The bodies of 33 victims who were on a California diving boat have been recovered, and one person is still missing.
According to the Los Angeles Times, Coast Guard officials made the announcement on Sept. 4. The boat, which was anchored on Santa Cruz Island, caught on fire on Labor Day.
When the fire broke out, 39 people were on board. Five crew members who were awake jumped overboard and swam to a nearby vessel.
The names of the victims were not officially revealed.
Domenic Selga told CBS News that his mother, step-father, and three step-sisters died.
“They were down there in those small bunks, those really small bunks … to have no escape … It was something that was playing in my head,” Selga said. “It was just a complete nightmare.”
Cherie McDonough said her daughter, 25, was on board.
“Never thought I would have to go through this,” she said. “She was just following her dreams. She loved it here and she loved the boat. She loved diving.”
Coast Guard Lt. Cmdr Matt Kroll said that some three-dozen divers partook in the recovery effort.
“Our priority is trying to find the last victim and also items that would be of interest to find out what happened,” he told the LA Times. “You want to bring closure to the families.”
National Transportation Safety Board member Jennifer Homendy said there is now a federal investigation into the cause of the fire, adding she is “100 percent confident” the cause will be determined.
“With 30-plus people dying, the investigation could lead to changes in the way vessels are designed or protected depending on the findings,” Marjorie Murtagh Cooke, former director of the NTSB Office of Marine Safety, told the paper.
On Sept. 4, a makeshift memorial was spotted for victims at the harbor where they died.
According to the LA Times, it included a copy of poem, “The Ocean,” by Nathaniel Hawthorne, which reads: