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Former OceanGate Employee Speaks Out About What Really Happened To Titan Submersible That Imploded While Visiting The Titanic Wreckage Site

July 19. 2023

Titan (short for Titanic)

On June 18, 2023 the Titan submersible, carrying five people, made a descent to visit the wreckage site of the famed Titanic ship. The Titan submersible was reported missing hours later. One June 19, 2023 the U.S. Coast Guard began an intense search for the submersible, with the assistance of international counterparts from nations such as Canada and France.

My tweet on Twitter.com

On June 20, 2023 I wrote about the incident in a time stamped tweet on Twitter, in which I stated, "#Oceangate sub didn't have safety measures. It has veered off course. They are at the bottom of the sea dying. They are losing their minds in the darkness. Why was there no blackbox in the vessel." 2-days later on June 22, 2023 the U.S. Coast Guard announced they found the wreckage of the Titan submersible. As I predicted days prior to the Titan being located, it had indeed veered off course, as the Coast Guard announced it was discovered 1,600 feet away from the Titanic wreckage site.

The U.S. Coast Guard found the wreckage site of the Titan at the bottom of the ocean, which confirms what I'd stated days prior on Twitter when I wrote, "They are at the bottom of the sea dying." It is now believed the sub descended to the bottom of the sea and then imploded, killing all five passengers onboard. At least they did not suffocate to death, as people were concerned and counting the days to when the Titan would run out of oxygen, which would have been June 22, 2023, which is ironically the day the submersible wreckage was discovered.

The five occupants of the Titan

There are reports the Titan tried to drop its weight in an attempt to ascend back to the surface. This means the occupants of the submersible knew something had gone wrong, just as I stated in my tweet, "They are losing their minds in the darkness." There is a mechanism in place on such submersibles that once it hits the floor of the ocean in distress, it automatically drops its weight and tries to ascend back to the surface. However, things can go wrong that can prevent it from dropping its weight and rising back to the surface, such as being stuck at the bottom of the ocean on the sea floor.

Subsequent investigations reveal the Titan had no security measures in place, which also confirms my tweet days prior when I stated, "#Oceangate sub didn't have safety measures." This incident was such a waste of human life. Five bright minds gone because the CEO of Oceangate, Stockton Rush, who died in the tragedy, took such an extraordinarily terrible risk with five lives. This was pure recklessness. And a 19-year-old boy lost his life. This should not have happened. My condolences to their families.

STORY SOURCE

A former OceanGate advisor said the Titanic submersible tried to reach the surface before it imploded, indicating those on board knew something had gone wrong

Sun, July 2, 2023 at 11:50 PM EDT - A former OceanGate advisor said the Titan sub dropped its weights before it imploded on June 18. Rob McCallum told The New Yorker that it tried to ascend before losing contact with its mother ship. McCallum is at least the second person to say OceanGate tried aborting the dive before disaster hit.

A former OceanGate advisor said the Titan submersible dropped its ballast and tried to ascend moments before going missing, likely meaning that the five people inside were already aborting the dive when it imploded. Rob McCallum, an expedition consultant who previously gave OceanGate advice on marketing and logistics, told The New Yorker that he received early reports about the Titan's fateful final dive.

"The report that I got immediately after the event — long before they were overdue — was that the sub was approaching thirty-five hundred meters," he told the New Yorker's Ben Taub. McCallum said the submersible had "dropped weights," which meant the dive was aborted, and then lost communication with its mother ship.

McCallum is the cofounder of the adventure-expedition company EYOS Expeditions. He's previously led dives to the Titanic's shipwreck and other deep-sea spots. But he used submarines designed to reach depths of 19,000 feet and a submersible that, unlike OceanGate's, was approved to reach extreme depths by the marine-classification society DNV.

He was in regular contact with OceanGate CEO Stockton Rush at one point and visited OceanGate's workshop, per the New Yorker. McCallum is at least the second person to publicly state that the Titan likely tried to ascend before it imploded.

James Cameron, a deep-sea expert who directed the "Titanic," also told ABC News on June 24 that he heard from "inside the community" that the Titan had dropped its weights and that those on board were "trying to manage an emergency."...

https://currently.att.yahoo.com

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