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HomeCruiseWoman's 'Suspicious Death' on Cruise Ship Sparks FBI Investigation

Woman’s ‘Suspicious Death’ on Cruise Ship Sparks FBI Investigation

The FBI is reportedly investigating the death of a woman aboard a cruise ship travelling from the Bahamas to Charleston, South Carolina.
According to WCSC News, citing the local FBI Columbia field office, agents with the Evidence Response Team boarded the vessel when it made port in the U.S. on March 4 to process the woman’s room.
It said crew members on the Carnival Sunshine were alerted to the unresponsive woman on February 27, but despite attempting to resuscitate her, she was pronounced dead at the scene.
WCSC reported that the incident was isolated, and that officials believed there was no further threat to other passengers.
Kevin Wheeler, spokesperson for the Columbia field office, told the news station that the FBI “investigates certain crimes on the high seas, as well as suspicious deaths of U.S. persons.” Newsweek has contacted Wheeler for further comment.
The Carnival Sunshine was launched in 1996, and was once the world’s largest passenger vessel. It has been home-ported in Charleston since May 2019.
The cruise liner departed Charleston in the late afternoon on Saturday, before returning to the Bahamas on Tuesday, according to ship tracker CruiseMapper. It is due to return to Charleston on Thursday.
A spokesperson for the owner, Carnival, told WCSC that the deceased woman and her husband were disembarked in Nassau, the capital of the Bahamas, where authorities were investigating the incident and conducting an autopsy.
CruiseMapper tracking shows the ship departed from Charleston on February 27, at around 4 p.m. ET, and arrived in Nassau on March 1.
The Carnival spokesperson said the company was “fully cooperating” with the investigation. Newsweek has reached out for comment.
Between 2000 and 2019, there were 623 reported deaths on cruise liners, 89 percent of which were passengers, according to a 2020 study in the International Journal of Travel Medicine and Global Health. Some 61 percent of passenger deaths were of U.S. citizens.
It found that the most common reasons for passenger deaths were falls—either overboard or onto another deck—as well as cardiac arrests and suicides. Meanwhile, suicide, murder and falls were the leading causes of crew deaths.
The study found that the largest proportion of deaths in the time period, 29 percent, occurred on Carnival cruise liners.
The FBI has jurisdiction to investigate potential crimes and suspicious deaths when the ship is U.S. owned, as the Carnival Sunshine is, and pertains to an American citizen, it has previously stated. It is also permitted to investigate if the ship is in U.S. waters, or if it was departing or arriving in an American port.
As the Carnival Sunshine carries a Bahamanian flag, the FBI is required to cooperate with the local authorities on the case.

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