An insurance company is suing the owner of an 18th-century replica sailing ship that sank during Superstorm Sandy.
Newsday reported Friday that Acadia Insurance Co. sued Robert Hansen this month. The suit seeks to recoup $5 million in payouts after the HMS Bounty sank off North Carolina in 2012.
One of the 16 crew members died. The captain was never found.
The National Transportation Safety Board noted some problems with the 50-year-old ship but largely faulted the captain for sailing into the storm’s path.
Acadia says the Setauket, New York-based Hansen didn’t disclose leaky areas and other “unseaworthy conditions,” so his insurance contract should be voided.
Hansen’s attorney hasn’t immediately responded to an email Friday night.
The three-masted ship was built for the 1962 film “Mutiny on the Bounty.”
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
Trump Will Ask Supreme Court to Revive $475 Million CNN Suit
CSU Adjusts Atlantic Hurricane Season Forecast Due to Emerging El Niño
Jefferies Sued by Fund Investors Alleging Water Firm Fraud
Ex-Shield AI Worker Sues Over ‘Profane, Egregious’ Acts by Senior Official