Costa Concordia Capt. Francesco Schettino Defiant on the Stand

Francesco Schettino, accused by survivors, politicians and the media of dereliction of duty after the 2012 shipwreck of the Costa Concordia cruise liner under his command killed 32, testified in his own defense for the first time Tuesday, defiant and gesticulating under questioning from Italian prosecutors.
Costa Concordia Capt. Francesco Schettino Defiant on the Stand
Francesco Schettino arrives to offer his first court testimony about the 2012 shipwreck off an Italian island that killed 32 people, in Grosseto, Italy, Tuesday, Dec. 2, 2014. The captain of the Costa Concordia cruise ship offered his first court testimony Tuesday about the 2012 shipwreck off an Italian island that killed 32 people, sitting hunched behind a table on a theater's stage while prosecutors questioned him from the first row. While Francesco Schettino has long said he looked forward to his day in court to vindicate himself, he was granted a request not to have his image, and only his voice, broadcast from the theater that has served as a courtroom due to the widespread interest in the case. Schettino is being tried alone on charges of manslaughter, causing a shipwreck. AP Photo/Giacomo Aprili
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GROSSETO, Italy—Francesco Schettino, accused by survivors, politicians and the media of dereliction of duty after the 2012 shipwreck of the Costa Concordia cruise liner under his command killed 32, testified in his own defense for the first time Tuesday, defiant and gesticulating under questioning from Italian prosecutors.

The testimony had a theatrical flair, with Schettino hunched over a table on a stage, at times studying a photo of the ship’s radar, while prosecutors in the front row of the auditorium played bit-by-bit audio segments from the ship’s bridge the night of Jan. 13, 2012, when the cruise liner hit rocks off the Tuscan island of Giglio, tearing a huge gash in the hull.

The trial is being held in a theater in the nearby town of Grosseto due to widespread interest: 4,200 people from 70 countries fled the ship as it listed. A panel of judges sat center stage.

Much of the day’s testimony was technical, and Schettino’s answers were so detailed that at times the prosecutor hurried him along, saying, “You’ve already explained that enough.”

Schettino is charged with manslaughter, causing a shipwreck and abandoning ship. If convicted, he faces more than 20 years’ imprisonment. He is being tried alone, after five other defendants reached plea deals.

He denies abandoning ship, saying he was thrown in the water as the ship rolled on its side. The exchange that has most defined his image is a recording of a port official in colorful, angry language ordering him back on board to oversee the evacuation of passengers.

During his testimony, Schettino said he allowed the approach to Giglio “to kill three birds with one stone” — pay homage to a retired commander living there, who it turned out was on the mainland; do a favor for the maître d', who was from Giglio; and for marketing reasons.

Prosecutors, however, contested Schettino’s notion that sailing close to the island was good for the cruise company, noting that passengers had not been advised and that had they looked out that night they would have only seen the island as a shadow in the dark.

Schettino denied a more salacious motive: taking the route near Giglio to impress a Moldovan dancer he had brought to the bridge. The woman has testified the two were lovers.

Schettino’s defense says no one died in the collision itself, but the failure of a backup generator and supposedly watertight compartments that were flooded created problems during the evacuation.

Although his face is well-known throughout Italy, Schettino was granted a motion not to have his image broadcast giving testimony. TV footage of the courtroom cut off the stage-left where he sat, and just his voice was heard, at times slipping into Neapolitan dialect.

Schettino is scheduled to continue giving evidence on Wednesday. The trial as a whole is expected to continue into the new year.

From The Associated Press

Colleen Barry
Colleen Barry
Author
Colleen Barry was raised in New York City. She began her pursuit to master figure drawing and painting as a teenager at the Arts Students League and the National Academy of Design. Later she studied under New York based artists such as Sam Adoquei, Andrea Smith, and Jacob Collins. Colleen has been the recipient of the Newington Cropsy Grant, which sent her to study in Italy is 2004. She returned to Italy once more in 2011 to reside as an affiliated fellow at the American Academy in Rome with her husband Will St. John. Colleen lives and works in New York City. She sells her work privately out of her studio in Bushwick, Brooklyn, and teaches drawing at the Grand Central Atelier in Long Island City, New York. Visit: colleenbarryart.com
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