 305 00:19:12,700 --> 00:19:13,967 As the director of engineering, 306 00:19:13,967 --> 00:19:16,000 did you make all engineering decisions? 307 00:19:16,000 --> 00:19:17,133 No. 308 00:19:18,300 --> 00:19:20,266 -Did you make any engineering decisions? -Yes. 309 00:19:21,467 --> 00:19:23,867 And who would make the majority of the engineering decisions? 310 00:19:23,867 --> 00:19:25,100 It was Stockton. 311 00:19:26,467 --> 00:19:29,000 In June 2019, an OceanGate pilot 312 00:19:29,000 --> 00:19:31,400 was conducting a pre-dive inspection 313 00:19:31,400 --> 00:19:34,300 and identified a crack in the carbon fiber. 314 00:19:34,300 --> 00:19:36,100 I got a picture. 315 00:19:36,100 --> 00:19:38,467 I said... I think the email was, 316 00:19:38,467 --> 00:19:39,967 "Hey, Tony, is this supposed to be there?" 317 00:19:39,967 --> 00:19:42,500 Said, "No, that's a crack." 318 00:19:42,500 --> 00:19:46,367 And I spent a couple hours trying to convince people that no, this is not salvageable. 319 00:19:46,367 --> 00:19:51,166 And I said, "Titan's got a crack in it. I said, "The hull's done." 320 00:19:51,166 --> 00:19:53,066 And we started carving it out, 321 00:19:53,066 --> 00:19:56,367 they noticed that the crack was bigger than we thought. 322 00:20:08,800 --> 00:20:12,767 When the first hull failed, they sanded it all out 323 00:20:12,767 --> 00:20:15,000 and they saw that there was a crack. 324 00:20:19,000 --> 00:20:22,200 It went virtually the whole length of the hull. 325 00:20:25,767 --> 00:20:29,900 Now, I know what it takes to create a sub. 326 00:20:29,900 --> 00:20:31,300 It's because it's what I do. 327 00:20:32,967 --> 00:20:35,300 That was the issue with the Titan. 328 00:20:35,300 --> 00:20:39,100 They painted themselves in the corner early in the game. 329 00:20:40,467 --> 00:20:45,166 As Stockton was planning to build the sub using carbon fiber... 330 00:20:45,166 --> 00:20:48,667 eh, I did not agree with it. 331 00:20:49,967 --> 00:20:55,066 Hardly anybody in the public is familiar with carbon fiber. 332 00:20:55,066 --> 00:21:01,266 It's stable all the way up until this magic point that it is not. 333 00:21:02,400 --> 00:21:05,867 The failure happens catastrophically. 334 00:21:05,867 --> 00:21:08,166 Nearly explosively. 335 00:21:08,166 --> 00:21:10,667 As you're diving down, the pressure is getting greater. 336 00:21:11,767 --> 00:21:14,166 Now, they heard big pops. 337 00:21:15,800 --> 00:21:18,300 So your fibers are like this. 338 00:21:18,300 --> 00:21:22,166 When this breaks like that, that would make some pretty loud pops. 339 00:21:22,166 --> 00:21:24,567 And if it's still hanging in there, still supporting it, 340 00:21:24,567 --> 00:21:26,867 it doesn't mean it's failed completely yet. 341 00:21:28,100 --> 00:21:30,367 Certainly, Stockton had the money. 342 00:21:30,367 --> 00:21:34,000 He had the vision, the drive to do this, 343 00:21:34,000 --> 00:21:37,300 and he surrounded himself, for the most part, 344 00:21:37,300 --> 00:21:39,367 with people that would say yes. 345 00:21:39,367 --> 00:21:40,867 Because if you didn't say yes, 346 00:21:40,867 --> 00:21:42,667 you weren't there working with him. 347 00:21:54,166 --> 00:21:56,867 [Capt. Neubauer] Thank you, Mr. Nissen. I appreciate your testimony. 348 00:21:56,867 --> 00:22:00,500 You are now released as a witness at this formal hearing. 349 00:22:02,967 --> 00:22:04,900 [Lt. Cdr. Tom Whalen] So after dive 47, 350 00:22:04,900 --> 00:22:08,100 Tony Nissen identified a crack. 351 00:22:08,100 --> 00:22:12,600 Stockton and OceanGate needed to maintain their company vision 352 00:22:12,600 --> 00:22:16,000 of taking people in a carbon fiber innovative submersible, 353 00:22:16,000 --> 00:22:18,700 going down to the Titanic for the trip of a lifetime. 354 00:22:20,767 --> 00:22:22,467 They didn't know what to do at that point 355 00:22:22,467 --> 00:22:24,000 because the hull had a crack in it. 356 00:22:24,000 --> 00:22:26,200 The director of engineering, Mr. Tony Nissen, 357 00:22:26,200 --> 00:22:28,600 states that they are going to need to scrap it. 358 00:22:28,600 --> 00:22:30,367 Basically what he says is, "The hull is done." 359 00:22:31,667 --> 00:22:33,200 Mr. Nissen is then fired. 360 00:22:35,667 --> 00:22:38,367 Stockton and OceanGate then move forward 361 00:22:38,367 --> 00:22:40,867 to create the final Titan hull 362 00:22:40,867 --> 00:22:42,700 of the same material as the first hull, 363 00:22:42,700 --> 00:22:43,867 which was carbon fiber. 364 00:22:50,166 --> 00:22:55,000 We're offering opportunities to go to the Titanic in 2021, 365 00:22:55,000 --> 00:22:57,400 and we'll be out for around four weeks, 366 00:22:57,400 --> 00:22:59,667 leaving from St. John's, Newfoundland, 367 00:22:59,667 --> 00:23:02,066 which is 380 nautical miles from the Titanic, 368 00:23:02,066 --> 00:23:05,567 and we're planning to go with our Titan submersible. 369 00:23:05,567 --> 00:23:08,166 It is the rarest of rare to go see that. 370 00:23:08,166 --> 00:23:10,200 Fewer people have seen the Titanic 371 00:23:10,200 --> 00:23:12,200 than will summit Everest in one day. 372 00:23:16,500 --> 00:23:19,867 [Dawood] This arrogance of the people in charge 373 00:23:19,867 --> 00:23:22,567 when they think they're above everything. 374 00:23:24,900 --> 00:23:26,800 That really gets to me. 375 00:23:29,266 --> 00:23:33,200 Like, why is ego and arrogance more important than safety? 376 00:23:35,567 --> 00:23:37,066 The irony is not lost on me 377 00:23:37,066 --> 00:23:40,500 that the Titanic sunk for exactly the same reason. 378 00:23:40,500 --> 00:23:42,467 History repeats itself. 379 00:24:00,066 --> 00:24:03,166 [Catterson] Stockton invited me once to go out flying with him. 380 00:24:04,800 --> 00:24:06,500 We were friends, 381 00:24:06,500 --> 00:24:09,266 and we were friends that would argue, 382 00:24:09,266 --> 00:24:11,900 and sometimes I would win. 383 00:24:11,900 --> 00:24:13,500 Most of the times I didn't. 384 00:24:17,367 --> 00:24:19,567 He's got an experimental aircraft. 385 00:24:20,900 --> 00:24:21,867 "Experimental." 386 00:24:23,300 --> 00:24:25,100 But anyways, we went out flying 387 00:24:25,100 --> 00:24:27,000 and he said, "Do you want to fly?" 388 00:24:28,000 --> 00:24:29,400 "Give me that thing." 389 00:24:29,400 --> 00:24:33,767 So, you know, I'm flying the airplane a little bit. It's great fun. 390 00:24:35,066 --> 00:24:37,500 And then he takes it back and says, 391 00:24:37,500 --> 00:24:40,600 "So do you want to do a barrel roll?" 392 00:24:40,600 --> 00:24:41,667 "Sure." 393 00:24:41,667 --> 00:24:43,967 He told me how to do it and then I did one. 394 00:24:48,767 --> 00:24:50,867 He said, "You know, this is great. 395 00:24:50,867 --> 00:24:54,767 "You know, nobody else ever wants to go and do this stuff." 396 00:24:54,767 --> 00:24:57,367 I said, "Well, it's either going to work or it's not going to work. 397 00:24:57,367 --> 00:24:59,166 "You know, while we're doing it, 398 00:24:59,166 --> 00:25:02,066 it's going to be, you know, a great fun time." 399 00:25:02,066 --> 00:25:03,800 Yeah, we could've crashed. 400 00:25:08,767 --> 00:25:12,200 Somewhere in there, we were a kindred spirit. 401 00:25:12,200 --> 00:25:15,166 Why I kept working with him? I don't know. 402 00:25:15,166 --> 00:25:18,166 Because I definitely did not say yes to him all the time. 403 00:25:24,567 --> 00:25:27,767 My dynamic with Stockton Rush was interesting. 404 00:25:27,767 --> 00:25:30,367 I mean, I liked Stockton. I respected him. 405 00:25:30,367 --> 00:25:33,200 I think that he liked and respected me as well. 406 00:25:33,200 --> 00:25:34,700 We didn't agree on everything. 407 00:25:34,700 --> 00:25:36,867 There we go. I bring this up. 408 00:25:38,000 --> 00:25:39,967 The Earth is really a water planet. 409 00:25:39,967 --> 00:25:41,600 You know, Stockton wasn't always right, 410 00:25:41,600 --> 00:25:43,300 but he was, like, sure he was right. 411 00:25:43,300 --> 00:25:45,800 ...clients who go to the Titanic 412 00:25:45,800 --> 00:25:47,967 have either been to space or are going to space. 413 00:25:47,967 --> 00:25:51,200 [Hagen] I'm guilty of the same hubris that Stockton had. 414 00:25:51,200 --> 00:25:55,867 The same desire to do great things and to expand my horizons. 415 00:25:55,867 --> 00:25:57,900 I was raised relatively poor 416 00:25:57,900 --> 00:26:00,467 and became relatively successful. 417 00:26:01,700 --> 00:26:06,066 I've always been drawn to people that were more successful. 418 00:26:06,066 --> 00:26:08,166 He was a genius, 419 00:26:08,166 --> 00:26:11,667 and he had a very distinct vision of what he was going to build, 420 00:26:11,667 --> 00:26:14,100 how he was going to do it and what he was going to achieve. 421 00:26:23,166 --> 00:26:25,967 [Stanley] It's a very small group of people in the world 422 00:26:25,967 --> 00:26:30,000 that have done what Stockton and I have done. 423 00:26:30,000 --> 00:26:35,166 Made a submersible, designed it, built it and operated it themselves. 424 00:26:36,300 --> 00:26:39,266 Yes, he was attempting going deeper, 425 00:26:39,266 --> 00:26:42,166 more people, more money involved. 426 00:26:42,166 --> 00:26:46,066 However, looking at his finances and experience, 427 00:26:46,066 --> 00:26:48,767 it didn't seem so unreasonable to me. 428 00:26:50,667 --> 00:26:54,800 I mean, he was working with tens of millions of dollars, 429 00:26:54,800 --> 00:26:56,567 doing something that I had done 430 00:26:56,567 --> 00:26:58,266 with tens of thousands of dollars 431 00:26:58,266 --> 00:27:01,667 and that I had started as a teenager with no formal training, 432 00:27:01,667 --> 00:27:03,367 and he was an Ivy League engineer. 433 00:27:04,767 --> 00:27:07,467 The sense of adventure appealed to him, 434 00:27:07,467 --> 00:27:11,867 but I don't believe he had to work for money pretty much ever. 435 00:27:11,867 --> 00:27:15,400 His primary motivations were more ego-driven than financial. 436 00:27:20,066 --> 00:27:22,867 [Hagen] People accuse him of trying to prove himself 437 00:27:22,867 --> 00:27:25,700 and live up to his own ancestry. 438 00:27:25,700 --> 00:27:27,266 And those are relevant points. 439 00:27:27,266 --> 00:27:29,467 Yeah. I mean, his family legacy 440 00:27:29,467 --> 00:27:32,467 was really about the closest that you could get 441 00:27:32,467 --> 00:27:35,066 to royalty within the United States. 442 00:27:36,800 --> 00:27:39,700 [Hagen] Stockton was a true blue-blood patrician, 443 00:27:39,700 --> 00:27:41,166 as was his wife, Wendy. 444 00:27:42,800 --> 00:27:46,567 Her great grandparents were the people that owned Macy's, 445 00:27:46,567 --> 00:27:48,767 whose lives were lost on the Titanic. 446 00:27:50,066 --> 00:27:52,400 She had that direct connection. 447 00:27:52,400 --> 00:27:54,734 They were of the upper crust. 448 00:27:57,166 --> 00:28:02,867 I don't think most people can even imagine the access that Stockton had 449 00:28:02,867 --> 00:28:06,000 to the uber elites of the world. 450 00:28:08,100 --> 00:28:12,567 Stockton's father had been the president-elect of the Bohemian Club, 451 00:28:12,567 --> 00:28:18,367 which owns a multi-thousand-acre reserve 452 00:28:18,367 --> 00:28:20,867 of old growth redwood forest 453 00:28:20,867 --> 00:28:23,300 an hour outside of San Francisco 454 00:28:23,300 --> 00:28:26,467 that they use for their private campground. 455 00:28:28,567 --> 00:28:31,367 You have such an accumulation of wealth, 456 00:28:31,367 --> 00:28:35,200 and there's people that want something cool-sounding to invest in. 457 00:28:35,200 --> 00:28:36,667 [man] Yeah, no, I'll get there. 458 00:28:36,667 --> 00:28:38,300 [Stanley] Stockton pitched an idea 459 00:28:38,300 --> 00:28:40,266 at the right place and the right time. 460 00:28:40,266 --> 00:28:43,200 [man] Apparently, Stockton's directing this too. 461 00:28:43,200 --> 00:28:45,266 [Stanley] People threw money at him, 462 00:28:45,266 --> 00:28:50,000 and he felt some kind of psychological need 463 00:28:50,000 --> 00:28:53,467 to accomplish something and impress these people. 464 00:28:53,467 --> 00:28:56,700 [interviewer] What does it mean to you to actually go to the Titanic? 465 00:28:56,700 --> 00:28:59,567 It's a culmination of over 11 years of work, 466 00:28:59,567 --> 00:29:02,367 and tons of time and blood, sweat and tears. 467 00:29:02,367 --> 00:29:04,467 I'm going to be so excited when I get down there 468 00:29:04,467 --> 00:29:06,500 and I see that bow come into view. 469 00:29:06,500 --> 00:29:10,000 Stockton wasn't necessarily fascinated by the Titanic. 470 00:29:10,000 --> 00:29:12,367 He was trying to improve this technology 471 00:29:12,367 --> 00:29:14,367 and trying to take it to a different level 472 00:29:14,367 --> 00:29:16,300 using private funding. 473 00:29:16,300 --> 00:29:19,266 [interviewer] What have you done to make sure 474 00:29:19,266 --> 00:29:22,767 Titan can survive a trip to Titanic? 475 00:29:22,767 --> 00:29:25,800 It's been a long process to ensure that Titan 476 00:29:25,800 --> 00:29:29,200 can go to the Titanic repeatedly and safely. 477 00:29:29,200 --> 00:29:31,000 We've refined the process 478 00:29:31,000 --> 00:29:35,066 so that we have extremely uniform five-inch-thick carbon fiber. 479 00:29:35,066 --> 00:29:37,667 And with great wealth comes great responsibility. 480 00:29:37,667 --> 00:29:40,000 And unfortunately, it is not always the case 481 00:29:40,000 --> 00:29:43,166 that those who possess great wealth behave responsibly. 482 00:29:55,066 --> 00:29:58,266 The director of engineering at the time asked him, 483 00:29:58,266 --> 00:30:01,367 "While that's great you want to build with carbon fiber, 484 00:30:01,367 --> 00:30:03,600 but can we build one out of another material?" 485 00:30:04,700 --> 00:30:08,166 He pushed and pushed and pushed, and OceanGate said, 486 00:30:08,166 --> 00:30:09,200 "There is no debating this. 487 00:30:09,200 --> 00:30:10,667 "It's gonna be carbon fiber." 488 00:30:18,100 --> 00:30:20,667 There are certifying agencies. 489 00:30:20,667 --> 00:30:23,266 the Pressure Vessel for Human Occupation committee, 490 00:30:23,266 --> 00:30:26,266 the SUBSAFE program in the Navy. 491 00:30:26,266 --> 00:30:28,467 These programs are over the top 492 00:30:28,467 --> 00:30:30,100 in their rules and regulations, 493 00:30:30,100 --> 00:30:32,200 but they had nothing with carbon fiber. 494 00:30:32,200 --> 00:30:34,867 So we had to go out and work on that. 495 00:30:34,867 --> 00:30:36,300 And one of the things I learned is, 496 00:30:36,300 --> 00:30:37,767 you know, when you're outside the box, 497 00:30:37,767 --> 00:30:41,200 it's really hard to tell how far outside the box you really are. 498 00:30:41,200 --> 00:30:42,800 And we were pretty far out there. 499 00:30:42,800 --> 00:30:45,567 [applause] 500 00:30:45,567 --> 00:30:48,867 He had stated all of the advantage of carbon fiber, 501 00:30:48,867 --> 00:30:51,467 but never stated any of the disadvantages of carbon fiber. 502 00:30:52,567 --> 00:30:56,266 He felt that operations overruled safety 503 00:30:56,266 --> 00:30:57,467 and saw classifications 504 00:30:57,467 --> 00:30:59,400 as being a waste of money and a waste of time. 505 00:31:00,567 --> 00:31:02,066 They wanted to be innovative. 506 00:31:08,800 --> 00:31:11,967 [Capt. Neubauer] There's a few anomalies that I've never seen before 507 00:31:11,967 --> 00:31:13,967 in thousands of investigations 508 00:31:13,967 --> 00:31:16,767 and thousands of incidents that I've overseen. 509 00:31:16,767 --> 00:31:20,567 One of them was just not registering the Titan. 510 00:31:20,567 --> 00:31:22,667 So we weren't tracking it. 511 00:31:22,667 --> 00:31:27,166 We call it "stateless," when a vessel doesn't have a flag or a registration. 512 00:31:27,166 --> 00:31:29,066 [interviewer] Why would they not register it? 513 00:31:29,066 --> 00:31:33,000 One reason to not register is to make sure that no one, 514 00:31:33,000 --> 00:31:35,467 from a regulatory standpoint, is monitoring your operations. 515 00:31:35,467 --> 00:31:39,667 To operate in a manner that you stay off the radar. 516 00:31:39,667 --> 00:31:43,000 Ultimately had jurisdiction because it was US-built, US-operated 517 00:31:43,000 --> 00:31:44,667 and not flagged by anybody else. 518 00:31:54,300 --> 00:31:55,900 -Hey! -How are you, man? 519 00:31:55,900 --> 00:31:57,266 -Glad to meet you. -Nice to meet you in person. 520 00:31:57,266 --> 00:31:58,200 -How are you? -Great! 521 00:31:58,200 --> 00:32:00,100 -Welcome to Everett. -Thrilled to be here. 522 00:32:00,100 --> 00:32:03,166 -This is not Titan, I'm guessing. -No, this is Suds. 523 00:32:03,166 --> 00:32:05,100 -S-U-D-S? -S-U-D-S. 524 00:32:05,100 --> 00:32:06,166 What is Suds? 525 00:32:06,166 --> 00:32:10,667 Suds is a a sub that I built, partly finished, 526 00:32:10,667 --> 00:32:13,066 and dove it the first time in 2006. 527 00:32:13,066 --> 00:32:16,000 As the host of Expedition Unknown on Discovery, 528 00:32:16,000 --> 00:32:17,600 my job is to go around the world 529 00:32:17,600 --> 00:32:19,467 investigating great mysteries 530 00:32:19,467 --> 00:32:22,066 and to tell stories of exploration. 531 00:32:22,066 --> 00:32:25,266 We had read about OceanGate. They had been in the news. 532 00:32:25,266 --> 00:32:29,600 Here was this innovator that was going to come and break design barriers 533 00:32:29,600 --> 00:32:32,567 and to create a next-generation submersible 534 00:32:32,567 --> 00:32:36,166 that could take passengers down to see Titanic. 535 00:32:36,166 --> 00:32:39,467 And we thought this would be a great story for Expedition Unknown. 536 00:32:39,467 --> 00:32:40,567 Okay. 537 00:32:45,667 --> 00:32:48,567 Oh, dear. What am I looking at? 538 00:32:48,567 --> 00:32:52,567 -[Rush] These are the results of some of our pressure tests. -[Gates] Okay. 539 00:32:52,567 --> 00:32:54,667 -High pressure tests? -High pressure tests. 540 00:32:54,667 --> 00:32:57,767 This is a third-scale model of the Titan hull. 541 00:32:57,767 --> 00:32:59,500 You have the cylindrical section 542 00:32:59,500 --> 00:33:03,500 and you have the domes that we originally thought 543 00:33:03,500 --> 00:33:05,300 we could make out of carbon fiber. 544 00:33:05,300 --> 00:33:08,767 -So this would have been a sub you don't want to be in. -This is true. 545 00:33:08,767 --> 00:33:11,567 But I assume, also, a valuable lesson, this test. 546 00:33:11,567 --> 00:33:14,000 Yes. One element we were looking at is 547 00:33:14,000 --> 00:33:16,667 could we predict the failure of carbon fiber? 548 00:33:16,667 --> 00:33:20,266 So a carbon fiber sub may work great for one dive or ten dives or a hundred, 549 00:33:20,266 --> 00:33:23,967 but will it get soft like the deck of your fiberglass boat 550 00:33:23,967 --> 00:33:25,567 after somebody's been stepping on it too much? 551 00:33:25,567 --> 00:33:27,800 -Right. -And how do you know that before somebody gets hurt? 552 00:33:27,800 --> 00:33:30,967 And there's been a bunch of work on acoustic emissions. 553 00:33:30,967 --> 00:33:32,967 So basically we're listening to the sound of the carbon. 554 00:33:32,967 --> 00:33:34,800 They start popping and crackling, 555 00:33:34,800 --> 00:33:36,567 these micro-buckling pieces. 556 00:33:36,567 --> 00:33:38,867 You know, little air bubbles go and fibers snap. 557 00:33:38,867 --> 00:33:41,567 And we found that you can tell quite clearly 558 00:33:41,567 --> 00:33:44,467 way before the carbon fails that it's going to fail. 559 00:33:44,467 --> 00:33:45,600 -Hmm. -And that would allow-- 560 00:33:45,600 --> 00:33:46,767 -You can hear it? -Yes. 561 00:33:46,767 --> 00:33:49,000 So If you get to 2,000 meters 562 00:33:49,000 --> 00:33:52,166 and it's making more noise than the last time you went to 2,000 meters, 563 00:33:52,166 --> 00:33:54,200 you can stop and go to the surface, say, "We've got a problem." 564 00:33:54,200 --> 00:33:56,266 -Right. -Our first hull didn't work out, 565 00:33:56,266 --> 00:33:57,867 so we made a full-scale hull. 566 00:33:57,867 --> 00:34:01,667 We tested it to 4,000 meters, and it didn't get quieter. 567 00:34:01,667 --> 00:34:03,767 It stayed noisy. That was not a good sign. 568 00:34:03,767 --> 00:34:05,500 So we took it to a chamber and tested it and said, 569 00:34:05,500 --> 00:34:07,200 "This hull is not good enough." 570 00:34:07,200 --> 00:34:09,667 So we scrapped that one and we made a new one and tested that, 571 00:34:09,667 --> 00:34:10,667 and it was perfect. 572 00:34:10,667 --> 00:34:13,300 Okay, so in the end, have you cracked the code? 573 00:34:13,300 --> 00:34:15,367 I think we've cracked the code. 574 00:34:18,867 --> 00:34:20,367 -Okay. You ready? -Yeah. 575 00:34:20,367 --> 00:34:22,467 -Brian, whenever you're ready. -[man yells] 576 00:34:22,467 --> 00:34:24,266 -Go ahead. Lead the way. -Okay. 577 00:34:24,266 --> 00:34:27,266 We went up in May 2021 578 00:34:27,266 --> 00:34:29,266 to meet Stockton and his team in person. 579 00:34:29,266 --> 00:34:32,100 -So, Josh, this is Titan. -Wow. 580 00:34:32,100 --> 00:34:33,700 [Gates] Stockton was going to give myself 581 00:34:33,700 --> 00:34:37,266 and my director of photography, Brian, a trip in the sub 582 00:34:37,266 --> 00:34:39,467 to understand what it's like to be in Titan 583 00:34:39,467 --> 00:34:42,800 and to talk about where we might mount cameras and film it 584 00:34:42,800 --> 00:34:44,667 when we went out into the North Atlantic. 585 00:34:44,667 --> 00:34:47,467 -[Rush] Come onboard. -[Gates] Hi, everybody. How are you? 586 00:34:47,467 --> 00:34:50,066 [Gates] Stockton was a really compelling salesman, 587 00:34:50,066 --> 00:34:52,500 and that's a good way to describe him, I think. 588 00:34:52,500 --> 00:34:55,367 So, this is the largest view port 589 00:34:55,367 --> 00:34:59,000 on any deep diving sub in planet Earth. 590 00:34:59,900 --> 00:35:02,567 Wow, that is extraordinary. 591 00:35:02,567 --> 00:35:05,667 Stockton's answers were reassuring, I suppose, 592 00:35:05,667 --> 00:35:07,166 but they also felt rehearsed. 593 00:35:07,166 --> 00:35:11,867 They felt like they were the smooth answers that you were bound to get 594 00:35:11,867 --> 00:35:14,567 as you cruised the showroom floor for a new car. 595 00:35:14,567 --> 00:35:17,367 Carbon fiber will be one-third the weight 596 00:35:17,367 --> 00:35:19,867 -of a similar titanium structure. -[Gates] Right. 597 00:35:19,867 --> 00:35:22,867 If you look at other deep diving subs, they tend to be spheres 598 00:35:22,867 --> 00:35:25,066 because the shape is the ideal shape for pressure. 599 00:35:25,066 --> 00:35:27,867 -Right. -A cylinder is a better shape for actually doing something. 600 00:35:27,867 --> 00:35:31,066 This was an experimental vehicle. 601 00:35:31,066 --> 00:35:33,066 It had never been to Titanic at this point. 602 00:35:33,066 --> 00:35:34,066 [Rush] Hang on here. 603 00:35:34,066 --> 00:35:36,667 [Gates] We all rely on that Spidey sense. 604 00:35:36,667 --> 00:35:38,667 We all have that little voice that whispers to us. 605 00:35:38,667 --> 00:35:41,867 In my job, I've learned I have to really listen to that voice. 606 00:35:41,867 --> 00:35:44,567 Because, you know, I dangle off a cliff for a living 607 00:35:44,567 --> 00:35:46,000 and dive into flooded tombs. 608 00:35:46,000 --> 00:35:47,567 I mean, that's my day-to-day job. 609 00:35:47,567 --> 00:35:49,900 -[Rush] Come on, get your shoes off. -[Gates] All right. 610 00:35:49,900 --> 00:35:53,166 [Gates] And that voice started whispering to me early on. 611 00:35:53,166 --> 00:35:55,266 -[Rush] Shoes off and you're in. -All right. 612 00:35:56,200 --> 00:35:57,467 See you later. 613 00:35:57,467 --> 00:36:00,967 The way that Titan was designed, it had no top hatch. 614 00:36:00,967 --> 00:36:03,300 You can't interrupt that hull with a hatch. 615 00:36:03,300 --> 00:36:06,567 The only way to get in or out of Titan was through the front. 616 00:36:07,400 --> 00:36:09,567 -Thank you, sir. -[Rush] Copy that. 617 00:36:11,100 --> 00:36:13,567 [Gates] And so, when you climbed inside of it 618 00:36:14,667 --> 00:36:16,166 and they close that door, 619 00:36:16,166 --> 00:36:18,100 they seal you in from the outside. 620 00:36:18,100 --> 00:36:20,367 Okay, the door is closed. Now what's happening to it? 621 00:36:20,367 --> 00:36:21,500 [Rush] They're bolting it in. 622 00:36:21,500 --> 00:36:22,667 [Gates] Literally bolting it in. 623 00:36:22,667 --> 00:36:23,767 How many bolts go around it? 624 00:36:23,767 --> 00:36:25,400 -Four bolts. -Four bolts. 625 00:36:25,400 --> 00:36:28,667 -So... So we're in. -You're in. 626 00:36:28,667 --> 00:36:31,600 [Gates] I mean, the only way out of this is if someone lets you out. 627 00:36:31,600 --> 00:36:33,300 -[Rush] Yes. -[Gates] We're sealed up. 628 00:36:33,300 --> 00:36:35,967 You are a prisoner. My prisoner. 629 00:36:35,967 --> 00:36:38,166 [chuckles] I'm happy to be here. Happy to be serving. 630 00:36:39,367 --> 00:36:42,367 Stockton just didn't see, even psychologically, 631 00:36:42,367 --> 00:36:45,300 the need for a way out of this sub. 632 00:36:46,000 --> 00:36:47,367 And so my question was, 633 00:36:47,367 --> 00:36:50,700 in your tests, how long does it take 634 00:36:50,700 --> 00:36:53,867 for Titan to mate with its sled 635 00:36:53,867 --> 00:36:55,600 and rise to the surface 636 00:36:55,600 --> 00:36:59,200 and for the bolts to be undone and passengers to get out? 637 00:36:59,200 --> 00:37:00,700 How long does that take? 638 00:37:00,700 --> 00:37:02,767 And Stockton said, "I have no idea." 639 00:37:03,800 --> 00:37:06,266 The only things you really want to worry about: fire. 640 00:37:06,266 --> 00:37:07,867 -There are smoke hoods. -[Gates] Those are where? 641 00:37:07,867 --> 00:37:10,166 On the side here. Pull back the mat a little bit. 642 00:37:10,166 --> 00:37:11,266 [Gates] Okay, under here? 643 00:37:11,266 --> 00:37:13,066 [Rush] Yup. Open that compartment. 644 00:37:13,066 --> 00:37:14,967 -There's a smoke hood there. -[Gates] Yup. 645 00:37:14,967 --> 00:37:19,000 [Rush] You open that up and there is a packet which you pull open 646 00:37:19,000 --> 00:37:22,867 and you have a hood that you put on top of your head, and that will keep you alive. 647 00:37:22,867 --> 00:37:24,000 Got it. 648 00:37:24,000 --> 00:37:27,600 He had never done any emergency docking procedures. 649 00:37:27,600 --> 00:37:29,767 In fact, we were there in May. 650 00:37:29,767 --> 00:37:32,667 They were bringing passengers a few months later 651 00:37:32,667 --> 00:37:34,066 for the first time to the North Atlantic. 652 00:37:34,066 --> 00:37:36,900 This is Titan, Topside. Topside, Titan. 653 00:37:36,900 --> 00:37:38,367 [indistinct response] 654 00:37:38,367 --> 00:37:39,467 [man] There he goes. 655 00:37:39,467 --> 00:37:41,867 [Brian] It's gonna take it pretty steep. 656 00:37:41,867 --> 00:37:43,567 This is where it gets interesting. 657 00:37:47,000 --> 00:37:48,100 [man 2] Yeah? 658 00:37:50,266 --> 00:37:52,467 We're settling down. We are underwater. 659 00:37:52,467 --> 00:37:54,300 And we'll turn on our TBL. 660 00:37:54,300 --> 00:37:57,567 [Gates] We were in the sub for hours with Stockton. 661 00:37:57,567 --> 00:38:01,166 And the dive was interesting 662 00:38:01,166 --> 00:38:03,467 in that nothing really worked right. 663 00:38:04,667 --> 00:38:05,900 Nothing. 664 00:38:05,900 --> 00:38:08,467 [Rush] I'm having trouble with our port horizontal thruster. 665 00:38:08,467 --> 00:38:10,000 [Gates] Okay. 666 00:38:10,000 --> 00:38:12,300 I don't know why, because it's starboard's that we changed. 667 00:38:15,500 --> 00:38:16,967 Okay, show him that. 668 00:38:25,300 --> 00:38:27,900 [Gates] "Aft is unlocked. No UBT light." 669 00:38:29,400 --> 00:38:31,400 -Got that? -Aft is unlocked? 670 00:38:31,400 --> 00:38:34,400 "Aft is unlocked. No UBT light." 671 00:38:34,400 --> 00:38:37,700 The sub didn't really do anything it was asked to do. 672 00:38:37,700 --> 00:38:39,567 You know, we took it underwater, 673 00:38:39,567 --> 00:38:44,700 and then there was just a cascade of problems with the sub. 674 00:38:44,700 --> 00:38:46,900 Now this guy will be down at Titanic too, right? 675 00:38:46,900 --> 00:38:48,400 [Rush] Yeah. Yup. 676 00:38:52,166 --> 00:38:55,467 They have an emergency override on the VBT 677 00:38:55,467 --> 00:38:56,967 in case we have a software problem. 678 00:38:56,967 --> 00:38:59,200 Then there was an issue with the software. 679 00:38:59,200 --> 00:39:01,767 The system crashed at one point. 680 00:39:01,767 --> 00:39:03,400 Hello. Do you copy? 681 00:39:07,700 --> 00:39:08,867 Topside, Titan. 682 00:39:10,667 --> 00:39:12,367 Motor doesn't even seem to be moving. 683 00:39:12,367 --> 00:39:15,767 But the control program says it's moving. No current. 684 00:39:15,767 --> 00:39:18,700 Give him an okay, and then just say we're going to thrust. 685 00:39:18,700 --> 00:39:19,967 Testing thrust again. 686 00:39:19,967 --> 00:39:22,266 Yeah, we don't like when the thrusters go out. We may just go 687 00:39:22,266 --> 00:39:23,367 back in the platform 688 00:39:23,367 --> 00:39:24,467 rather than go to the bottom. 689 00:39:24,467 --> 00:39:25,767 -[Josh] Okay. -We're pretty much here. 690 00:39:27,467 --> 00:39:28,400 Hey, Topside. 691 00:39:30,266 --> 00:39:31,467 Topside Titan. 692 00:39:31,467 --> 00:39:33,200 [Josh] At one point, three of the thrusters 693 00:39:33,200 --> 00:39:34,867 weren't working, you know? 694 00:39:34,867 --> 00:39:35,767 I mean, it was... 695 00:39:37,166 --> 00:39:38,266 non-functional, 696 00:39:38,867 --> 00:39:40,000 is a good way to put it. 697 00:39:40,767 --> 00:39:43,567 And so, eventually, it was decided 698 00:39:43,567 --> 00:39:45,600 that we had to scrub the dive 699 00:39:45,600 --> 00:39:47,266 and bring it back to the surface. 700 00:39:48,500 --> 00:39:49,867 [Stockton] Okay, we're up. 701 00:39:49,867 --> 00:39:52,100 [woman speaking indistinctly over radio] 702 00:39:52,700 --> 00:39:53,900 Yep, everything's good. 703 00:39:53,900 --> 00:39:55,367 Tell us back whenever you're ready. 704 00:39:59,066 --> 00:40:00,367 We're gonna get some good footage. 705 00:40:00,367 --> 00:40:01,200 Big time. 706 00:40:01,200 --> 00:40:03,333 And this will make a different story. 707 00:40:05,767 --> 00:40:07,767 [Josh] Stockton seemed completely unaware 708 00:40:07,767 --> 00:40:11,000 of how bad this dive had gone from our perspective. 709 00:40:11,000 --> 00:40:12,700 And so on the way back to port, 710 00:40:12,700 --> 00:40:15,166 I asked him about his experiences 711 00:40:15,166 --> 00:40:17,000 in deeper dives on the sub. 712 00:40:17,800 --> 00:40:20,166 How noisy is it when it goes down, 713 00:40:20,166 --> 00:40:21,667 -you think? -[Stockton] What? 714 00:40:21,667 --> 00:40:23,166 [Josh] Just the general descent, 715 00:40:23,166 --> 00:40:24,200 -is it pretty quiet? -Oh, it'll be quiet. 716 00:40:24,200 --> 00:40:27,367 There's usually a bang, um, somewhere... 717 00:40:27,367 --> 00:40:29,266 -Most subs have a bang of some type. -Mm-hmm. 718 00:40:29,266 --> 00:40:30,767 [Stockton] When I was in the sub before, 719 00:40:30,767 --> 00:40:31,667 and it was, you know, 720 00:40:31,667 --> 00:40:32,867 I'll play you what it sounded like 721 00:40:32,867 --> 00:40:34,867 when the carbon fiber's collapsing around you 722 00:40:34,867 --> 00:40:37,066 and you don't have much time left. 723 00:40:37,066 --> 00:40:38,166 This is what it sounds like. 724 00:40:38,166 --> 00:40:39,467 [Josh] And what, you just were ascending, ascending, 725 00:40:39,467 --> 00:40:40,567 ascending at that point? 726 00:40:40,567 --> 00:40:42,467 [Stockton] No, no, I was going down. I kept going down, 727 00:40:42,467 --> 00:40:44,500 because [chuckling] why not? 728 00:40:44,500 --> 00:40:46,667 -[Josh] That was in the first iteration. -Yeah. 729 00:40:47,400 --> 00:40:49,367 Once I saw that that was 730 00:40:49,367 --> 00:40:51,066 where he was willing to go 731 00:40:51,066 --> 00:40:52,467 to get this operation 732 00:40:53,166 --> 00:40:54,066 up and running, 733 00:40:54,900 --> 00:40:56,667 a kind of fear set in for me 734 00:40:56,667 --> 00:40:58,000 that was so much deeper 735 00:40:58,000 --> 00:41:00,567 than anything I experienced while riding in the sub. 736 00:41:02,166 --> 00:41:03,967 [Stockton] I don't know if it'll play on the speaker, but... 737 00:41:04,467 --> 00:41:06,667 [faint clicking] 738 00:41:06,667 --> 00:41:07,967 [Stockton] Those click sounds... 739 00:41:07,967 --> 00:41:09,467 [clicking continues] 740 00:41:09,467 --> 00:41:11,000 [Stockton]...that wasn't a mouse clicking. 741 00:41:12,567 --> 00:41:13,667 And you could feel it. 742 00:41:13,667 --> 00:41:15,900 I was in the dome. I could feel these things popping. 743 00:41:15,900 --> 00:41:17,000 [Josh] Uh-huh. 744 00:41:17,000 --> 00:41:19,767 [Stockton] It was... sort of different. 745 00:41:19,767 --> 00:41:21,367 Second dive, I put earplugs in... 746 00:41:21,367 --> 00:41:22,767 -[Josh] Right. -[Stockton]...and it worked much better. 747 00:41:22,767 --> 00:41:24,000 [Josh laughing] You just ignored it. 748 00:41:24,000 --> 00:41:25,367 -Right. -Yeah, yeah. 749 00:41:25,367 --> 00:41:27,367 It wasn't just a red flag for me, 750 00:41:27,367 --> 00:41:29,467 it was like a flare had gone up. 751 00:41:29,467 --> 00:41:32,000 And here we were in 2021, 752 00:41:32,000 --> 00:41:33,467 and I was thinking, 753 00:41:33,467 --> 00:41:37,100 "When did they go back and test this new sub 754 00:41:37,100 --> 00:41:38,266 in the Bahamas?" 755 00:41:38,266 --> 00:41:40,667 And I couldn't quite make the dates line up in my head. 756 00:41:40,667 --> 00:41:43,500 And so I pressed Stockton and said, "Wait a minute, 757 00:41:43,500 --> 00:41:45,100 when did you take Titan, 758 00:41:45,100 --> 00:41:47,367 this Titan, to the Bahamas?" 759 00:41:49,000 --> 00:41:50,100 Hello. 760 00:41:51,000 --> 00:41:52,867 Oh. We're back. 761 00:41:54,967 --> 00:41:57,800 We've had 52 dives in the sub to date. 762 00:41:57,800 --> 00:41:59,300 -[Josh] Test dives? -Test dives. 763 00:41:59,300 --> 00:42:01,567 [Josh] Are those dives all here around Everett? 764 00:42:01,567 --> 00:42:02,867 No, so 52... 765 00:42:02,867 --> 00:42:04,867 We've had 52 dives on the hull. 766 00:42:04,867 --> 00:42:06,867 Um, a lot of them at Everett, 767 00:42:06,867 --> 00:42:08,867 -and many of them in the Bahamas. -Okay. 768 00:42:08,867 --> 00:42:10,266 We spent a year and a half in the Bahamas 769 00:42:10,266 --> 00:42:11,433 testing the sub. 770 00:42:12,800 --> 00:42:16,300 [Josh] But this version of Titan had never even been 771 00:42:16,300 --> 00:42:17,300 to the Bahamas. 772 00:42:17,300 --> 00:42:20,266 The first hull had been on 49 dives, 773 00:42:20,266 --> 00:42:22,567 but this hull, this new hull, 774 00:42:22,567 --> 00:42:25,200 was only on its third dive ever, 775 00:42:25,200 --> 00:42:27,367 and it had never been down to depth. 776 00:42:28,667 --> 00:42:29,767 I suddenly realized, 777 00:42:29,767 --> 00:42:31,567 what would it mean if I made 778 00:42:31,567 --> 00:42:34,567 this kind of promotional documentary 779 00:42:34,567 --> 00:42:36,500 about Stockton and about OceanGate 780 00:42:36,500 --> 00:42:38,800 that maybe inspired other people to go 781 00:42:38,800 --> 00:42:40,467 and take a ride in this sub... 782 00:42:41,800 --> 00:42:44,266 and then something happened to it? 783 00:42:44,266 --> 00:42:46,100 And so I made the really difficult decision 784 00:42:46,100 --> 00:42:48,100 to call up the president of the network 785 00:42:48,100 --> 00:42:51,100 and to fall on my sword and say, "I'm really sorry. 786 00:42:51,100 --> 00:42:52,500 I know that money's been spent here. 787 00:42:52,500 --> 00:42:53,667 I know that this is something 788 00:42:53,667 --> 00:42:55,967 that was a big deal for you to sign off on, 789 00:42:55,967 --> 00:42:57,367 and I appreciate the opportunity, 790 00:42:57,367 --> 00:42:59,066 but we shouldn't do this. 791 00:42:59,467 --> 00:43:00,400 This is a mistake. 792 00:43:00,400 --> 00:43:01,800 Something bad is going to happen here." 793 00:43:13,200 --> 00:43:16,400 [narrator reading] 794 00:43:20,166 --> 00:43:22,800 OceanGate Expeditions offers you 795 00:43:22,800 --> 00:43:24,867 the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity 796 00:43:24,867 --> 00:43:27,266 to be a specially trained crew member 797 00:43:27,266 --> 00:43:30,300 safely diving to the Titanic wreckage site. 798 00:43:31,667 --> 00:43:34,467 This is not a thrill ride for tourists. 799 00:43:34,467 --> 00:43:35,800 It's much more. 800 00:43:44,266 --> 00:43:45,266 [Josh] There's something eternal 801 00:43:45,266 --> 00:43:47,667 about Titanic and her passengers. 802 00:43:49,000 --> 00:43:50,166 We know the ship is wrecked. 803 00:43:51,367 --> 00:43:53,100 We know about the lives lost. 804 00:43:53,100 --> 00:43:55,567 We know that it's down in the depths of the ocean, 805 00:43:55,567 --> 00:43:57,367 but it's still kind of out there. 806 00:43:59,100 --> 00:44:01,100 It's the ship of dreams. It captures all of us. 807 00:44:01,100 --> 00:44:03,667 We all went to that movie. 808 00:44:03,667 --> 00:44:05,500 There's something about the story of Titanic 809 00:44:05,500 --> 00:44:07,900 that really reaches out to us. 810 00:44:10,367 --> 00:44:12,900 The Titanic, to me, was the embodiment. 811 00:44:12,900 --> 00:44:16,867 It was the crowning moment of the Gilded Age. 812 00:44:19,266 --> 00:44:22,500 We thought that we were leaving the past behind, 813 00:44:22,500 --> 00:44:24,467 that we had created an unsinkable ship 814 00:44:24,467 --> 00:44:26,467 of incredible speed and opulence, 815 00:44:26,467 --> 00:44:28,166 and it sank on its maiden voyage 816 00:44:28,166 --> 00:44:31,367 and took most of the celebrities of the age with it. 817 00:44:31,367 --> 00:44:34,100 You know, you can't even imagine what that was like. 818 00:44:38,266 --> 00:44:41,300 [Stockton] The Titanic is one of the most amazing brands 819 00:44:41,300 --> 00:44:42,500 in the world. 820 00:44:42,500 --> 00:44:45,567 People are so enthralled with Titanic 821 00:44:45,567 --> 00:44:48,967 that it became a must-do dive. 822 00:44:51,367 --> 00:44:54,500 [Josh] The idea that the very first time 823 00:44:54,500 --> 00:44:56,967 that Titan was going to visit this... 824 00:44:57,900 --> 00:45:00,066 really deadly wreck, 825 00:45:00,066 --> 00:45:01,767 passengers were gonna be aboard, 826 00:45:02,467 --> 00:45:03,567 was insane to me. 827 00:45:12,300 --> 00:45:14,166 [Stockton] 920 meters. 828 00:45:15,667 --> 00:45:17,900 [Alfred] Stockton did bring in people like myself 829 00:45:17,900 --> 00:45:21,166 to help fund his perfection of this technology, 830 00:45:21,166 --> 00:45:22,600 and that's what this was all about. 831 00:45:23,467 --> 00:45:25,000 [man 1] We kill the thrust, 832 00:45:25,000 --> 00:45:26,667 we are descending in a bit. 833 00:45:26,667 --> 00:45:27,867 [man 2] Yeah, we're going down. 834 00:45:29,367 --> 00:45:30,467 [Stockton] We make sure 835 00:45:30,467 --> 00:45:32,567 that everyone who joins an expedition understands 836 00:45:32,567 --> 00:45:34,066 this is an experimental sub. 837 00:45:34,066 --> 00:45:35,266 There are no rules 838 00:45:35,266 --> 00:45:37,300 for a carbon fiber and titanium sub. 839 00:45:38,166 --> 00:45:39,467 People are informed 840 00:45:39,467 --> 00:45:41,200 that it's very dangerous down there. 841 00:45:42,367 --> 00:45:44,266 We're constantly improving the sub 842 00:45:44,266 --> 00:45:45,567 to allow us to innovate. 843 00:45:45,567 --> 00:45:46,767 But we have to be very careful 844 00:45:46,767 --> 00:45:49,000 so that you don't, by trying to improve it, 845 00:45:49,000 --> 00:45:50,400 create a safety problem. 846 00:45:51,700 --> 00:45:54,266 [Alfred] I do have a higher tolerance for risk 847 00:45:54,266 --> 00:45:55,500 than the normal person, 848 00:45:55,500 --> 00:45:56,867 and so did Stockton. 849 00:45:56,867 --> 00:45:58,567 Maybe that's bravery, 850 00:45:58,567 --> 00:46:01,066 or maybe it's foolhardiness. I'm not sure. 851 00:46:08,867 --> 00:46:11,266 [Jason] I understand the draw to go down and see 852 00:46:11,266 --> 00:46:14,867 the underwater world of the Titanic firsthand. 853 00:46:14,867 --> 00:46:16,900 But how do you keep the person safe 854 00:46:16,900 --> 00:46:19,200 who doesn't understand submersible operations, 855 00:46:19,200 --> 00:46:21,867 who just knows they want to go see something unique? 856 00:46:21,867 --> 00:46:23,000 How do you prevent them 857 00:46:23,000 --> 00:46:25,900 from taking the ultimate risk like that? 858 00:46:25,900 --> 00:46:28,567 Especially because it was a commercial arrangement 859 00:46:28,567 --> 00:46:30,367 and they're paying passengers. 860 00:46:30,367 --> 00:46:32,767 That is something the Coast Guard has to look at. 861 00:46:45,500 --> 00:46:46,867 [female panel member 1] So to confirm, 862 00:46:46,867 --> 00:46:48,266 to become a mission specialist, 863 00:46:48,266 --> 00:46:50,567 did you pay Oceangate any money? 864 00:46:51,266 --> 00:46:52,567 I did. 865 00:46:53,100 --> 00:46:54,166 As a mission specialist, 866 00:46:54,166 --> 00:46:56,000 were you part of the submersible crew 867 00:46:56,000 --> 00:46:57,367 or were you a passenger? 868 00:47:01,800 --> 00:47:03,867 Well, both. I was a... 869 00:47:04,567 --> 00:47:05,867 I was a passenger 870 00:47:05,867 --> 00:47:08,467 who was given the latitude 871 00:47:08,467 --> 00:47:10,500 to participate in the mission. 872 00:47:21,300 --> 00:47:23,467 I didn't do any of the, 873 00:47:23,467 --> 00:47:25,967 what I would say, critical items, 874 00:47:25,967 --> 00:47:29,667 but certainly tighten bolts on the dome 875 00:47:29,667 --> 00:47:31,567 and other things that I would qualify 876 00:47:31,567 --> 00:47:33,100 as what we would say 877 00:47:33,100 --> 00:47:34,667 in a slang version, monkey work. 878 00:47:38,500 --> 00:47:41,867 [Jason] The term 'mission specialist' was created by Oceangate 879 00:47:41,867 --> 00:47:43,867 to give the perception 880 00:47:43,867 --> 00:47:46,367 you know, to others and including regulators 881 00:47:46,367 --> 00:47:50,000 that these were really crew members, 882 00:47:50,000 --> 00:47:52,266 when in fact they were paying passengers. 883 00:47:54,100 --> 00:47:56,266 You can do an operation safely, 884 00:47:56,266 --> 00:47:59,266 where you give passengers simple duties, 885 00:47:59,266 --> 00:48:03,100 but it has to be done with the proper oversight. 886 00:48:03,100 --> 00:48:05,600 And that's what was lacking in this case. 887 00:48:10,767 --> 00:48:14,266 Did you observe the incident as the dome fell off? 888 00:48:15,600 --> 00:48:17,200 Yes, I did. 889 00:48:17,200 --> 00:48:19,967 And did the dome slide down the ramp? 890 00:48:21,467 --> 00:48:23,500 A short distance, then it got stuck. 891 00:48:25,266 --> 00:48:27,200 I actually have a picture of it on my phone. 892 00:48:31,667 --> 00:48:34,767 When the titanium dome fell off, 893 00:48:35,900 --> 00:48:37,467 there were only four bolts in it 894 00:48:37,467 --> 00:48:38,400 and they just sheared 895 00:48:38,400 --> 00:48:40,000 and they exploded like bullets. 896 00:48:41,600 --> 00:48:44,166 Suddenly the people inside were looking out at the ocean 897 00:48:44,166 --> 00:48:44,967 down a ramp 898 00:48:44,967 --> 00:48:47,567 and obviously, a horrifying moment. 899 00:48:53,166 --> 00:48:54,767 The thought with the four bolts was 900 00:48:54,767 --> 00:48:56,500 simply that once you went to depth, 901 00:48:56,500 --> 00:48:58,700 I mean, you didn't need anything to hold it on. 902 00:48:58,700 --> 00:49:00,700 The pressure was so intense 903 00:49:00,700 --> 00:49:02,166 that you couldn't pry it off. 904 00:49:03,967 --> 00:49:05,467 Stockton wanted to appropriate 905 00:49:05,467 --> 00:49:09,000 any pictures or videos of the occurrence. 906 00:49:09,000 --> 00:49:10,767 So there was a dedicated effort 907 00:49:10,767 --> 00:49:12,000 to hush that up. 908 00:49:13,100 --> 00:49:15,300 [Jason] It was clear to me from Mr. Hagen's testimony 909 00:49:15,300 --> 00:49:17,567 that he had a very high risk tolerance, 910 00:49:17,567 --> 00:49:19,800 and that he felt like 911 00:49:19,800 --> 00:49:21,600 there was a possibility 912 00:49:21,600 --> 00:49:22,767 that the worst could occur. 913 00:49:24,467 --> 00:49:26,767 [Alfred] I was okay with accepting the risk. 914 00:49:28,066 --> 00:49:30,700 I insisted on going down on the next mission 915 00:49:30,700 --> 00:49:32,266 after the dome fell off 916 00:49:32,266 --> 00:49:34,200 because it was the first actual descent. 917 00:49:44,367 --> 00:49:46,967 [female panel member 2] And if you look under dive 62, 918 00:49:46,967 --> 00:49:49,100 there are several issues listed. 919 00:49:49,800 --> 00:49:52,100 Some are dive critical. 920 00:49:54,567 --> 00:49:55,967 [indistinct radio chatter] 921 00:49:55,967 --> 00:49:58,467 [female panel member 1] And that was the dive you were on, correct? 922 00:49:58,467 --> 00:49:59,867 Dive 62? 923 00:49:59,867 --> 00:50:01,266 -Yes. -Okay. 924 00:50:03,100 --> 00:50:05,000 It states "Incident, external hull, 925 00:50:05,000 --> 00:50:07,400 HPA valve set in the wrong position 926 00:50:07,400 --> 00:50:09,266 for the dive. 927 00:50:09,266 --> 00:50:12,500 Starboard control pod failed at 1700 meters 928 00:50:12,500 --> 00:50:14,266 after pop sound heard. 929 00:50:15,467 --> 00:50:18,467 Two drop weights jammed in the starboard channel. 930 00:50:18,467 --> 00:50:20,500 Number 1 and number 3 acoustic sensors 931 00:50:20,500 --> 00:50:22,367 have extreme and unusual events. 932 00:50:22,367 --> 00:50:24,000 Dome hinge retention plate bent. 933 00:50:24,000 --> 00:50:26,700 DVL intermittent. 934 00:50:26,700 --> 00:50:30,567 External lights flickering and tilt not functional. 935 00:50:30,567 --> 00:50:32,266 Port battery will not turn on 936 00:50:32,266 --> 00:50:35,567 and sub comes off the platform in a rough launch." 937 00:50:37,967 --> 00:50:39,800 Did any of that cause you any concern 938 00:50:39,800 --> 00:50:41,967 while you were inside the submersible at the time? 939 00:50:43,400 --> 00:50:44,967 Well, there wasn't anything I could do about it. 940 00:50:44,967 --> 00:50:47,000 I mean, we just had to get back to the surface. 941 00:50:47,000 --> 00:50:48,100 It was... 942 00:50:49,166 --> 00:50:50,767 I wasn't unduly con... 943 00:50:50,767 --> 00:50:52,567 I mean, there was a level of concern. 944 00:50:52,567 --> 00:50:54,166 I just figured we'd sort it out 945 00:50:54,166 --> 00:50:55,900 and return to the surface. 946 00:51:05,600 --> 00:51:07,767 [female panel member 1] Since you paid to go to the Titanic, 947 00:51:07,767 --> 00:51:09,066 did you get reimbursed 948 00:51:09,066 --> 00:51:10,767 since you didn't make it to the Titanic? 949 00:51:10,767 --> 00:51:11,767 No, I did not. 950 00:51:11,767 --> 00:51:12,667 I don't believe 951 00:51:12,667 --> 00:51:15,066 there was any provision to be reimbursed, 952 00:51:15,066 --> 00:51:17,567 but Stockton made it clear 953 00:51:17,567 --> 00:51:20,000 that if you did not get to the Titanic, 954 00:51:20,000 --> 00:51:23,100 you would get another opportunity. 955 00:51:23,100 --> 00:51:24,567 I went back the next year, 956 00:51:24,567 --> 00:51:26,600 so I had two expeditions basically 957 00:51:26,600 --> 00:51:27,667 for the price of one. 958 00:51:28,567 --> 00:51:29,900 Did I answer your question? 959 00:51:29,900 --> 00:51:31,166 You did. Thank you. 960 00:51:32,300 --> 00:51:33,767 Hi, my name is Stockton Rush. 961 00:51:33,767 --> 00:51:35,667 I'm the CEO and founder of Oceangate. 962 00:51:35,667 --> 00:51:36,967 Let's take a look at Titan. 963 00:51:38,266 --> 00:51:39,967 So we're coming into the sub. 964 00:51:39,967 --> 00:51:42,400 This is the only toilet available 965 00:51:42,400 --> 00:51:44,300 on a deep diving submersible. 966 00:51:44,300 --> 00:51:46,567 Best seat in the house. You can look out the viewport. 967 00:51:46,567 --> 00:51:49,467 We put a privacy screen in, turn up the music. 968 00:51:49,467 --> 00:51:51,467 It's very popular. 969 00:51:51,467 --> 00:51:53,667 We have our control screen here, 970 00:51:53,667 --> 00:51:54,967 our sonar screen here. 971 00:51:56,100 --> 00:51:58,867 This is the second year we've been out to the Titanic. 972 00:51:58,867 --> 00:52:01,100 We're a completely privately funded operation 973 00:52:01,100 --> 00:52:03,567 and we're funded by what we call mission specialists 974 00:52:03,567 --> 00:52:04,667 who help support the mission. 975 00:52:04,667 --> 00:52:07,400 So they take quite a bit of money to come and join us. 976 00:52:07,400 --> 00:52:09,467 We really are focusing on the Titanic, 977 00:52:09,467 --> 00:52:10,567 on the science around it. 978 00:52:10,567 --> 00:52:13,000 We want to document what the wreck is like now 979 00:52:13,000 --> 00:52:13,800 and also try to predict 980 00:52:13,800 --> 00:52:15,100 what it will be like in the future. 981 00:52:20,800 --> 00:52:22,767 [Antonella] All my background, other than Oceangate, 982 00:52:22,767 --> 00:52:24,200 has been in science work. 983 00:52:24,200 --> 00:52:26,166 I love that aspect of the job. 984 00:52:26,166 --> 00:52:28,066 There's a... 985 00:52:28,066 --> 00:52:30,967 you know, the exploration aspect of it is certainly fun. 986 00:52:32,467 --> 00:52:34,166 I'd been contracted to be an engineer 987 00:52:34,166 --> 00:52:35,367 in operations tech. 988 00:52:36,600 --> 00:52:39,166 There are very few women in this field. 989 00:52:39,166 --> 00:52:40,567 So you're already swimming in to it 990 00:52:40,567 --> 00:52:43,266 from a place of self-doubt, you know, 991 00:52:43,266 --> 00:52:45,767 having fought to be taken seriously. 992 00:52:47,700 --> 00:52:49,700 The moment I stepped onto the ship, 993 00:52:50,400 --> 00:52:51,300 I never forgot it. 994 00:52:51,300 --> 00:52:53,500 I had to sign the liability waiver. 995 00:52:53,500 --> 00:52:55,467 And Stockton was there, 996 00:52:55,467 --> 00:52:57,467 and to a room full of people, 997 00:52:57,467 --> 00:53:00,567 some of them who had paid him lots of money to be there, 998 00:53:00,567 --> 00:53:01,667 all I really knew was 999 00:53:01,667 --> 00:53:03,667 a quarter million dollar price tag. 1000 00:53:03,667 --> 00:53:05,500 He says, "The company's registered in the Bahamas, 1001 00:53:05,500 --> 00:53:07,100 and they don't do punitive damages, 1002 00:53:07,100 --> 00:53:08,767 so don't even bother suing me." 1003 00:53:08,767 --> 00:53:10,667 And he says this with a laugh. 1004 00:53:10,667 --> 00:53:11,867 And I was so shocked. I wrote it down. 1005 00:53:11,867 --> 00:53:13,000 That's a verbatim quote, 1006 00:53:13,000 --> 00:53:15,266 because I wrote it down right after this meeting, 1007 00:53:15,266 --> 00:53:16,367 'cause I was 1008 00:53:16,367 --> 00:53:17,600 just shocked. 1009 00:53:19,367 --> 00:53:20,567 I wasn't even aware 1010 00:53:20,567 --> 00:53:24,066 the extent of how ridiculous 1011 00:53:24,066 --> 00:53:25,867 and unsafe their operation was. 1012 00:53:30,500 --> 00:53:32,567 Even just the level of attention to detail 1013 00:53:32,567 --> 00:53:33,900 in inspecting the sub 1014 00:53:33,900 --> 00:53:35,767 or pre-diving the sub. 1015 00:53:35,767 --> 00:53:37,500 You know, I'd walk around right before a dive 1016 00:53:37,500 --> 00:53:39,567 and just find cables that were loose 1017 00:53:39,567 --> 00:53:40,600 or unplugged. 1018 00:53:42,066 --> 00:53:44,600 My experience comes from the ROV world. 1019 00:53:44,600 --> 00:53:46,967 Remotely Operated Underwater vehicles. 1020 00:53:46,967 --> 00:53:48,700 We wouldn't send an ROV down like that. 1021 00:53:49,667 --> 00:53:52,500 And they don't have people on an ROV. 1022 00:53:52,500 --> 00:53:54,100 [people cheering and talking indistinctly] 1023 00:53:55,166 --> 00:53:57,000 [Antonella] It felt like 1024 00:53:57,000 --> 00:54:00,867 watching some really bizarre, surrealist movie or something, 1025 00:54:00,867 --> 00:54:02,667 and I'm the only one going, 1026 00:54:02,667 --> 00:54:03,600 "This is insane, right? 1027 00:54:03,600 --> 00:54:05,166 Like, is anyone else seeing this?" 1028 00:54:05,166 --> 00:54:06,667 You know what I mean? Sort of like, 1029 00:54:06,667 --> 00:54:08,800 what's the old, like, story? The emperor has no clothes, right? 1030 00:54:08,800 --> 00:54:10,767 And only one person is saying, "Wait a second." 1031 00:54:16,300 --> 00:54:18,600 [Josh] How does this guy keep taking this sub down? 1032 00:54:20,867 --> 00:54:23,767 There's only so many answers to this question. 1033 00:54:23,767 --> 00:54:24,667 Uh, 1034 00:54:24,667 --> 00:54:25,500 delusion 1035 00:54:26,200 --> 00:54:27,667 or desperation. 1036 00:54:27,667 --> 00:54:31,200 Someone who is so deep into this 1037 00:54:31,200 --> 00:54:33,567 and has so many creditors at the door 1038 00:54:33,567 --> 00:54:36,467 and has their personal reputation on the line 1039 00:54:36,467 --> 00:54:38,767 that they have to move forward 1040 00:54:38,767 --> 00:54:40,467 and keep forging ahead. 1041 00:54:42,300 --> 00:54:45,266 And that's when you start selling something as a product 1042 00:54:45,767 --> 00:54:47,800 that isn't a product. 1043 00:54:47,800 --> 00:54:48,867 It's an experiment. 1044 00:55:09,066 --> 00:55:11,767 [Alfred] I'm constantly reminded of the Titan 1045 00:55:11,767 --> 00:55:13,900 and my descents to the Titanic. 1046 00:55:15,200 --> 00:55:18,066 Anytime I see a glorious tapestry 1047 00:55:18,066 --> 00:55:19,967 of a lightning sky, 1048 00:55:20,867 --> 00:55:22,867 you remember that glorious morning 1049 00:55:22,867 --> 00:55:23,800 without a cloud 1050 00:55:23,800 --> 00:55:26,200 and the first rays of sun 1051 00:55:26,200 --> 00:55:27,800 brightening the eastern horizon. 1052 00:55:28,767 --> 00:55:30,100 And you tend to think of that 1053 00:55:30,100 --> 00:55:32,467 because it was that kind of a day. 1054 00:55:33,500 --> 00:55:35,200 And it was such a memorable day, 1055 00:55:35,200 --> 00:55:36,967 and such a wonderful adventure. 1056 00:55:52,500 --> 00:55:54,066 All right, good morning, everyone. 1057 00:55:55,367 --> 00:55:56,767 Headed back to the Titanic. 1058 00:55:56,767 --> 00:55:59,700 Right now, we did vessel checks this morning. 1059 00:55:59,700 --> 00:56:02,767 Uh, a couple of very minor anomalies, 1060 00:56:02,767 --> 00:56:04,100 which is great. 1061 00:56:04,100 --> 00:56:05,367 [indistinct chatter] 1062 00:56:06,767 --> 00:56:08,266 [Antonella] It was putting on a show. 1063 00:56:09,567 --> 00:56:11,367 It's like, "Pay attention to this, 1064 00:56:11,367 --> 00:56:13,266 pay no attention to the man behind the curtain. 1065 00:56:13,266 --> 00:56:14,300 We're going to talk about 1066 00:56:14,300 --> 00:56:15,867 all these different little things." 1067 00:56:15,867 --> 00:56:17,166 No one actually notices, 1068 00:56:17,166 --> 00:56:18,166 "Wait a second. 1069 00:56:18,166 --> 00:56:20,300 Like, there's a bigger problem here." 1070 00:56:23,700 --> 00:56:27,667 [indistinct conversation] 1071 00:56:27,667 --> 00:56:29,300 [Alfred] It was one of those moments 1072 00:56:29,300 --> 00:56:31,567 where you embrace the possibilities, 1073 00:56:31,567 --> 00:56:32,700 you embrace the unknown. 1074 00:56:32,700 --> 00:56:36,166 -[man] There you go. -[ratcheting] 1075 00:56:36,166 --> 00:56:38,667 -[woman] All right, we're good. Ready? -[man 1] Yeah. 1076 00:56:38,667 --> 00:56:39,600 [man 2 over radio] Roger that. 1077 00:56:41,567 --> 00:56:42,967 [man speaking indistinctly over radio] 1078 00:56:47,266 --> 00:56:50,200 Platform tugger line will get you in place. 1079 00:56:50,200 --> 00:56:52,400 Titan is a go for a dive to the Titanic. 1080 00:56:53,000 --> 00:56:54,567 You find that in that moment 1081 00:56:54,567 --> 00:56:57,667 you're living a life trembling with joy. 1082 00:56:57,667 --> 00:57:01,266 At that moment, that's the essence of what I felt. 1083 00:57:11,900 --> 00:57:13,100 -[man 1] Unlocked. -[man 2] Unlocked. 1084 00:57:13,100 --> 00:57:14,266 [man 3] We're unlocked. 1085 00:57:25,467 --> 00:57:27,667 [Alfred] I remembered how passionate we were 1086 00:57:27,667 --> 00:57:28,867 in that moment, 1087 00:57:28,867 --> 00:57:32,166 how excited I was to see this iconic shipwreck 1088 00:57:32,166 --> 00:57:34,266 and to go deeper than I'd ever gone before, 1089 00:57:34,266 --> 00:57:35,400 I'd ever imagined. 1090 00:57:45,266 --> 00:57:47,100 [man 1] Oh, my God, that's it, yeah, yeah, yeah. 1091 00:57:47,100 --> 00:57:48,433 [man 2 speaks indistinctly] 1092 00:57:48,433 --> 00:57:51,000 -[man 1] Yeah. That's it, that's it. -[man 2 speaks indistinctly] 1093 00:57:51,000 --> 00:57:52,967 [man 1 chuckling] Oh, my God, we're pretty close here. 1094 00:57:53,700 --> 00:57:55,200 We're pretty close. 1095 00:57:56,867 --> 00:57:59,100 It's a devastating thing to look at, 1096 00:57:59,100 --> 00:58:00,967 but it's also awe-inspiring. 1097 00:58:03,400 --> 00:58:05,166 And inspirational in some ways, 1098 00:58:05,166 --> 00:58:07,467 and deeply sobering, 1099 00:58:07,467 --> 00:58:09,867 where all these people lost their lives, 1100 00:58:09,867 --> 00:58:11,767 but their remains are not there. 1101 00:58:11,767 --> 00:58:13,066 Their belongings are. 1102 00:58:13,066 --> 00:58:15,100 The detritus of their lives 1103 00:58:15,100 --> 00:58:17,367 and the detritus of the tragedy 1104 00:58:17,367 --> 00:58:20,667 are broken and ridden with bacteria 1105 00:58:20,667 --> 00:58:23,300 and scattered across the floor of the ocean for all to see. 1106 00:58:25,066 --> 00:58:26,367 -[man 3] Above here... -[man 4] Oh, yeah. 1107 00:58:26,367 --> 00:58:27,867 [man 3] That's the funnel number 1. 1108 00:58:32,600 --> 00:58:33,567 [man 4] And that's where they were 1109 00:58:33,567 --> 00:58:34,767 launching the lifeboats. 1110 00:58:34,767 --> 00:58:35,867 [man 3] Yeah. 1111 00:58:36,867 --> 00:58:38,567 [somber instrumental music playing] 1112 00:58:55,400 --> 00:58:57,066 Right now, we're doing three knots, 1113 00:58:57,066 --> 00:58:58,767 and we're trying to get back to the sub. 1114 00:59:00,900 --> 00:59:03,000 [Alfred] We were ascending in the Titan. 1115 00:59:03,000 --> 00:59:06,500 We were actually fairly close to the surface, as I remember, 1116 00:59:06,500 --> 00:59:08,100 and we heard a loud crack. 1117 00:59:13,266 --> 00:59:16,100 Which sounded like the ship breaking apart. 1118 00:59:16,767 --> 00:59:17,767 It was very loud, 1119 00:59:17,767 --> 00:59:18,700 it was very dramatic, 1120 00:59:18,700 --> 00:59:21,467 and everyone sat up, like, "What was that?" 1121 00:59:22,800 --> 00:59:24,266 Mmm, look at that blue. 1122 00:59:25,166 --> 00:59:26,867 [Alfred] I can see the surface almost. 1123 00:59:28,500 --> 00:59:29,967 [man 1] That's a pretty welcome sight. 1124 00:59:31,100 --> 00:59:33,567 [Alfred] It was certainly concerning, 1125 00:59:33,567 --> 00:59:35,967 because we didn't understand what it was. 1126 00:59:35,967 --> 00:59:37,600 I mean, we were close enough to the surface 1127 00:59:37,600 --> 00:59:39,100 where I knew we were going to come out 1128 00:59:39,100 --> 00:59:41,567 and that we were going to be okay. 1129 00:59:41,567 --> 00:59:44,367 FRC, we see them now out of our 9 o'clock, 1130 00:59:44,367 --> 00:59:46,367 about 450 meters out. 1131 00:59:47,000 --> 00:59:47,967 [Antonella] We spoke 1132 00:59:47,967 --> 00:59:49,500 to a member of the Horizon Arctic crew 1133 00:59:49,500 --> 00:59:51,467 about the bang that was heard, 1134 00:59:51,467 --> 00:59:53,166 'cause I was, you know, just concerned 1135 00:59:53,166 --> 00:59:55,867 and kind of shocked that this had happened. 1136 00:59:55,867 --> 00:59:58,100 And he told me that he heard this bang. 1137 00:59:58,100 --> 00:59:59,000 [dull thud] 1138 00:59:59,000 --> 01:00:00,467 [Antonella] He was out in the Zodiac 1139 01:00:00,467 --> 01:00:02,000 waiting as the sub came up, 1140 01:00:02,000 --> 01:00:04,367 and he was able to hear it from the surface. 1141 01:00:04,367 --> 01:00:05,300 Um. 1142 01:00:05,300 --> 01:00:06,600 It must have been loud. 1143 01:00:08,266 --> 01:00:09,800 I was just, like, shocked. 1144 01:00:09,800 --> 01:00:11,200 No one else really sort of reacted, 1145 01:00:11,200 --> 01:00:12,500 and then Stockton sort of shut it down 1146 01:00:12,500 --> 01:00:15,266 and, you know, just, "Oh, we'll talk about that later." 1147 01:00:17,600 --> 01:00:18,700 [Stockton] It's an open book here. 1148 01:00:18,700 --> 01:00:20,900 If you have any questions about what's going on, 1149 01:00:20,900 --> 01:00:23,400 about carbon fiber, problems we had, 1150 01:00:23,400 --> 01:00:26,000 rumors of problems we had, actual problems we had. 1151 01:00:26,000 --> 01:00:27,867 When we got to the surface, Scott was piloting, 1152 01:00:27,867 --> 01:00:29,700 he heard a really loud bang. 1153 01:00:29,700 --> 01:00:32,500 -Um, not a soothing sound. -[man] No. 1154 01:00:32,500 --> 01:00:33,667 Um, but on the surface, 1155 01:00:33,667 --> 01:00:37,467 and as Tym and P.H. will attest, 1156 01:00:37,467 --> 01:00:40,567 almost every deep diving sub makes a noise at some point. 1157 01:00:40,567 --> 01:00:42,266 You have dissimilar shapes 1158 01:00:42,266 --> 01:00:43,867 and metals that are 1159 01:00:43,867 --> 01:00:46,300 expanding due to thermal interaction, 1160 01:00:46,300 --> 01:00:48,100 due to pressure changes, 1161 01:00:48,100 --> 01:00:50,367 and it's quite common to have a noise. 1162 01:00:52,200 --> 01:00:53,667 [Antonella] My initial reaction was like, 1163 01:00:53,667 --> 01:00:55,400 "Hold on. You know, you don't..." 1164 01:00:56,800 --> 01:00:58,667 Even if you heard your car make that sort of noise, 1165 01:00:58,667 --> 01:00:59,867 you'd probably stop and go, 1166 01:00:59,867 --> 01:01:02,000 "Wait a second, we need to, like, see what happened here." 1167 01:01:06,300 --> 01:01:08,100 [Cmdr. Williams] When they heard this loud bang, 1168 01:01:08,100 --> 01:01:09,800 there should have been all stop, 1169 01:01:09,800 --> 01:01:12,200 do not continue, investigate further. 1170 01:01:13,500 --> 01:01:15,066 This picture here is 1171 01:01:15,066 --> 01:01:16,767 of the placements 1172 01:01:16,767 --> 01:01:19,000 of the acoustic emission sensors 1173 01:01:19,000 --> 01:01:19,867 on the Titan. 1174 01:01:22,166 --> 01:01:23,367 The purple you see here, 1175 01:01:23,367 --> 01:01:25,567 this is the acoustic emissions, 1176 01:01:25,567 --> 01:01:26,867 basically the energy 1177 01:01:26,867 --> 01:01:29,467 or acoustic data that was heard. 1178 01:01:29,467 --> 01:01:30,867 On Dive 80, 1179 01:01:30,867 --> 01:01:32,767 this purple line goes all the way to the top, 1180 01:01:32,767 --> 01:01:34,600 which means it was a loud bang. 1181 01:01:34,600 --> 01:01:37,166 There is this huge amplitude. 1182 01:01:38,667 --> 01:01:42,767 Delamination is essentially a parting of the carbon fiber. 1183 01:01:42,767 --> 01:01:45,066 And what we have come to the conclusion was 1184 01:01:45,066 --> 01:01:46,500 there was a delamination 1185 01:01:47,667 --> 01:01:48,767 on Dive 80 1186 01:01:49,500 --> 01:01:53,667 upon surfacing at 2:46 p.m. local time. 1187 01:01:58,266 --> 01:01:59,300 [Antonella] I did talk to Phil Brooks, 1188 01:01:59,300 --> 01:02:00,567 the director of engineering. 1189 01:02:00,567 --> 01:02:01,533 He had told me, 1190 01:02:01,533 --> 01:02:03,467 "It looks like there was movement in the hull, 1191 01:02:03,467 --> 01:02:04,567 but only a few microns." 1192 01:02:05,767 --> 01:02:07,867 But I did say to him... 1193 01:02:07,867 --> 01:02:09,667 I brought up the possibility of delamination. 1194 01:02:09,667 --> 01:02:11,400 And I asked him, "Are you going to keep diving the sub?" 1195 01:02:11,400 --> 01:02:12,967 And he said, "Yeah, we'll do the next mission, 1196 01:02:12,967 --> 01:02:14,300 and then we'll visually inspect it 1197 01:02:14,300 --> 01:02:16,266 when we get back to Seattle." 1198 01:02:17,166 --> 01:02:18,600 I was just shocked. 1199 01:02:18,600 --> 01:02:21,467 Like, you don't need to be a composites expert... 1200 01:02:23,367 --> 01:02:24,667 to see that and think, 1201 01:02:24,667 --> 01:02:27,000 "Okay, maybe we need to step back 1202 01:02:27,000 --> 01:02:28,266 and stop the operation 1203 01:02:28,266 --> 01:02:29,700 until we figure out 1204 01:02:29,700 --> 01:02:31,266 what this actually means." 1205 01:02:32,200 --> 01:02:35,200 But of course, as with anything with Oceangate, 1206 01:02:35,200 --> 01:02:36,967 the response was to just go, 1207 01:02:36,967 --> 01:02:37,800 "Oh, okay." 1208 01:02:37,800 --> 01:02:39,700 and then just keep going. 1209 01:02:39,700 --> 01:02:41,900 Stockton Rush touted this system as, 1210 01:02:41,900 --> 01:02:43,767 "It will let me know something is happening 1211 01:02:43,767 --> 01:02:46,166 before something bad happens." Right? 1212 01:02:46,667 --> 01:02:48,166 Their system did that. 1213 01:02:48,166 --> 01:02:49,166 Their system said 1214 01:02:49,166 --> 01:02:50,967 there has been a fundamental change 1215 01:02:50,967 --> 01:02:52,667 in the material of your carbon fiber, 1216 01:02:52,667 --> 01:02:54,900 and it was no longer structurally sound 1217 01:02:54,900 --> 01:02:58,166 like it had been prior to Dive 80. 1218 01:02:58,166 --> 01:03:02,266 Delamination at Dive 80 was the beginning of the end. 1219 01:03:02,266 --> 01:03:04,467 And everyone that stepped on board the Titan 1220 01:03:04,467 --> 01:03:05,500 after Dive 80 1221 01:03:05,500 --> 01:03:06,767 was risking their life. 1222 01:03:17,567 --> 01:03:20,266 [Antonella] I've gone back and forth a lot, like... 1223 01:03:20,266 --> 01:03:22,100 [sniffles]...whether I should have done more, you know, 1224 01:03:22,100 --> 01:03:24,500 whether there's some moral obligation to do more. 1225 01:03:28,066 --> 01:03:29,567 I felt like it was the right thing to do 1226 01:03:29,567 --> 01:03:31,300 to share what I knew 1227 01:03:31,300 --> 01:03:33,266 and tell that part of the story. 1228 01:03:34,200 --> 01:03:35,767 So many people are watching 1229 01:03:36,467 --> 01:03:37,800 and commenting. 1230 01:03:39,166 --> 01:03:44,166 We will now hear virtual testimony from Ms. Antonella Wilby, 1231 01:03:44,166 --> 01:03:46,000 former Oceangate contractor. 1232 01:03:46,700 --> 01:03:48,900 Ms. Wilby, can you hear us? 1233 01:03:48,900 --> 01:03:51,166 -I can. -Thank you for your time today, 1234 01:03:51,166 --> 01:03:52,667 Ms. Wilby. We appreciate it. 1235 01:03:54,100 --> 01:03:56,867 I was really impressed that Ms. Wilby contacted us 1236 01:03:56,867 --> 01:03:59,767 and said "Hey, I'm willing to go on the record" 1237 01:03:59,767 --> 01:04:02,867 in a very high profile setting 1238 01:04:02,867 --> 01:04:05,600 and gave us some really critical testimony. 1239 01:04:07,066 --> 01:04:08,100 So as I understand it, 1240 01:04:08,100 --> 01:04:09,300 you were present 1241 01:04:09,300 --> 01:04:13,567 during dive 80 on July 15th, 2022, 1242 01:04:13,567 --> 01:04:16,066 where a loud bang was heard upon surfacing. 1243 01:04:16,066 --> 01:04:17,100 Am I correct? 1244 01:04:17,867 --> 01:04:19,000 Yes. 1245 01:04:19,000 --> 01:04:21,567 Can you please tell me in detail 1246 01:04:21,567 --> 01:04:24,000 about what you know about that dive? 1247 01:04:24,000 --> 01:04:25,467 [Antonella] Um, 1248 01:04:25,467 --> 01:04:29,100 I wanted to say something before the next dive 1249 01:04:29,100 --> 01:04:30,900 because they were going to be diving the sub 1250 01:04:31,467 --> 01:04:32,600 a couple days later. 1251 01:04:33,400 --> 01:04:35,567 I went to Amber Bay, 1252 01:04:35,567 --> 01:04:38,266 the director of administration. 1253 01:04:38,266 --> 01:04:40,000 The culture is sort of, you know, 1254 01:04:40,000 --> 01:04:42,667 anyone who has a legitimate safety concern 1255 01:04:42,667 --> 01:04:44,300 should feel free to raise that concern 1256 01:04:44,300 --> 01:04:45,667 without fear of retribution. 1257 01:04:51,100 --> 01:04:53,266 I initially went to Amber Bay. 1258 01:04:55,100 --> 01:04:57,000 And I told her I was really concerned 1259 01:04:57,000 --> 01:04:59,300 that they were going to continue diving the sub. 1260 01:04:59,300 --> 01:05:00,900 Her initial response was, 1261 01:05:00,900 --> 01:05:03,467 "Yes, people are concerned about you too. 1262 01:05:03,467 --> 01:05:04,900 You don't have an explorer mindset." 1263 01:05:04,900 --> 01:05:07,300 And, like, that's not the mindset, you know. 1264 01:05:07,300 --> 01:05:08,600 Talking about explorer mindset, like, 1265 01:05:08,600 --> 01:05:11,100 this is not a mindset that you should have for doing anything. 1266 01:05:12,400 --> 01:05:14,367 [Stockton] It's a very participatory sub. 1267 01:05:14,367 --> 01:05:15,967 Often you'll be sitting there, and he'll back in. 1268 01:05:15,967 --> 01:05:17,600 And he'll say, "Everybody in the dome." 1269 01:05:17,600 --> 01:05:18,800 And so you all pile in the dome, 1270 01:05:18,800 --> 01:05:20,800 and that brings the nose down so he can slam it in there. 1271 01:05:20,800 --> 01:05:21,867 [Wilby] It was all about 1272 01:05:21,867 --> 01:05:24,500 I wasn't capable of working with them 1273 01:05:24,500 --> 01:05:27,000 because they were too innovative. 1274 01:05:27,000 --> 01:05:30,367 And not at all listening to, like, what I was trying to explain, 1275 01:05:30,367 --> 01:05:32,300 that, you know, there's a lot of evidence 1276 01:05:32,300 --> 01:05:34,400 that something has gone really wrong here. 1277 01:05:45,367 --> 01:05:48,066 [Stockton] All stations are reporting the launch as a go. 1278 01:05:48,066 --> 01:05:49,100 Please stand by. 1279 01:05:55,400 --> 01:05:56,600 It's two-and-a-half miles down, 1280 01:05:56,600 --> 01:05:58,000 and it's difficult. 1281 01:05:58,000 --> 01:06:00,300 That's why no one else does it. 1282 01:06:02,266 --> 01:06:04,367 [Williams] After dive 80, every single time 1283 01:06:04,367 --> 01:06:06,467 you would go down to depth, 1284 01:06:06,467 --> 01:06:08,567 you were further damaging that hull. 1285 01:06:08,567 --> 01:06:11,567 Eventually, something bad was going to happen. 1286 01:06:13,567 --> 01:06:16,767 [man] The bottom should be within a couple of meters. 1287 01:06:17,667 --> 01:06:20,500 -All right. -[people applauding] 1288 01:06:20,500 --> 01:06:22,467 [Stockton] Right now, they will cruise around the bow, 1289 01:06:22,467 --> 01:06:24,900 and they'll spend about two hours on that, and then they'll come up. 1290 01:06:24,900 --> 01:06:26,900 It'll take about two-and-a-half hours to get it to the surface. 1291 01:06:26,900 --> 01:06:28,266 [man on radio] Okay, all hands. 1292 01:06:28,266 --> 01:06:30,066 Sounds like we're go for the dive. 1293 01:06:30,066 --> 01:06:32,500 Next stop, Titanic. 1294 01:06:32,500 --> 01:06:35,467 [Gates] There is a real symmetry between Titan and Titanic. 1295 01:06:35,467 --> 01:06:37,100 That is wild. 1296 01:06:37,100 --> 01:06:38,367 [man] That is nice, yep. 1297 01:06:38,367 --> 01:06:42,500 Naming your submarine Titan is maybe a first clue 1298 01:06:42,500 --> 01:06:45,100 in some of the failings and some of the hubris 1299 01:06:45,100 --> 01:06:47,200 that ultimately led to what happened. 1300 01:06:48,000 --> 01:06:49,600 Titan reports on bottom. 1301 01:06:50,567 --> 01:06:53,567 -[all cheering] -None of it broke out. 1302 01:06:56,767 --> 01:06:58,967 [Stockton speaking] 1303 01:07:29,500 --> 01:07:32,867 [Stanley] There's no possible way that Stockton didn't know 1304 01:07:32,867 --> 01:07:34,567 how this was going to end, 1305 01:07:34,567 --> 01:07:36,266 and they just carried on anyway. 1306 01:07:37,967 --> 01:07:41,066 I think he painted himself in a corner. 1307 01:07:41,066 --> 01:07:42,467 He didn't have a good out. 1308 01:07:42,467 --> 01:07:46,266 And if he admits defeat and failure, 1309 01:07:46,266 --> 01:07:50,100 and then has to tell this to the people 1310 01:07:50,100 --> 01:07:52,000 that had given him so much money, 1311 01:07:53,166 --> 01:07:55,266 like, what's the rest of his life look like? 1312 01:07:57,000 --> 01:07:58,967 These guys, I-- I set up for the dome. 1313 01:07:58,967 --> 01:08:00,667 The hull itself, you're not going to hurt the hull. 1314 01:08:00,667 --> 01:08:02,667 From the standpoint of passenger safety, 1315 01:08:02,667 --> 01:08:04,266 you're going to be alive because the hull-- 1316 01:08:04,266 --> 01:08:05,467 Nothing is breaching the hull. 1317 01:08:05,467 --> 01:08:07,500 It's the safest spot on the entire planet. 1318 01:08:07,500 --> 01:08:11,200 He wasn't necessarily set on murder-suicide at that point, 1319 01:08:12,567 --> 01:08:15,667 but he had given up hope on the project 1320 01:08:15,667 --> 01:08:18,000 coming to fruition the way he had promised. 1321 01:08:21,200 --> 01:08:22,166 And then it was just a matter of 1322 01:08:22,166 --> 01:08:24,767 is it going to fail with me in it, 1323 01:08:24,767 --> 01:08:28,300 or with other people, or how-- 1324 01:08:28,300 --> 01:08:29,500 How is it going to fail? 1325 01:08:29,500 --> 01:08:33,567 But it was obvious that it was going to fail in some way. 1326 01:08:38,166 --> 01:08:39,467 [Wilby] I left after two weeks. 1327 01:08:39,467 --> 01:08:42,100 They offered to send me home, and I said yes. 1328 01:08:42,100 --> 01:08:42,900 You know, no one even looked at me. 1329 01:08:42,900 --> 01:08:44,300 Like, I just grabbed my duffel bag 1330 01:08:44,300 --> 01:08:45,567 and walked off the ship. 1331 01:08:45,567 --> 01:08:46,967 And, like, people were-- 1332 01:08:46,967 --> 01:08:48,600 Wouldn't make eye contact with me. 1333 01:08:50,166 --> 01:08:53,300 It's just added another feeling of just feeling bad. 1334 01:08:53,300 --> 01:08:55,166 Like you've somehow done something horribly wrong. 1335 01:08:55,166 --> 01:08:59,467 Like you're the evil, terrible person that people won't even like. 1336 01:08:59,467 --> 01:09:00,300 Look at you. 1337 01:09:15,066 --> 01:09:17,567 [reporter 1] We continue to track some of the coldest air 1338 01:09:17,567 --> 01:09:20,667 so far in years felt across eastern Canada. 1339 01:09:20,667 --> 01:09:22,266 It pushes into the maritime provinces... 1340 01:09:22,266 --> 01:09:24,567 [reporter 2] Central and eastern Canada is in the grips 1341 01:09:24,567 --> 01:09:26,800 of a polar vortex right now. 1342 01:09:29,266 --> 01:09:31,567 Everything was conspiring against the sub. 1343 01:09:33,667 --> 01:09:36,066 When they would take it back and store it, 1344 01:09:38,100 --> 01:09:39,767 it was left out in the elements. 1345 01:09:51,800 --> 01:09:54,667 Once it started getting into freezing weather, 1346 01:09:54,667 --> 01:09:57,467 the water would then start to expand 1347 01:09:57,467 --> 01:09:59,767 and try prizing the-- 1348 01:09:59,767 --> 01:10:03,900 The hull away from the titanium ring. 1349 01:10:03,900 --> 01:10:07,467 And each time, the water would go through freezing cycles. 1350 01:10:07,467 --> 01:10:10,400 It's like ice breaking up rocks. 1351 01:10:12,066 --> 01:10:14,467 [Gates] You're not going to tell them it was left out all winter in the cold. 1352 01:10:14,467 --> 01:10:17,467 You're not going to tell them about previous sounds 1353 01:10:17,467 --> 01:10:19,266 and cracking from inside the hull. 1354 01:10:20,200 --> 01:10:22,767 They didn't treat the Titan hull with respect. 1355 01:10:22,767 --> 01:10:23,967 And that was your moneymaker. 1356 01:10:28,867 --> 01:10:30,467 [Stockton] It's an open book here. 1357 01:10:30,467 --> 01:10:33,367 Do you have any questions about what's going on about, uh, acoustic monitoring, 1358 01:10:33,367 --> 01:10:36,266 about, uh, carbon fiber problems we had, 1359 01:10:36,266 --> 01:10:37,500 rumors of problems we had. 1360 01:10:37,500 --> 01:10:40,000 We want everyone going into this fully informed 1361 01:10:40,000 --> 01:10:41,800 this is an experimental sub. 1362 01:10:41,800 --> 01:10:43,266 This is a dangerous environment. 1363 01:10:43,266 --> 01:10:46,800 Almost every deep-diving sub makes a noise at some point. 1364 01:10:46,800 --> 01:10:48,767 You have these similar shakes... 1365 01:10:55,400 --> 01:10:56,700 [Gates] My suspicion is that Stockton had 1366 01:10:56,700 --> 01:10:59,900 enormous financial pressure to keep going, 1367 01:11:01,900 --> 01:11:03,767 and that's when bad things happened. 1368 01:11:04,667 --> 01:11:05,834 [man 1 on radio] Go ahead. 1369 01:11:05,834 --> 01:11:09,200 [man 2] Yeah, I need to stay alongside of this water. 1370 01:11:11,667 --> 01:11:14,767 [man 3] When I woke up, I was like, "Oh, God, no." 1371 01:11:16,066 --> 01:11:19,000 [Catterson] There was a risk that something could go wrong... 1372 01:11:19,000 --> 01:11:20,100 [man on radio] Topside stage, 1373 01:11:20,100 --> 01:11:22,000 diver one and diver two heading to surface. 1374 01:11:22,000 --> 01:11:25,767 ...which is why I always kept coming back as safety diver. 1375 01:11:27,500 --> 01:11:28,934 It's a choice. 1376 01:11:28,934 --> 01:11:34,700 It's either to make yourself available to help if you're needed or not. 1377 01:11:41,667 --> 01:11:46,567 On the 18th, it was a perfect day for diving. 1378 01:11:48,266 --> 01:11:51,166 The sun came out, the skies were blue, 1379 01:11:51,166 --> 01:11:53,767 the seas were calm, the wind was down. 1380 01:11:55,767 --> 01:11:57,900 What was your responsibility on that day? 1381 01:11:57,900 --> 01:11:59,667 I was running the platform again. 1382 01:12:00,867 --> 01:12:04,400 Basically, I did all the dive checks for the platform. 1383 01:12:06,200 --> 01:12:07,467 Stockton was the pilot. 1384 01:12:07,467 --> 01:12:10,166 He was doing all the internal checks. 1385 01:12:10,166 --> 01:12:13,066 He's like, "This is great! This is great!" 1386 01:12:14,367 --> 01:12:15,667 We get to dive. 1387 01:12:18,066 --> 01:12:20,500 Did you have any communications with the passengers 1388 01:12:20,500 --> 01:12:22,467 after they had come out to the submersible? 1389 01:12:22,467 --> 01:12:25,100 -They'd come out on another dinghy... -[Whalen] Mm-hm. 1390 01:12:25,100 --> 01:12:27,467 ...and they get out. 1391 01:12:27,467 --> 01:12:29,834 And then they got into the sub. 1392 01:12:32,266 --> 01:12:34,667 [Hagen] Anyone that went down in it, 1393 01:12:34,667 --> 01:12:36,600 whatever their motivations, 1394 01:12:36,600 --> 01:12:39,100 should have understood how risky it was. 1395 01:12:40,200 --> 01:12:43,000 They were either embracing that reality 1396 01:12:43,000 --> 01:12:44,333 or they were delusional. 1397 01:12:45,867 --> 01:12:48,000 The one person that should not have been on the Titan 1398 01:12:48,000 --> 01:12:49,800 was the teenage son. 1399 01:12:55,367 --> 01:12:58,967 Suleman was close to the last to going in. 1400 01:12:58,967 --> 01:13:01,867 And when he came up, I grabbed him by the-- 1401 01:13:01,867 --> 01:13:04,500 The back of his-- His flotation device. 1402 01:13:04,500 --> 01:13:06,266 You know, pull him and make sure 1403 01:13:06,266 --> 01:13:09,100 he's not gonna, you know, go sliding off into the water. 1404 01:13:09,100 --> 01:13:10,266 And... 1405 01:13:11,767 --> 01:13:13,300 I helped him get in. 1406 01:13:13,300 --> 01:13:16,867 I helped him get into the sub, 1407 01:13:16,867 --> 01:13:19,367 and then I said, "Have a good dive." 1408 01:13:37,266 --> 01:13:38,967 [man] At 9:14 a.m. local, 1409 01:13:38,967 --> 01:13:41,567 according to the Polar Prince deck log, 1410 01:13:41,567 --> 01:13:45,500 the Titan disengaged, maneuvered away 1411 01:13:45,500 --> 01:13:48,900 and proceeded to dive with five persons aboard. 1412 01:13:59,100 --> 01:14:02,266 The Polar Prince received a ping from the Titan 1413 01:14:02,266 --> 01:14:06,200 approximately every five to ten seconds. 1414 01:14:10,066 --> 01:14:12,000 They're going down to see the Titanic. 1415 01:14:13,000 --> 01:14:16,767 You have this young boy, you know, who's excited. 1416 01:14:16,767 --> 01:14:19,100 His dad is excited for him. 1417 01:14:19,100 --> 01:14:23,000 These are the flashes going through your mind. 1418 01:14:28,667 --> 01:14:31,900 The quiet, right? The moments before. 1419 01:14:32,967 --> 01:14:34,500 What questions, 1420 01:14:34,500 --> 01:14:36,266 what conversations were they having? 1421 01:15:03,867 --> 01:15:05,467 [man] Communications continued 1422 01:15:05,467 --> 01:15:06,867 throughout the descent. 1423 01:15:06,867 --> 01:15:09,900 There were no transmissions which indicated trouble 1424 01:15:09,900 --> 01:15:12,767 or an emergency aboard the Titan. 1425 01:15:12,767 --> 01:15:16,467 At 10:47:27 a.m. local, 1426 01:15:16,467 --> 01:15:20,867 the Titan messaged, "Dropped two wts." 1427 01:15:22,500 --> 01:15:26,166 At 10:47:33 a.m. local, 1428 01:15:26,166 --> 01:15:29,100 the Titan was pinged for the final time. 1429 01:15:29,100 --> 01:15:35,200 The depth of the Titan was 3,346 meters. 1430 01:15:55,400 --> 01:15:56,600 [Whalen] Okay, so what you're going to see 1431 01:15:56,600 --> 01:15:59,767 is Miss Rush, uh, as she is the-- 1432 01:15:59,767 --> 01:16:01,000 On the comms and tracker. 1433 01:16:01,000 --> 01:16:04,100 -[Neubauer] She leads that team, right? -[Whalen] Yes. 1434 01:16:04,100 --> 01:16:07,367 -You will hear a noise that is external to the ship. -Okay. 1435 01:16:07,367 --> 01:16:09,367 Or external to the room, I should say. 1436 01:16:09,367 --> 01:16:11,867 -And you will see their reaction to the noise. -Okay. 1437 01:16:11,867 --> 01:16:14,300 -And then we'll rewind and go again. -Right. 1438 01:16:14,300 --> 01:16:15,767 How many meters to go? 1439 01:16:16,767 --> 01:16:17,700 Um... 1440 01:16:22,166 --> 01:16:23,300 [thud over comms] 1441 01:16:29,400 --> 01:16:31,467 [Whalen] So at that point, she said, "What was that bang?" 1442 01:16:31,467 --> 01:16:32,400 [Neubauer] Yeah. "What was that bang?" 1443 01:16:32,400 --> 01:16:33,867 Is this max volume right now? 1444 01:16:33,867 --> 01:16:35,166 [Whalen] It is max volume for this. 1445 01:16:35,166 --> 01:16:37,266 I'm gonna back up and play it one more time. 1446 01:16:37,266 --> 01:16:39,266 It sounds like a door slamming. 1447 01:16:41,166 --> 01:16:44,200 Approximately in five seconds, you will hear the bang. 1448 01:16:44,567 --> 01:16:45,467 [Wendy] Um... 1449 01:16:49,567 --> 01:16:50,967 [thud over comms] 1450 01:16:51,467 --> 01:16:53,400 Yeah. 1451 01:16:55,867 --> 01:16:57,867 Now, next, she's going to look at the computer, 1452 01:16:57,867 --> 01:16:59,767 and she says, "Dropped two weights." 1453 01:16:59,767 --> 01:17:04,200 Dropped two weights was the last message from the Titan. 1454 01:17:04,200 --> 01:17:05,433 [Neubauer] Right. 1455 01:17:05,433 --> 01:17:09,066 The message actually comes in after they heard the noise of 1456 01:17:09,066 --> 01:17:11,300 what could possibly have been the implosion noise. 1457 01:17:11,300 --> 01:17:12,667 Right. Okay. 1458 01:17:20,700 --> 01:17:22,767 It appears that she thinks something happened, 1459 01:17:22,767 --> 01:17:25,800 or she senses something, and then the relief 1460 01:17:25,800 --> 01:17:27,300 once she sees "Dropped two weights." 1461 01:17:27,300 --> 01:17:29,200 Agreed. 1462 01:17:29,200 --> 01:17:32,667 [Whalen] What we believe is the implosion sound came first, 1463 01:17:32,667 --> 01:17:36,166 before the computer message of "dropped two weights." 1464 01:17:36,166 --> 01:17:38,000 Based upon the speed of actual sound. 1465 01:17:39,100 --> 01:17:41,100 Sound travels through the water column 1466 01:17:41,100 --> 01:17:43,500 -at 1,500 meters per second. -[Neubauer] Right. 1467 01:17:43,500 --> 01:17:46,867 And so they were at 3,346 meters below the surface, 1468 01:17:46,867 --> 01:17:48,500 so that would have been, like, two-and-a-half seconds. 1469 01:17:48,500 --> 01:17:51,800 Dropped two weights is the last thing that they stated. 1470 01:17:51,800 --> 01:17:56,467 -Within five seconds is when we lost comms and tracking. -[Neubauer] Yeah. Okay. 1471 01:17:57,700 --> 01:17:59,467 Gotta show some other folks. 1472 01:17:59,467 --> 01:18:00,867 That is-- 1473 01:18:00,867 --> 01:18:04,767 I mean, you figured, the fatal moment, you know, for all of them. 1474 01:18:04,767 --> 01:18:05,767 [Whalen] Mm-hm. 1475 01:18:08,166 --> 01:18:09,667 It is. It's very sobering. 1476 01:18:21,667 --> 01:18:23,867 [Jamie Frederick] At 5:40 p.m., we received a call. 1477 01:18:23,867 --> 01:18:26,166 A report of an overdue submersible 1478 01:18:26,166 --> 01:18:28,266 at the site of the Titanic. 1479 01:18:28,266 --> 01:18:30,767 We happened to have the United States Coast Guard 1480 01:18:30,767 --> 01:18:33,066 C-130 on deck in St. John's. 1481 01:18:33,867 --> 01:18:35,166 And, ironically, that aircraft 1482 01:18:35,166 --> 01:18:37,900 was on deck in St. John's because they were conducting 1483 01:18:37,900 --> 01:18:40,000 an international ice patrol mission, 1484 01:18:40,000 --> 01:18:41,367 which is something the Coast Guard does 1485 01:18:41,367 --> 01:18:44,100 as a result of the sinking of the Titanic. 1486 01:18:51,100 --> 01:18:52,300 [reporter] The Canadian Coast Guard, 1487 01:18:52,300 --> 01:18:54,266 they have new ships that have just arrived on scene. 1488 01:18:54,266 --> 01:18:55,867 The Horizon Arctic, 1489 01:18:55,867 --> 01:18:58,867 a ship that can drop a remotely-operated vehicle. 1490 01:18:58,867 --> 01:19:01,767 If they find that sub, they've got a huge challenge 1491 01:19:01,767 --> 01:19:03,867 lifting it up out of the water, 1492 01:19:03,867 --> 01:19:07,033 maybe from a depth of two-and-a-half miles. 1493 01:19:09,500 --> 01:19:15,100 There's no other explanation for losing comms and tracking 1494 01:19:15,100 --> 01:19:16,900 when they weren't yet at the bottom, 1495 01:19:16,900 --> 01:19:18,100 other than implosion. 1496 01:19:19,767 --> 01:19:21,700 They found what they were looking for. 1497 01:19:21,700 --> 01:19:24,900 It was no longer a search and rescue, but a recovery. 1498 01:19:31,800 --> 01:19:33,200 They found debris. 1499 01:19:41,266 --> 01:19:47,100 Stockton would have understood the reality of an implosion 1500 01:19:47,100 --> 01:19:49,800 being instantaneous and painless. 1501 01:19:49,800 --> 01:19:52,300 You're talking about something happening 1502 01:19:52,300 --> 01:19:54,367 in a fraction of a second, 1503 01:19:54,367 --> 01:19:57,767 where you're exposed to temperatures hotter than the sun 1504 01:19:57,767 --> 01:20:03,100 and pressures more than double what's inside a scuba tank. 1505 01:20:03,100 --> 01:20:04,166 So they-- 1506 01:20:04,166 --> 01:20:06,667 You know, they didn't feel a single-- 1507 01:20:06,667 --> 01:20:09,567 It's basically the perfect, painless way to die. 1508 01:20:14,500 --> 01:20:17,100 [Catterson] This was a moment in time 1509 01:20:17,100 --> 01:20:20,367 when their sub was there, and then it was not. 1510 01:20:27,066 --> 01:20:30,266 [Dawood] I lost two people who are important in my life. 1511 01:20:34,800 --> 01:20:38,467 I would never want anybody to go through that pain. [sniffles] 1512 01:20:59,266 --> 01:21:02,867 So here is a picture of the aft dome that came up. 1513 01:21:02,867 --> 01:21:04,066 It is filled with water. 1514 01:21:04,066 --> 01:21:06,300 And then we emptied the water, 1515 01:21:06,300 --> 01:21:09,200 and then we started to go through some of the debris. 1516 01:21:09,200 --> 01:21:11,200 This is what the sludge looked like 1517 01:21:11,200 --> 01:21:13,200 once you got rid of the water. 1518 01:21:13,200 --> 01:21:17,100 So a lot of this is just carbon fiber or fiberglass. 1519 01:21:17,100 --> 01:21:18,667 You know, electronic parts. 1520 01:21:18,667 --> 01:21:21,066 I mean, really, it turned into sludge. 1521 01:21:22,700 --> 01:21:27,166 [Steele] Let's just consider the end cap to be a bowl, a mixing bowl. 1522 01:21:27,166 --> 01:21:30,367 Items that were inside of the Titan at the time 1523 01:21:30,367 --> 01:21:34,166 now become encased inside of the end cap. 1524 01:21:35,800 --> 01:21:37,467 We were all just, kind of, getting all hands in 1525 01:21:37,467 --> 01:21:40,100 and separating what needed to be considered 1526 01:21:40,100 --> 01:21:41,667 as, uh, human remains 1527 01:21:41,667 --> 01:21:45,333 and what was just other wreckage pieces. 1528 01:21:47,767 --> 01:21:51,100 So as we were pulling apart, that's how we realized what it was, 1529 01:21:51,100 --> 01:21:53,367 Mr. Rush's, uh, clothing. 1530 01:21:53,367 --> 01:21:56,867 It was actually caked inside of sand. 1531 01:21:58,467 --> 01:22:02,567 It was the piece of his sleeve, uh, that had survived. 1532 01:22:02,567 --> 01:22:03,767 No, not the whole suit. 1533 01:22:03,767 --> 01:22:07,166 Um, just that end inside of the sleeve of it 1534 01:22:07,166 --> 01:22:11,700 was ink pen, business cards 1535 01:22:11,700 --> 01:22:15,700 and stickers for the Titanic. 1536 01:22:16,767 --> 01:22:20,266 And there was nothing else but that. 1537 01:22:20,266 --> 01:22:21,367 But each one of those pieces, 1538 01:22:21,367 --> 01:22:24,166 even the pen, was still intact. 1539 01:22:24,166 --> 01:22:25,867 It hadn't been broken. 1540 01:22:25,867 --> 01:22:27,400 All of this debris, 1541 01:22:28,367 --> 01:22:29,500 all of these things shattered, 1542 01:22:29,500 --> 01:22:31,300 but his pen was still intact. 1543 01:22:39,567 --> 01:22:42,600 [Williams] Everyone wants to know what happened to Titan. 1544 01:22:42,600 --> 01:22:44,767 Could it have been prevented? 1545 01:22:44,767 --> 01:22:47,166 I think it's important for the public to hear the truth. 1546 01:22:48,266 --> 01:22:50,166 The whole world is interested in that. 1547 01:22:51,467 --> 01:22:54,166 [Neubauer] The testimony gathered has been critical, 1548 01:22:54,166 --> 01:22:56,000 but there is still more work to be done. 1549 01:22:56,000 --> 01:23:00,767 And our final report will be essential in shaping future safety standards. 1550 01:23:00,767 --> 01:23:03,867 I'm now ready to take your questions. 1551 01:23:03,867 --> 01:23:05,500 Anne Emerson, Channel 4. 1552 01:23:05,500 --> 01:23:09,567 Do you believe you have enough to recommend criminal charges? 1553 01:23:09,567 --> 01:23:13,100 And if so, who are you looking at charging? 1554 01:23:27,800 --> 01:23:29,467 [Dawood] I think I will never be the same. 1555 01:23:30,734 --> 01:23:35,667 I don't think that anybody who goes through loss and-- 1556 01:23:35,667 --> 01:23:38,300 And such a trauma can ever be the same. 1557 01:23:39,967 --> 01:23:44,800 One of the most important things that came out for me 1558 01:23:44,800 --> 01:23:47,467 was when the Coast Guard 1559 01:23:47,467 --> 01:23:51,166 also assured us as a family that 1560 01:23:53,166 --> 01:23:55,100 we couldn't have known. 1561 01:23:55,100 --> 01:23:56,500 For me, that was... 1562 01:23:58,500 --> 01:24:01,467 yeah, I guess the most important, 1563 01:24:02,667 --> 01:24:05,867 um, reassurance they could have given me. 1564 01:24:11,800 --> 01:24:15,667 [Catterson] My belief with the dead is just leave them alone. 1565 01:24:15,667 --> 01:24:17,000 The same goes for Stockton. 1566 01:24:18,266 --> 01:24:19,300 [scoffs] 1567 01:24:19,300 --> 01:24:20,367 I wish he was here right now, 1568 01:24:20,367 --> 01:24:22,166 and I would smack him one, you know. 1569 01:24:22,166 --> 01:24:23,367 Um... 1570 01:24:24,467 --> 01:24:25,467 [sighs] 1571 01:24:25,467 --> 01:24:29,100 [stammering] It does no good to-- 1572 01:24:29,100 --> 01:24:31,567 To speak ill of the dead. You know, it's... 1573 01:24:34,867 --> 01:24:36,667 [Steele] Those days searching, 1574 01:24:36,667 --> 01:24:39,000 I was hoping that the outcome 1575 01:24:39,000 --> 01:24:40,600 was not going to be what it was. 1576 01:24:42,000 --> 01:24:44,100 You know, laws are written in blood, 1577 01:24:44,100 --> 01:24:45,667 you know, regulations are written in blood. 1578 01:24:45,667 --> 01:24:47,000 That's the saying in the Coast Guard. 1579 01:24:48,900 --> 01:24:50,367 We needed to provide closure. 1580 01:24:51,767 --> 01:24:54,066 We needed to provide closure to those families. 1581 01:25:17,166 --> 01:25:21,000 OceanGate gave this idea that they were safe. 1582 01:25:21,000 --> 01:25:22,867 But when you look at all of the things 1583 01:25:22,867 --> 01:25:25,767 that OceanGate bypassed and didn't do, 1584 01:25:25,767 --> 01:25:27,400 safety was not their priority, 1585 01:25:27,400 --> 01:25:29,066 it was monetary gain. 1586 01:25:29,900 --> 01:25:32,500 For me, a submersible is way riskier 1587 01:25:32,500 --> 01:25:35,266 than other vessel operations. 1588 01:25:35,266 --> 01:25:38,734 So why are we giving them less stringent safety requirements? 1589 01:25:38,734 --> 01:25:39,934 It just doesn't make sense. 1590 01:25:39,934 --> 01:25:42,400 We've, of course, talked about some of the recommendations. 1591 01:25:42,400 --> 01:25:44,567 The most important one to me is-- 1592 01:25:44,567 --> 01:25:46,600 Is changing how we handle 1593 01:25:46,600 --> 01:25:50,500 any US passenger submersible in our naval waters. 1594 01:25:52,967 --> 01:25:58,000 If you want to be an explorer, an inventor, an innovator, 1595 01:25:58,000 --> 01:26:00,266 that's awesome, you know. 1596 01:26:00,266 --> 01:26:01,200 Knock yourself out. 1597 01:26:02,867 --> 01:26:07,300 But when you start inviting the public, 1598 01:26:07,300 --> 01:26:12,100 when you bring a kid into this thing you've invented, 1599 01:26:12,100 --> 01:26:16,166 you have a responsibility at that point to be totally forthright 1600 01:26:16,166 --> 01:26:20,100 about what it is that you're offering. 1601 01:26:24,066 --> 01:26:27,734 [Stanley] When people are doing things like spending $250,000 1602 01:26:27,734 --> 01:26:31,667 in a death tube that wasn't tested, 1603 01:26:31,667 --> 01:26:34,266 controlled by a game controller 1604 01:26:34,266 --> 01:26:35,900 by a guy that's telling you 1605 01:26:37,767 --> 01:26:40,467 how he wants to be remembered for breaking rules, 1606 01:26:41,900 --> 01:26:45,266 it's a message to the super wealthy, 1607 01:26:45,266 --> 01:26:47,166 the oligarchy, if you will, 1608 01:26:47,166 --> 01:26:49,667 that your money can't buy everything. 1609 01:26:49,667 --> 01:26:50,967 [Whalen] He was arrogant. 1610 01:26:50,967 --> 01:26:53,667 He felt that his way was the only way and the best way. 1611 01:26:53,667 --> 01:26:55,900 And, I mean, I don't know why he felt that way, but he did. 1612 01:26:55,900 --> 01:26:58,367 And, um-- 1613 01:26:58,367 --> 01:27:01,266 -[Williams] Five people perished because of it. -You know, it's-- Mm. 1614 01:27:02,400 --> 01:27:04,800 [Williams] There were so many opportunities 1615 01:27:04,800 --> 01:27:07,100 for Stockton to stop this operation from happening, 1616 01:27:07,100 --> 01:27:11,100 and he always chose to continue the operation, 1617 01:27:11,100 --> 01:27:14,800 instead of thinking about it from a safety perspective. 1618 01:27:17,266 --> 01:27:21,200 With regards to the actions and the inactions of Mr. Rush, 1619 01:27:21,200 --> 01:27:25,367 continued, um, failures to properly, um, inspect the hull, 1620 01:27:25,367 --> 01:27:26,567 failures to-- 1621 01:27:26,567 --> 01:27:29,467 To properly, um, identify risks 1622 01:27:29,467 --> 01:27:30,767 and risk mismanagement. 1623 01:27:30,767 --> 01:27:32,667 So many steps and so many failures 1624 01:27:32,667 --> 01:27:34,166 that got to where this is at. 1625 01:27:34,166 --> 01:27:37,266 So really, what we have here is not an accident. 1626 01:27:39,000 --> 01:27:41,400 It's a potential crime. 1627 01:27:43,867 --> 01:27:45,166 -[Whalen] Yes, sir. -[Williams] Yes. 1628 01:27:47,000 --> 01:27:47,934 Okay. 1629 01:27:47,934 --> 01:27:49,266 [Whalen] He knew the risks he was taking 1630 01:27:49,266 --> 01:27:52,367 with carbon-fiber hull and with the Titan. 1631 01:27:52,367 --> 01:27:55,600 But he didn't tell anybody else about those risks 1632 01:27:55,600 --> 01:27:56,900 because he had to make the money. 1633 01:27:58,367 --> 01:28:00,166 It's inescapable. 1634 01:28:00,166 --> 01:28:04,934 There is no letting Stockton off the hook at the end of this. 1635 01:28:07,400 --> 01:28:13,000 How did the people that had access to the information 1636 01:28:13,000 --> 01:28:17,000 that the general public didn't have until after the disaster, 1637 01:28:17,000 --> 01:28:22,367 how did those people not only not stop him, but keep giving him money? 1638 01:28:23,367 --> 01:28:25,667 That's the question that keeps me up at night. 1639 01:28:27,600 --> 01:28:28,900 [Dawood] I'm not looking for blaming. 1640 01:28:30,000 --> 01:28:33,100 We all know who the culprit is. 1641 01:28:35,567 --> 01:28:38,266 Well, it's not changing anything, does it? 1642 01:28:38,266 --> 01:28:40,734 The culprit died with them, right? 1643 01:28:40,734 --> 01:28:41,667 So... 1644 01:28:43,667 --> 01:28:45,166 who am I to blame? 1645 01:29:40,367 --> 01:29:41,767 [Stockton] There are a group of people, 1646 01:29:41,767 --> 01:29:43,200 I don't know how many there are, 1647 01:29:43,200 --> 01:29:45,867 that say you shouldn't visit the Titanic 1648 01:29:45,867 --> 01:29:47,300 because it's a grave site. 1649 01:29:47,300 --> 01:29:50,266 Um, in my mind, I think that's just absurd. 1650 01:29:50,266 --> 01:29:51,300 The fact of the matter is 1651 01:29:51,300 --> 01:29:53,266 the best way to honor those who died 1652 01:29:53,266 --> 01:29:55,800 is to draw attention to it, to make people think about it. 1653 01:29:57,667 --> 01:30:00,367 I think it's very important to keep the Titanic alive.