The children of an Alabama woman who died on a cruise ship said she didn’t want to go, reports say.
“The night before they left my mom hugged me for a good five minutes and I was kind of curious as to why was it so long and I asked her and she said, ‘Well, it might be the last hug you get from me,’” he explained to “Good Morning America.”
“I can’t focus. It’s like my rock is gone and it’s just very painful for me. I’m trying to do the best I can,” Tenorio said of his 52-year-old mother’s death.
Her daughter, Andrea Smith, said she didn’t “want to go” on the Princess Cruises ship with her husband Leo Tenorio.
“My mom did not want to go on this cruise. She did not. ... She knew something was going to happen,” she also told “Good Morning America.”
Smith said she and Leo were going on the Florida-to-Aruba cruise to “work on their relationship.”
Leo Tenorio was questioned by police in the case but is not a suspect. No other suspects were named.
Passengers reported seeing an unidentified man struggling with Tenorio. He was allegedly choking her before she fell, the Fox10 report said.
Timothy Tenorio, meanwhile, said Leo was someone who “always wanted the best for his mother,” as reported by “Good Morning America,” adding that he was a “supportive husband.”
“Princess Cruises can confirm that a 52-year-old, American, female guest passed away early Tuesday morning aboard Royal Princess as the ship was enroute to Aruba. The incident was reported to the FBI and local authorities and the local authorities met and boarded the ship upon arrival in Aruba,” it said.
It added: “We are cooperating fully with the investigating authorities, including the FBI. An official cause of death has not been announced. We are deeply saddened by this incident and offer our sincere condolences to the family and those affected. Royal Princess is sailing a 7-day roundtrip Southern Caribbean cruise that departed Port Everglades (Ft. Lauderdale) on Nov. 9 and will return on Nov. 17.”
The cause of the fall is unknown, the report said.