-4.9 C
New York
Friday, December 5, 2025
HomeHeadline newsBoat captain charged with manslaughter after Florida Keys parasailing incident

Boat captain charged with manslaughter after Florida Keys parasailing incident

Date:

Related stories

Is Air India facing drop in flights due to US changing policies?

Highlights: US travel demand for Air India has dropped...

India expands US energy imports to ease trade tensions and diversify supply

Highlights: India signs its first major structured LPG import...

Indian tech worker on H-1B visa sues US firm over forced labor, caste bias

Highlights: Siri Software Solutions and CEO accused of forced...

Legal visa status no shield as US warns of swift removal for those who violate American laws

Highlights: Nearly 80,000 non-immigrant visas revoked in less than...

A Florida Keys boat captain has been arrested and charged with manslaughter after his “negligence” led to the death of a parasailing woman earlier this year.

Daniel Gavin Couch was booked into the Monroe County Jail and was being held on a $100,000 bond, CBS Miami News reported as details of the fatal accident emerged.

Supraja Alaparthi from Illinois, her 10-year-old son Sriakshith and her nephew Vishant Sadda aged nine were parasailing, anchored by Couch’s boat when the incident took place on May 30 this year.

As the parasail went out of control amid strong winds when they were aloft, the boat operator cut the towline to the chute which then plunged and dragged the vacationing trio. They eventually crashed into the Old Seven Mile Bridge. Alaparthi died instantly while the two children suffered injuries.

An attorney, hired by Alaparthi’s family, gave an account of how the horrified members of the family desperately screamed for help during the crash.

- Advertisement -

The lawyer said 11 family members who were on the boat at the time of the tragedy saw Couch cut the cord, NBC News reported.

“All the family members were yelling to the captain to hook them, use a rescue device to jump in the water,” the lawyer who filed a lawsuit on behalf of the Alaparthis, said.

“Do something to save our family,” the attorney quoted them as saying.

“They saw them screaming, saw them yelling for help as the wind gusted in and took them away from the boat.”

The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission arrested Couch over the woman’s death and for allegedly violating commercial parasailing statutes.

“There is no excuse for the negligence and disregard for public safety that was shown in this case,” Alberto Maza of the agency’s law enforcement division said.

According to the Commission, Couch hadn’t recently checked weather conditions before he took the passengers on the parasailing trip.

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Latest stories