Aaron Bunch Journalist with Australian Associated Press | Collection of published work | + 61 484 008 119 | abunch@aap.com.au

Aaron Bunch
Trawler’s emergency hatch welded shut

The FV Cassandra’s former manager, Dennis Markwell, used an unqualified boatbuilder to refit the trawler.

A Queensland inquest into the deaths of two fishermen on a trawler that sank in rough seas has heard the vessel had an out-of-date safety system.

March 19, 2019

When FV Cassandra sank, killing the two men aboard three years ago, it had a skipper who didn’t know the notoriously rough seas, its forward escape hatch welded shut and an out-of-date safety system.

The boat’s former manager, Dennis Markwell, has painted a bleak picture of the prawn trawling operation onboard FV Cassandra at a Queensland inquest into the two deaths three years ago.

The trawler overturned and sank off the northeastern tip of Fraser Island, killing skipper Matt Roberts, 61, and crewman David Chivers, 36, on April 4, 2016.

Their bodies have never been found.

Mr Markwell, now retired, told counsel assisting the coroner, John Aberdeen, he wouldn’t fish in the area where the Cassandra sank to a depth of 47 metres because of rough currents.

The inquest in Gladstone heard he was responsible for the boat’s operation and oversaw its refit at Tin Can Bay with unqualified boatbuilder Stephen Armitage months before the skipper started work.

Despite managing the boat and being paid a percentage of the catch by its owner, Paddockmist Pty Ltd, Mr Markwell denied being responsible for safety training on the vessel.

“I don’t think they train them in the prawning industry,” he said

However, Mr Markwell was responsible for welding shut the forward hatch to the boat’s sleeping quarters because “it was rusting and leaking”.

“When I bought the boat it didn’t even work,” he said.

He told the inquest he didn’t know if the sudden impact of water rushing through the wheelhouse when the boat rolled could have pushed the crew into the sleeping quarters.

Nor did he know if the emergency hatch, if working, could have acted as an emergency exit for the pair.

“I don’t want to think about those things,” the lifelong fisherman said.

Huge swells prevented rescuers from reaching the stricken vessel when it rolled 10 kilometres off Waddy Point about 3am.

Neither of the vessel’s two emergency radio beacons were activated.

The Cassandra is thought to have tipped over after one of its four huge prawn nets caught on the seafloor.

The boat’s safety management system had no instructions on how to deal with “hookups” and the only copy was kept in a drawer aboard the boat despite a Marine Safety Queensland finding it was incomplete and ordering it be upgraded just a year earlier.

“(They wanted) more details about everything,” he said.

The work order, which also included improvements to the life rafts and life jackets, was signed off as complete by another skipper, Vivian Armitage, the boat’s owner had earlier purchased the Cassandra’s fishing license from, the court heard.

The inquest began on Tuesday hearing Mr Aberdeen say that lifesaving equipment was found tangled in rigging and failed to deploy.

An underwater video camera showed life rafts still attached to the boat.

They are supposed to automatically launch when the boat capsizes.

The inquest continues on Wednesday.

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