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Severely Hypothermic Man Rescued After Clinging To Boat For 13 Hours
A 36-year-old Medford man spent 13 desperate hours clinging to the top of a 10-foot aluminum boat with half of his body submerged in near-freezing water before the U.S. Coast Guard found him and pulled him out of the frigid ocean after his vessel capsized in Nantucket Sound, officials said.
The frantic search for Arthur Moscufo began around 1:20 a.m. yesterday, when his worried girlfriend called the U.S. Coast Guard to report that he hadn’t returned home from a trip out on the Bass River earlier in the day, according to a release. Less than an hour later, the Coast Guard said a 42-foot rescue boat was dispatched from the agency’s Chatham station to search for Moscufo, which was soon joined by an MH-60 Jayhawk helicopter crew.
Harbormasters from Harwich, Yarmouth and Dennis and firefighters from Yarmouth and Hyannis also assisted with the search, officials said.
At about 4 a.m., the Jayhawk helicopter crew spotted Moscufo “clinging to the hull of his capsized boat” about 21⁄2 miles southwest of the Bass River in Nantucket Sound wearing a life jacket, shirt, jeans and sneakers, according to the release. The Coast Guard rescue boat quickly responded to the scene, pulled Moscufo from the 37-degree water and rendered emergency first aid before he was rushed by ambulance to nearby Cape Cod Hospital. A hospital spokeswoman said Moscufo was in stable condition and recovering last night.
Calls to Moscufo’s family members were unreturned last night.
In a statement, a Coast Guard official said Moscufo’s nearly fatal ordeal should serve as a warning to other boaters who are thinking of venturing out this winter.
“I cannot stress enough the importance of checking the water temperature before going on the water in the winter months,” Operations Specialist 2nd class Michelle Crocker, of Sector Southeastern New England, said in a statement, adding that “support provided by our interagency partners from the Cape Cod Mutual Response System ensured the successful outcome of this overdue case.”
Severely Hypothermic Man Rescued After Clinging To Boat For 13 Hours
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A 36-year-old Medford man spent 13 desperate hours clinging to the top of a 10-foot aluminum boat with half of his body submerged in near-freezing water before the U.S. Coast Guard found him and pulled him out of the frigid ocean after his vessel capsized in Nantucket Sound, officials said.
The frantic search for Arthur Moscufo began around 1:20 a.m. yesterday, when his worried girlfriend called the U.S. Coast Guard to report that he hadn’t returned home from a trip out on the Bass River earlier in the day, according to a release. Less than an hour later, the Coast Guard said a 42-foot rescue boat was dispatched from the agency’s Chatham station to search for Moscufo, which was soon joined by an MH-60 Jayhawk helicopter crew.
Harbormasters from Harwich, Yarmouth and Dennis and firefighters from Yarmouth and Hyannis also assisted with the search, officials said.
At about 4 a.m., the Jayhawk helicopter crew spotted Moscufo “clinging to the hull of his capsized boat” about 21⁄2 miles southwest of the Bass River in Nantucket Sound wearing a life jacket, shirt, jeans and sneakers, according to the release. The Coast Guard rescue boat quickly responded to the scene, pulled Moscufo from the 37-degree water and rendered emergency first aid before he was rushed by ambulance to nearby Cape Cod Hospital. A hospital spokeswoman said Moscufo was in stable condition and recovering last night.
Calls to Moscufo’s family members were unreturned last night.
In a statement, a Coast Guard official said Moscufo’s nearly fatal ordeal should serve as a warning to other boaters who are thinking of venturing out this winter.
“I cannot stress enough the importance of checking the water temperature before going on the water in the winter months,” Operations Specialist 2nd class Michelle Crocker, of Sector Southeastern New England, said in a statement, adding that “support provided by our interagency partners from the Cape Cod Mutual Response System ensured the successful outcome of this overdue case.”
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