The Latest Shocking Update on OCEANGATE Victims - Away State Journal
The victims of the OceanGate Titan submarine tragedy have had their remains returned to their grieving families as "slush" in "shoeboxes". Christine Dawood's husband Shahzada and 19-year-old son ...
OceanGate Titan victims' bodies returned to grieving families as 'slush in shoeboxes'
MSN: OceanGate Titan victims' bodies returned to grieving families as 'slush in shoeboxes'
On , a submersible imploded while trying to visit the remains of the R.M.S. Titanic, killing the five passengers onboard. The victims included Stockton Rush, the CEO of OceanGate, which ...
The Sun: Titan submarine victims’ bodies were ‘slush’ that were returned in ‘shoeboxes’, grieving wife and mum reveals
Titan submarine victims’ bodies were ‘slush’ that were returned in ‘shoeboxes’, grieving wife and mum reveals
MSN: Report: Remains of Titan sub victims returned as 'slush in shoeboxes'
MSN: Remains of British father and son Titan sub disaster victims were returned to family as 'slush'
Remains of British father and son Titan sub disaster victims were returned to family as 'slush'
OceanGate Inc. is an American privately owned company based in Everett, Washington, that provided crewed submersibles for tourism, industry, research, and exploration.
Legal experts say a lawsuit stemming from the Titan submersible disaster felt inevitable, but winning the $50 million judgment being sought against the owner of the vessel, OceanGate, could be very difficult.
The "catastrophic implosion" that wrecked OceanGate's Titan sub, a vessel en route to view the Titanic wreckage, proved fatal to those onboard. Five people who were killed on the vessel in the depths of the ocean on , were later discovered among the debris of the ocean floor, a couple of hundred meters from the bow of the Titanic.