Florida Keys

Two dead in water off the Florida Keys, and Coast Guard searching for more people

The Coast Guard said it and other agencies responded to multiple reports of people in the water off the Lower Florida Keys Friday, Aug. 5, 2022.
The Coast Guard said it and other agencies responded to multiple reports of people in the water off the Lower Florida Keys Friday, Aug. 5, 2022. TNS

The U.S. Coast Guard said the bodies of two people who were attempting to migrate to South Florida have been recovered from the ocean water off the Florida Keys after a vessel capsized Friday morning.

The agency said that eight people have been rescued, and the search continues for five more people. Six of the survivors required medical attention, according to the Coast Guard.

In total, 15 people were on board the migrant boat that capsized 14 miles south of Sugarloaf Key in the Lower Keys, said Petty Officer Nicole Groll, a Coast Guard spokeswoman.

Officers with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission recovered the two bodies and turned them over to the Monroe County Medical Examiner’s Office, Groll said.

Groll declined Friday evening to disclose the people’s country of origin, but the Keys had seen a significant increase in the number of Cuban migrants arriving in the island chain all week.

“Our search continues for others that may have survived this tragic incident. This situation highlights the risks these migrants face as they attempt to enter the United States illegally by sea,” Rear Adm. Brendan McPherson, commander of the Coast Guard’s Seventh District, said in a statement. “The Florida Straits and its approaches can be hazardous for even the best trained and equipped mariners. For people illegally migrating aboard unseaworthy or overloaded boats and homemade rafts, who lack basic lifesaving equipment like life jackets, those risks can often prove deadly.”

As many as 130 people from Cuba arrived in various locations up and down the island chain between Thursday and Friday, said Adam Hoffner, division chief of U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s Miami operations.

Last weekend, more than 60 Cubans landed in separate incidents, according to the Border Patrol.

The ramp-up in landings is occurring during an already busy time for Border Patrol, Coast Guard and Customs crews patrolling the Florida Straits and the Caribbean. Since October, the Coast Guard has stopped more than 3,739 Cubans and 6,534 Haitians at sea who were trying to reach South Florida. Almost all have been returned to their homelands.

Both nations are experiencing deteriorating economic and political conditions, and Haiti is going through a period of rampant gang violence that has contributed to the largest maritime migration away from its shores since 2004.

The Coast Guard urged boaters in the Lower Keys to steer clear of its crews on the water, as well as those from FWC and U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s Air and Marine Operations, as the search continued for the missing migrants.

“Please be safe while transiting the area and give rescue crews space,” the agency said in a statement.

Friday’s tragedy in the Key occurs after several migrant voyages have turned deadly in Caribbean in recent months.

During a July 28 boat landing, more than 70 passengers had to swim to a tiny, uninhabited island called Isla de Mona, located in the waters between Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic. Five Haitian migrants drowned.

Only days before, 17 Haitian migrants, all but one female, died when their boat capsized in the middle of the night near New Providence, the most populated island in the Bahamas archipelago. At least one of the deceased was pregnant and another was a young girl, Bahamian authorities said. The boat was believed to be en route to Miami.

In May, another boat overturned near Puerto Rico’s western coasts, resulting in the deaths of 11 Haitian women. The victims were laid to rest in San Juan in June during funerary rites attended by relatives, politicians, journalists and the general public.

This story was originally published August 5, 2022 at 1:55 PM.

David Goodhue
Miami Herald
David Goodhue covers the Florida Keys and South Florida for FLKeysNews.com and the Miami Herald. Before joining the Herald, he covered Congress, the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of Energy in Washington, D.C. He is a graduate of the University of Delaware. 
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