Misadventure verdict at inquest into death of Coast Guard's Catriona Lucas

Misadventure verdict at inquest into death of Coast Guard's Catriona Lucas

Marine expert Michael Kingston, with Caitriona Lucas' daughter and husband Emma and Bernard Lucas (on the right) arriving at the inquest at Kilmallock Courthouse. Picture: Brendan Gleeson

A verdict of misadventure has been returned at the inquest into the death of Irish Coast Guard advanced coxswain Caitriona Lucas in an incident off the Clare coast.

The unanimous verdict was issued by a jury before Limerick coroner John McNamara at Kilmallock Court. They also issued seven recommendations in relation to safety management, training and equipment used by the Irish Coast Guard.

Ms Lucas (41), an experienced member of Doolin Coast Guard and mother of two, died after the Kilkee Coast Guard Delta rigid inflatable boat (RIB) she was crewing on capsized during a search for a missing man on September 12, 2016.

She was the first Irish Coast Guard volunteer to lose her life during a tasking.

Marine expert Michael Kingston, representing the Lucas family, had sought a verdict of unlawful killing.

However Simon Mills, senior counsel for the Department of Transport and Irish Coastguard, said the verdict of unlawful killing was not one open to a jury in a coroner’s court.

Ms Lucas’s family including her husband, Bernard, son Ben, and daughter Emma attended the hearing. In a statement afterwards on behalf of the family, her son Ben said a failure to have proper safety systems caused his mother’s death. He said there were “critical lessons to be learned”, and the jury had made recommendations that should have been made seven years ago “to protect life”.

Ben Lucas criticised the delay in holding the inquest, and said that “the preservation and production of evidence has been appalling”. He said:

Irish Coast Guard management, the Attorney General’s office, and the Department of Transport did not act on a critical report in 2012 that instructed them to put in place a senior safety systems manager in the Irish Coast Guard that never happened, and my mother went to help others but was let down so terribly.

The hearing heard 28 depositions, including evidence that a recommendation for a safety systems manager at the Irish Coast Guard in 2012 was not implemented until 2018.

It heard that “interpersonal issues”, which had been reported to Irish Coast Guard management the previous March (2016), had led to a loss of experienced volunteers at the Kilkee unit — which meant “flanking stations”, including Doolin which Ms Lucas was a member of, were asked to help out.

It heard Ms Lucas was conscious in the water for 17 minutes after the Kilkee Delta RIB was hit by a wave and capsized in a shallow surf zone at Lookout Bay off Kilkee, and that a second RIB owned by the Kilkee unit could have reached the area to effect a rescue of all three on board within 10 minutes.

However, after Kilkee deputy officer-in-charge Orla Hassett called for that D-class RIB to be launched, two of her colleagues left the scene. She had to requisition a privately owned vessel which rescued one of the three, Kilkee volunteer Jenny Carway.

In a statement given to the inquest on Thursday, Kilkee volunteer Lorraine Lynch, who had been at the station with Ms Hassett when a “Mayday” alert was relayed, said that she was “told” by Martony Vaughan as officer-in-charge (OIC) “to come with him in the jeep to the cliff walk”.

Kilkee Delta RIB coxswain James Lucey, was rescued some hours later by the Shannon Coast Guard helicopter, which also airlifted Ms Lucas on board earlier and flew her to Limerick University Hospital where she was pronounced dead.

The inquest heard that the cause of Ms Lucas’s death was due to drowning, but a head injury which could have caused temporary loss of consciousness was a contributory factor.

Rescue delay

Summing up for the jury, Limerick coroner John McNamara said it appeared there was a “brain drain” in relation to the Kilkee unit and some “confusion” about the command structure of the unit.

He said that Ms Hassett had put it “quite succinctly” that this was not relevant when three people were available to launch a second RIB to effect a rescue.

He recalled that evidence had been heard about previous recommendations, including those in an appendix to the Marine Casualty Investigation Board (MCIB) inquiry into Ms Lucas’s death relating to a previous incident in a surf zone off Inch, Co Kerry, in 2014.

He said that the Kilkee unit was not aware of those Inch recommendations, and he noted evidence from Health and Safety Authority (HSA) inspector Helen McCarthy that there was no site specific risk assessment of the area where the capsize occurred and no map of hazardous areas at the Kilkee station.

Mr McNamara said “it is clear that if Ms Lucas’s helmet had remained on, it may have avoided the head injury that she sustained”.

He said it was “unfortunate” that her drysuit, which had filled with water, was not available for inspection by the HSA or its experts.

The coroner said that “we don’t know what the outcome would have been” if the Kilkee D-class RIB had been launched, but Mr Kingston had established from drone footage that there was a window of 17 minutes.

“Ms Hassett, an experienced volunteer, felt they could have attempted a successful rescue,” he said, and he paid tribute to her presence of mind and that of Garda sergeant John Moloney in requisitioning a civilian vessel which rescued Ms Carway.

“This occurred within an emergency situation, with a lot of pressure on everyone involved,” he said. He also commended those who had recorded the drone footage.

The jury of four men and three women issued seven recommendations related to safety,equipment, training and implementation of previous reviews.

Condolences were expressed to the Lucas family by the coroner, Gardai, legal representatives of both sides and the HSA.

The jury at the Caitriona Lucas inquest made seven recommendations that:

  • Each Coast Guard station should take appropriate steps to ensure Irish Coast Guard volunteers are aware of relevant exclusions for Coast Guard vessels and where possible display same clearly at the base station; 
  • An immediate ongoing review of training of Coast Guard volunteers/staff should provide up-to-date training for capsize incidents;
  • An ongoing review should take place of suitability of all safety gear, including helmets, to ensure safety in operational conditions;
  • There should be “urgent” implementation/education of all lessons learned and recommendations of all reviews into Coast Guard incidents;
  • Measures should be taken to ensure that all Coast Guard vessels are fitted with voyage data recorders;
  • There should be establishment of an appropriate centralised safety management/portal for identified risk issues on a confidential basis;
  • And the Irish Coast Guard should consider ongoing training for the officer-in-charge (OIC) and deputy OIC “as appropriate” at units.

More in this section

War_map
Cookie Policy Privacy Policy Brand Safety FAQ Help Contact Us Terms and Conditions

© Examiner Echo Group Limited