RCMP to use sonar in effort to locate missing Nova Scotia fishermen
Scallop dragger, 5 crew members have been missing for week
An underwater recovery team with Nova Scotia RCMPplans to use sonar to explore parts of the Bay of Fundy where a fishing boat and its crew disappeared last week.
The Chief William Saulis, a scallop dragger that was based out of Yarmouth, N.S., was last heard from early on the morning of Dec. 15 when it was heading toward Digby after a week-long fishing expedition.
In a news releaseTuesday, RCMP said the underwater recovery team left port in Digbyin the morning but soon encountered poor conditions, including swells over three metres,and turned back. The team plans to try again when safe to do so.
RCMP spokesperson Sgt. Andrew Joyce said the goal is to locate the vessel.
An aerial search was also planned for Tuesday but was cancelled because of a low ceiling.
A variety of search efforts have been made, off and on, since the Chief William Saulissent out itsemergency beaconnear Delaps Coveshortly before 6 a.m. on Dec. 15. Twolife-rafts washed ashore, empty, later that morning.
By nightfall, search-and-rescue crews had announced they'd found thebody of one crew member, Newfoundland's Michael Drake.
The other five members of the crew Aaron Cogswell, Leonard Gabriel, Dan Forbes, EugeneFrancisand Charles Roberts, the captain of the vessel have not been found.
The Transportation Safety Board of Canada says the boatsank, although the cause remains unclear. After a 36-hour search and rescue mission by theMaritime Joint Rescue Co-ordination Centre, RCMP took over the case as a recovery mission and missing persons investigation.
The police force searched by helicopter over the weekend and didn'trecover anything.With no helicopter available Monday, the search was paused.