Retrieving Titanic’s radio: US to challenge expedition, says can damage the iconic shipwreck

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Updated: Jun 11, 2020 1:09 PM

The appeals court in Richmond has taken an interest in cases involving the nations agreements with foreign countries as well as cases concerning the disturbance of grave sites, he said.

File image: AP)

The US government will try to stop a companys planned salvage mission to retrieve the Titanics wireless telegraph machine arguing the expedition would break federal law and a pact with Britain to leave the iconic shipwreck undisturbed.

US attorneys filed a legal challenge before a federal judge in Norfolk Virginia late Monday The expedition is expected to begin by the end of August The Atlantabased salvage firm RMS Titanic Inc said it would exhibit the telegraph while telling the stories of the operators who broadcast the sinking ships distress calls.

The company plans to recover the radio equipment from a deck house near the Titanics grand staircase The mission could require an underwater vehicle to cut into the rapidly deteriorating roof if the submersible is unable to slip through a skylight. US attorneys argue the company cant do that They say federal law requires the firm to get authorization from the Secretary of Commerce before conducting salvage expeditions that would physically alter or disturb the wreck

The agreement with the United Kingdom they add regulates entry into the hull sections to prevent disturbances to the hull and other artifacts and any human remains. The international agreement calls for the Titanic to be recognized as a memorial to those men women and children who perished and whose remains should be given appropriate respect the governments filing states

The Titanic was traveling from England to New York when it struck an iceberg and sank in 1912 killing all but about 700 of the 2208 passengers and crew Distress calls to other ships that were made by the Marconi wireless telegraph machine are credited with helping to save hundreds of people on lifeboats.

The US filed its arguments with the same federal judge who ruled last month that the salvage firm could dive nearly 25 miles 4 kilometers to recover the telegraph equipment The Titanic wreck site sits on the floor of the North Atlantic about about 400 miles 645 kilometers off Newfoundland Canada In May U S District Judge Rebecca Beach Smith agreed with the salvage firm that the telegraph is historically important and could soon disappear within the rapidly decaying wreck Smith wrote that recovering the telegraph would contribute to preserving the legacy of the ship and its passengers.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration represents the publics interest in the shipwreck NOAA has operated for years as a friend of the court Its now seeking to be a party to the salvage case  NOAAs legal challenge escalates a simmering debate over who can approve salvage missions to the worlds most famous shipwreck. The federal agency argues that federal laws and international agreements should apply to the wreckage The salvage firm disagrees claiming that hundreds of years of maritime law give authority to the court in Norfolk

NOAA seeks to jettison the law of the sea developed over centuries the company argued in legal filings earlier this year. George Rutherglen a law professor who teaches admiralty law at the University of Virginia said the case is likely far from over  Depending on how Judge Smith rules on NOAAs status as a party to the case Rutherglen said the US government could still try bringing its case to the 4th US Circuit Court of Appeals

The appeals court in Richmond has taken an interest in cases involving the nations agreements with foreign countries as well as cases concerning the disturbance of grave sites he said.  I would be surprised if the 4th Circuit doesnt pay some attention to what the United States says Rutherglen said.  Rutherglen also said that granting the firms current request could open the door to further requests to salvage inside the hull. “The salvors have a lot of money tied up in this wreck he said Their natural incentive is to try to recover as many artifacts as they ethically can.”

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