Ohio Billionaire To Take Deep Sea Submersible To Titanic To Prove It’s Safe After OceanGate Implosion

An Ohio billionaire is planning on taking a deep sea submersible to the bottom of the ocean floor in the northern Atlantic to tour the wreckage of the Titanic just one year after another submersible imploded at the site.

Real estate investor Larry Connor said that he will be making the voyage in a two-person submersible — more than 12,000 feet deep — with Triton Submarines co-founder Patrick Lahey.

Lahey, speaking about Connor, told The Wall Street Journal: “We had a client, a wonderful man. He called me up and said, ‘You know, what we need to do is build a sub that can dive to [Titanic-level depths] repeatedly and safely and demonstrate to the world that you guys can do that, and that Titan was a contraption.'”

Connor told the Journal that he wants to “show people worldwide that while the ocean is extremely powerful, it can be wonderful and enjoyable and really kind of life-changing if you go about it the right way.”

“Patrick has been thinking about and designing this for over a decade,” Connor continued. “But we didn’t have the materials and technology. You couldn’t have built this sub five years ago.”

The two will make the journey in a $20 million submersible, the Triton 4000/2 Abyssal Explorer, which can dive to a depth of 4,000 meters. The Titanic rests at the 3,800 meters below the ocean’s surface.

Last June, a submersible from OceanGate imploded on its way to the bottom of the ocean floor to view the Titanic. All five people on board — including OceanGate’s CEO, Stockton Rush — were killed within a fraction of second due to the extreme pressures that exist at that depth.

David Lochridge, a submersible pilot and engineer who had served in Great Britain’s Royal Navy and worked all over the world, had expressed reservations about the design and build of OceanGate’s submersible, but his concerns were reportedly dismissed. He found numerous problems with the vessel, including the carbon-fiber hull having “very visible signs of delamination and porosity,” the glue for ballast bags coming off, sealing faces with errant plunge holes, and O-ring grooves whose design was not standard, among many others. When Lochridge brought up his concerns at a company meeting, he was fired.

“I would consider myself pretty ballsy when it comes to doing things that are dangerous, but that sub is an accident waiting to happen,” Lochridge wrote to Rob McCallum, who co-founded a company called Eyos Expeditions and had taken tourists to the Titanic years before. “There’s no way on earth you could have paid me to dive the thing. … I don’t want to be seen as a Tattle tale but I’m so worried he kills himself and others in the quest to boost his ego.”

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OceanGate’s director of finance and administration said in the interview that she could not work for Rush, and so she quit as soon as she found another job.

“I could not work for Stockton,” she said, claiming that he had asked her to take over as chief submersible pilot. “I did not trust him. It freaked me out that he would want me to be head pilot, since my background is in accounting.” She noted that several of the engineers for the company were in their late teens and early twenties.

Trump’s Defense Targets Michael Cohen In Closing Arguments For New York Hush-Money Trial

Former President Donald Trump’s legal team began giving final arguments to a Manhattan jury on Tuesday morning as the trial over alleged hush-money payments comes to a close. 

Trump’s defense argued that government prosecutors had presented no evidence of a criminal conspiracy, largely dependent on unreliable testimony from ex-Trump lawyer Michael Cohen. Trump faces 34 counts of falsifying business records over alleged payments to Stormy Daniels and Karen McDougal.

During his testimony earlier in the trial, Cohen admitted that he secretly recorded Trump and that he stole tens of thousands of dollars from the Trump Organization.

“You cannot convict President Trump,” Trump lawyer Todd Blanche said. “You cannot convict President Trump of any crime beyond a reasonable doubt based on the words of Michael Cohen.”

Blanche added that the secret recording Cohen made did not actually show Trump discussing payments to McDougal, as the prosecution had argued. “You don’t know about the integrity of this file and this recording,” he told the jury. 

The lawyer also argued that Cohen did not tell Trump about a $130,000 payment to Daniels.

“There’s no way that you can find that President Trump knew about this payment at the time it was made without believing the words of Michael Cohen, period. And you cannot — you cannot — believe his words,” Blanche said. 

Blanche also argued that the government was trying to create a criminal conspiracy over documents filed in 2017 when the alleged conspiracy was supposed to aid his 2016 presidential campaign. 

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“The charges relate to documents in 2017, and the government wants you to believe that President Trump did these things with his records to conceal efforts to promote his successful candidacy in 2016, the year before,” Blanche said “Every campaign in this country is a conspiracy to promote a candidate, a group of people working together to help somebody win. You have to find that this effort was done by unlawful means.”

Trump, who has said that the charges brought against him are an attempt to interfere with his 2024 presidential campaign, has been limited in speaking out about the trial due to a gag order placed on him by Judge Juan Merchan. 

In a Truth Social post on Monday, Trump called the gag order placed on him illegal and unconstitutional and said the whole prosecution was “the Biden White House at work.”

The Biden campaign held a press event with actor Robert De Niro outside the courthouse on Tuesday, during which the actor railed against the former president.

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