Crime Weekly - S3 Ep324: OceanGate: A Rush to Break the Rules (Part 3)
Episode Date: July 25, 2025It was marketed as a voyage for the boldest among us - a ticket to the bottom of the world, where only a handful of humans had ever dared to go. But what began as a high-tech adventure turned into an ...unthinkable tragedy, and at the center of it all was one man: Stockton Rush. He called it innovation. Critics called it recklessness. And five people would pay the ultimate price. In this series, we’re diving deep into the story behind the Titan submersible disaster. From the birth of OceanGate and Stockton Rush’s obsession with rewriting the rules of deep-sea exploration, to ignored warnings, missing safety certifications, and a catastrophic implosion that sent shockwaves across the globe. Who was Stockton Rush- visionary pioneer or dangerous idealist? What happened in the final hours of the Titan’s descent? And how did a vessel built for discovery become a tomb in the dark silence of the Atlantic? This is not just a story about engineering failure; it’s a story about ego, ambition, and the fatal cost of a man with a god complex who gambled with human lives in the name of legacy. We're coming to CrimeCon Denver! Use our code CRIMEWEEKLY for 10% off your tickets! https://www.crimecon.com/CC25 Try our coffee!! - www.CriminalCoffeeCo.com Become a Patreon member -- > https://www.patreon.com/CrimeWeekly Shop for your Crime Weekly gear here --> https://crimeweeklypodcast.com/shop Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/CrimeWeeklyPodcast Website: CrimeWeeklyPodcast.com Instagram: @CrimeWeeklyPod Twitter: @CrimeWeeklyPod Facebook: @CrimeWeeklyPod ADS: 1. https://www.Smalls.com/CrimeWeekly - Get 60% off your first Smalls order PLUS free shipping! 2. https://www.HelixSleep.com/CrimeWeekly - Get 27% off sitewide! 3. https://www.PDSDebt.com/CrimeWeekly - Get your FREE debt assessment today! 4. https://www.EatIQBAR.com - Text WEEKLY to 64000 for 20% off ALL IQBAR products and FREE shipping!
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Hello everybody. Welcome back to Crime Weekly, I'm Stephanie Harlow.
And I'm Derek Lavasser.
We are diving right into the third and final part of the Titan submersible disaster.
We're going to finish up with what happened, we're going to talk about the actual fateful
day that the Titan did implode, and we're going to give our final thoughts.
And there's actually some really interesting things.
I found some videos that I had never known about before most likely because the content creator that made these videos
I believe is from Mexico and they're all in
Spanish so they just didn't pop up when I was looking for things
But I found some footage in in one of these videos that just stunned me. Yeah, you called me about it. You're like Derek
Yeah, what I just found?
No, it's, I'm looking forward to tonight
because you didn't send me the footage, unfortunately.
You made me wait till today.
So now I have it.
I have not watched it yet.
And I am looking forward to getting into it
and wrapping this series up as well.
And also, if you didn't watch Crime Weekly News
or listen to Crime Weekly News,
congrats to the CrimeCon giveaway winner Jackie.
She has reached out to us.
She now has her passes.
But keep subscribing, keep turning your notifications on on Apple and Spotify.
We're giving away two more tickets.
We'll let you know when that goes live.
But I wouldn't wait.
I would go over there now, get it done so that you're submitted and we will be reviewing
it and picking another winner shortly.
Excited about it. Also, if you didn't watch Crime Weekly News, Derek and picking another winner shortly excited about it
Also, if you didn't watch crime weekly news Derek and I sort of chatted about yes
Amy Bradley Netflix documentary and I've always been interested in that case. I've told my subscribers
We've talked about that before how I've been wanting to talk about Amy Bradley and Derek covered Amy Bradley and detective perspective
And we already don't agree. Yeah, and yeah, and he was like we should do a deep dive and I was like, let's get like
Let's get everyone's temperature.
So if you didn't watch Crime Weekly News
and you're watching this, let us know in the comments,
do you want us to do a deep dive on Amy Bradley?
Because I do, and so does Derek.
Yeah, I was more surface level.
It's about an hour episode.
Ours will be like probably a five or six part series.
So one hour versus 14 hours.
Yeah.
It's gonna be a little different.
Exciting, yeah. All right going to be a little different. Exciting.
Yeah.
All right.
So let's dive in.
Last time and last episode, we followed Ocean Gate's
reckless trajectory as founder Stockton Rush ignored warnings
from industry veterans and fired his director
of marine operations, David Lockridge,
after Lockridge refused to sign off
on the Titans' final design, citing
over two dozen critical safety concerns from flammable materials inside the cabin to missing bolts and unexplained damage
in the carbon fiber hull. Lockridge took his complaints to OSHA, but Rush countered with
a lawsuit that effectively silenced him. While experts like deep-sea explorer Rob McCallum
and MTS chairman Will Conan urged Rush to stop. Rush dismissed their concerns as baseless
cries from gatekeepers clinging to an outdated industry. One of Titan's most controversial
safety systems was an acoustic monitoring device that listened for the sounds of the
hull failing, essentially relying on the creaks and pops of micro-buckling as a warning sign,
but as pressure testing moved forward, the danger became undeniable.
The sub nearly broke apart in shallow water.
At depth, the hull warped far more than engineers had predicted, and finally, under flashlight
inspection, came the most chilling discovery of all, a visible crack, followed by the revelation
that 11 square feet of Titan's carbon fiber hull had delaminated, peeling apart like a
ruptured shell.
The warning signs weren't just audible anymore,
they were visible and catastrophic.
So in 2020, numerous media outlets reported
that Ocean Gate would begin its first tourist dives
to the Titanic the following year.
The company had announced that it had secured
$18 million in equity financing.
And this means that Ocean Gate raised money
by selling ownership shares
So instead of borrowing money that they would have to pay back
They sold a portion of ownership to individuals and these investors then became
Shareholders who would benefit if the company grew or if it was sold later on but they also assumed a lot of risk if it failed
So Ocean Gates 18 million in equity financing
It looks like it came almost entirely
from private inside investors,
meaning existing stakeholders, board members,
and associates of Stockton Rush
rather than public venture capitalists
or institutional backers.
According to an SEC filing at the time,
the investment was 100% insider funded
with no external firms participating.
OceanGate said that this funding would be used to rebuild the Titan Hall after earlier
structural concerns, as well as accelerate development of next-generation subs like Cyclops
3 and 4.
These are submersibles that Stockton Rush claimed would be capable of entering even
deeper into the ocean, and also a general expansion OceanGate's expedition business, their tourism,
where their money came from, basically.
Now, in February of 2020,
NASA announced its partnership with OceanGate
to develop and manufacture
new carbon fiber pressure vessels.
They also said they were planning to play a role
in building and testing the new carbon fiber hull for Titan.
After the submersible implosion,
NASA quickly clarified that they had not been
as hands-on as they had initially planned, stating that the COVID-19 pandemic had prevented
them from fulfilling this intent. So basically, they never touched anything. They never built
anything. They simply consulted. Justin Jackson, who was the NASA materials engineer, testified that NASA had provided remote consultations
throughout the build of Titan's 1-3rd scale model,
but they didn't do any manufacturing or testing
of the cylinders, the hull.
He also said that at one point,
NASA declined to allow OceanGate
to use their name in a press release
because the language that OceanGate wanted to use
sounded more like an endorsement, and NASA was like was like no we haven't endorsed this like we were
planning to be more hands-on but with the pandemic we can't be and so we we
don't know actually if we would be behind this carbon fiber haul and so we
don't want you guys to talk about it like we are even though of course Stockton
Rush always threw NASA around he He always threw Boeing around.
Anything that would give him legitimacy.
Think about how much credibility that gives you.
They're sending spaceships up to the moon.
I mean, yeah.
And NASA's like, don't put our name on it.
I think it is funny though that Stockton Rush
is throwing around NASA, Boeing, all of these things
during all of this time.
But then as soon as the implosion happened,
NASA and Boeing came out and they were like, listen, we were not as involved as he made it
seem. And it's like, well, why did you let him make it seem like that then? So what I, and I don't
have any proof of this, but what I would think, and it sounds like from the documentary and what
we're hearing that there were points where Boeing and NASA may have consulted on certain things and
it could have been as informal as an email or a phone call and in many of those consultations they might not have agreed with what they were
doing.
But at the point before it's happening, before this implosion happens, NASA and Boeing are
thinking yeah, we're being contracted to do certain things.
It sounds like they were being paid because I remember in the documentary there was a
Boeing representative who said, I think they just didn't go with us because maybe it was too expensive. You know,
we were just, we were very expensive. So they were definitely charging them.
Well they had to sell them the carbon fiber, right? Which apparently,
allegedly some,
some employees of OceanGate have said that carbon fiber was
way past its prime. Like it was past its shelf life,
which is why Boeing had sold it to Ocean Gate
for a cheaper price.
That wouldn't seem completely unreasonable to me.
And then as far as Boeing not stepping out
and saying something during the Ocean Gate marketing
and advertising, like, oh, we're not involved,
because they were, they were,
it's a very vague and loosely used phrase, but Boeing's like, yeah, well, technically they're not involved because they were they were so it's a very vague and loosely used phrase
But Boeing's like yeah, well, technically they're not wrong. We are somewhat involved
However, like you pointed out as soon as the implosion happens like any business is gonna do
They're gonna separate themselves as far as they can from this company because they know no pun intended
It's a sinking ship, right?
like it's going down and they don't want to be attached to it
because obviously this is a huge tragedy
and they don't want it associated with their names,
either Boeing or NASA.
Yeah, but here's my thing.
Like obviously the whole expired carbon fiber thing
is like strictly word of mouth.
Some employees at Ocean Gate had said that
and I mean, it kind of makes sense
considering what happened,
but if it's true,
why did Boeing sell OceanGate carbon fiber
that was past its shelf date knowing
what they were building it for,
what they were using it for, what they were building?
Can I play Boeing defense attorney right now?
So Boeing has their carbon fiber that they're using
in their airplanes or spaceships,
whatever they're doing, right?
And they have created tests when they use smaller scale models to test the tolerances to make sure that the carbon
fiber they're using will live up to the environment or the applications they're using it for.
They're doing the work, they're doing the testing and getting good results before putting
people inside of it. Boeing is saying, Hey, listen, this carbon fiber is past the date of what we could use it for,
for our applications. It won't last. However, we'll sell you the carbon fiber.
We're going to be able to recuperate some of the money for the carbon fiber that
we cannot use.
It's on you to do the testing to make sure that this carbon fiber in its current
state will live up to the means that you want to use it for that. It's going to,
it's going to be applicable to whatever environment you're going to put it in
where it's going to, it's going to survive. That's not our responsibility.
So we'll sell it to you if you think it can work,
but it's your responsibility to do the test.
And you've laid it out very clearly over the last three parts,
these last three parts that the testing did not live up to it.
And that Ocean Gate saw that this carbon fiber would not survive. yet they still used it. So if I'm Boeing I'm
saying listen we gave you the product but it was your responsibility to make
sure that it would work because we're not a submersible company. We're an
airplane company. We put people we put things in the sky. We don't know what
you're doing down there. That was your responsibility. Alright so what you're
saying is if it's true which it could be not true if it's true. It's legally no issue
No, we're really a gray area
No, I don't even think so because listen you don't think it's morally a gray area if they knew that he was gonna bring paying
Passengers down in that submersible because here's here's my thing the airplanes have different tolerances that they yeah
So Boeing a responsible company company, is saying,
hey listen, we know it's not gonna work for us.
However, there are other applications
that we're not as familiar with,
where this carbon fiber may be more than fine
for what you're using it for.
We're not in your business, we're not doing it,
we're not sending a sub down to the Titanic.
So if we can sell you this stuff,
we have put a date on like carbon fiber and I'm no
by no means a carbon fiber expert, but I use carbon fiber in my 3D prints. Now certain prints
that I use need higher tolerances and maybe certain carbon fiber weaves wouldn't work for others, but
there's still a use case for that carbon fiber. It might be past the date for Boeing, but carbon
fiber doesn't necessarily expire, right? It can be in a vehicle for its entire life. It might be past the date for Boeing, but carbon fiber doesn't necessarily expire, right?
It can be in a vehicle for its entire life. It weakens though.
But we're talking about over time and exposed elements, it weakens.
Small amounts. So what Boeing is saying, Hey, listen,
we're going to sell it to you because you're telling us that even though it's
past our prime, it would still work for you. But listen, let it be known. We're not saying that
this is going to work for your sub or maybe they did that this is the big if right? Yeah, we don't
know. Now, if you showed me documentation or evidence that said Stockton Rush or one of his
team members said to Boeing, hey, listen, we know it's past your expiration date for airplanes,
but do you think this would work in a submarine that's gonna be going down 4,000 meters? And there's documentation
from Boeing saying, yeah it's gonna be more than fine, you're good to go. That's
a huge legal issue for them. All right, so here's the thing. The whole
like where did this carbon fiber come from is a huge mystery, which is crazy to
me because... Yeah, how the hell does that happen? The the Coast Guard did like this huge, very in depth investigation.
So Stockton Rush once told a journalist that he'd obtained the carbon fiber
at a big discount from Boeing, and he even admitted it was past its shelf life
for use in airplanes.
See what you said there?
What? Past the shelf life for use in airplanes, which I do.
If it's past the shelf life for use in airplanes, is past the shelf life for use in subm. Yeah. Which I do. If it's pass the shelf life for use in airplanes is pass the shelf life for use
in submersibles.
It's a pressurized cabin.
Which is, yes, exactly.
There's way more pressure.
I completely agree from the layman perspective, but that's the key phrase there.
Boeing said it's past their expiration for airplanes.
But listen, Boeing, they took a while to respond to this, but when they did,
they said we have no record of selling any composite materials
to Stockton Rush or Ocean Gate.
Stockton was getting his stuff from China or something.
So where was he getting it?
Now, we really don't know where, now listen,
I think Boeing, this is just allegedly, don't come from me,
Boeing could have potentially sold it.
And they're saying, hey, we have no record.
Maybe it was kind of an under the table sale, who knows?
Or Stockton Rush got his carbon fiber
from some like, bullshit place, yes.
He got it from Amazon Prime.
Not from Amazon Prime.
He got it from Amazon Prime.
I feel like there's records of that.
Like the Coast Guard would have found it.
You love a good conspiracy theory.
What if Stockton was going through back channels
at Boeing where there's someone on the lower level
who says hey
This carbon fiber is no good. They're gonna throw it in the trash. They're gonna throw it in the dumpster
I'm gonna throw it in the dumpster
If you want to pick it up, it'll be there and would that be the first time like something like that happened?
No, officially they might not have any record the higher-ups might be like we never sold them anything
unofficially
Stockton rush could have still gotten it from Boeing or from some random
Like you said maybe from China who knows if I had to guess and I could be wrong. I definitely could be wrong
I I would lean towards Stockton trying to give some credibility to the naysayers of this carbon fiber who were saying
Oh, it's no good and him saying I got it from Boeing. It's got to be good
But maybe he really wasn't getting it from Boeing.
But why?
But he was publicly saying he was before the implosion.
So at that point, was he saying he was getting the carbon fiber or working with them?
Carbon?
He said, he told a journalist, I got the carbon fiber from Boeing at a huge
discount and said, because it was past his shelf life.
Yeah.
So why would he say that publicly?
Don't you think at that point, Boeing would come out and be like, no, dude,
what are you talking about? But they didn't. agree they didn't so that's weird. That is
Very weird. So we know that they have to make a new hall, right because they've got all these issues
It got hit by lightning Stockton Rush was like the halls fine
Just some other issues, but the hall wasn't fine because then he goes in the shallow water never been fine
It's flow the halls never been fine
so they got to build a new one and that that's going to be the V2, the version two hall.
And the Titans version two hall was one of the most ambitious and ultimately most fatal
components ever built for Amanda Submersible.
Ocean Gate contracted Spencer Composites to manufacture the hall using a co-bonding method
that fused hundreds of layers of carbon fiber with titanium interface rings in a single
curing process.
The final design included 480 alternating layers, some wet wound in a hoop pattern,
others laid axially in pre-peg strips, all cured in a high-temperature autoclave over
the course of seven days.
To the untrained eye, it looked like cutting-edge innovation, but beneath the surface, literal
and figurative, serious flaws were already taking root. A later analysis by the National Transportation Safety
Board found wrinkles in the fiber layers, air pockets known as voids, signs of porosity,
and areas where the carbon fiber had begun to delaminate. This is the V2 haul. And that
meant the tightly compressed layers had started to separate. There were also rubbing features,
evidence that the bond between the carbon fiber and the titanium rings had degraded over time,
reducing the structure's ability to distribute pressure evenly. Now this
hull did pass pressure tests at the University of Maryland, but Ocean Gate
chose to use the old titanium rings from the damaged hull, the version 1, even
though there were proven fatigue issues because Stockton Rush was against
further delays and additional costs.
So after the hull was rebuilt, new metal lifting eyes were added to the titanium interface rings.
These are components that connected the carbon fiber cylinder to the end caps.
These were advertised by Ocean Gate as additional hoisting points for easy handling of the vessel. And a representative from the original ring manufacturer
had expressly advised Ocean Gate in 2017
that these titanium rings should only be lifted
using nylon straps, not rigid metal attachments,
writing, quote,
"'The titanium cannot take load slash tension,' end quote."
So bolted lifting eyes are gonna focus all the load
at one point.
And without careful engineering, this can cause the titanium ring to deform or crack under the subs roughly 23,000 pound weight.
Makes total sense.
It does. And these rings were actually bonded to the carbon fiber hall using epoxy,
which meant applying weight to the rings was going to transmit shear or peel stresses into the bond line, degrading it.
So they didn't, they, when we say hoisting point, we mean getting the submersible off
the support ship and then like onto the platform that's in the water and then once again into
the water.
So you have to hoist it onto the support ship.
Then you have to hoist it onto, down into the platform that's in the water.
So you're picking it up, putting it down, picking it up, putting it down several times.
That's a lot of pressure on those individual points. I mean, I'm working, we were talking about,
I'm renovating my house right now and I think about porcelain tile, right? And if I take my hand
and I put it on top of a piece of porcelain tile and I push down as hard as I can, nothing's going
to happen. But if I took a screwdriver and I put it on that tile and I applied the same pressure,
it's going to crack it because all that poundage, all that force is on that one little speck
of the top of that screwdriver hitting that one point on the tile which is going to cause
it to crack.
Now in this case, you're still applying the same methodology where you have these points
where these attachments have been added.
So all the weight of that submersible is now on those points instead of being dispersed throughout the nylon strap.
So you're going to have that flexing, you're going to have that cracking, you may have some carbon fibers
delaminate or even just stretch, whatever it could be.
The up and down is not going to be good for the overall integrity of the submersible and you would think
these engineers would have known that. Well, they weren't
they weren't even supposed to really use those at all.
At all. They wanted the pressure of the lifting and dropping or I shouldn't say dropping but lowering. They wanted it dispersed evenly
throughout the submersible not on those individual points. That makes
perfect sense to me because that happens in a lot of different applications. They shouldn't
have used it. So the lifting eyes were a recent addition to that haul. It wasn't on the V1 haul
and they were added for convenience to hoist tight in more easily. That meant, you know,
saving time with a single hook and cable rather than using a sling or a spreader bar which would
distribute the load more evenly. They should be using a sling or a spreader bar which would distribute
the load more evenly.
They should be using a sling,
that's what they had done before.
They didn't even put them in in a way
where it would like separate it from the hull,
they just bonded it right to the hull.
So all the pressure that the lifting rings
would be taking would be transmitted into the hull,
which is just bananas to me, it's bananas, but that's what they
did. So despite warnings, Ocean Gate kept the new lifting points on Titan, but there's no record of
them being structurally tested or verified by an analysis before Titan returned to service,
which it did in June of 2021. So basically the version one hall, it's scrapped. There's too
many issues, lightning strikes,
this, this and that, it's bad.
They built this new V2 hall.
They put the new things on them,
the bolting lifting eyes that they hadn't had before.
And then before returning it to service,
they did not have these things tested or analyzed by,
it doesn't even appear to, not even an outside party,
it doesn't even appear that their engineering team
did any tests with these.
So that's crazy.
And so they bring it back,
they put it back in the water, June of 2021,
multiple dives were conducted that year.
So Titan missions, for everybody who's unaware,
they're not just going out in the ocean for one day,
they're structured as multi-day expeditions.
Typically they lasted between eight and 10 days, with some time spent on Titan and most of it on the support ship,
the Polar Prince. And Stockton Rush knew that each attempt to reach the Titanic might not
succeed the first or second time, maybe due to weather, technical failures, ocean currents.
So extra time was baked into these expeditions to maximize the
odds that each mission specialist, aka paying customer, would get a chance to
dive and hopefully to view the Titanic wreck. So they're going out for like over
a week and the whole thing is, you know, the weather might not be good today or
maybe something on the submersible isn't up to par, we've got to fix it. So this
way everybody, all the mission specialists are there for an extended
period and they have the opportunity to go on multiple dives in Titan and
Hopefully get to the Titanic which is what was promised right because what happens if they don't get to the Titanic
Well, then Stockton rush is gonna have to refund them their money or give them a free trip on a future mission
Which is taking money out of his pocket now
We're gonna talk about some of these attempts
The first attempt was called mission one and it began on June 28th, 2021 with the polar prince arriving to a spot in
the ocean above the Titanic wreck on June 30th. Later, Ocean Gate would write on its blog that
during this mission, Titan had reached a depth of 1700 meters, which was nearly halfway to the depth
of the wreck. This is really the only time they're like bringing paying customers down too, right?
So they have never done that before but they're doing it now.
Oceangate also mentioned in their blog that only one dive occurred, which they claim took place on the sixth day out to sea.
But according to mission specialist Fred Hagen, who was on this mission, an earlier dive had taken place that Ocean K didn't advertise,
they didn't talk about on their blog, and when you hear his recollection of the dive, you'll see why.
According to Hagen, just days before his dive, there was an incident where Titan was being pulled onto the ramp,
and for some reason, the crane operator let it go a little prematurely and kind of abruptly,
and it caused Titan to slam down onto the deck
Well, we attempted to launch the Titan and we experienced some issues and when we they were pulling it back up onto the deck
I
Believe what happened was that we you know
It came up and the crane was pulling it up the ramp and it got to a point where it was see-sawing
and the crane was pulling it up the ramp. And it got to a point where it was sea-sulling.
There's the flat plane of the deck,
and then there's the angled plane of the ramp,
which is fairly steep, probably a little too steep.
But again, this was all experimental,
and we were feeling our way through it.
So it was teetering back and forth.
And then the crane operator let it go a little bit too abruptly so I would and it slammed down
on the deck with quite a bit of force. Now the complicating factor was that a
decision had been made to only install four of the 18 bolts and the 3,500 pound
titanium dome and that decision was made I was there when the decision was made. I was there when the decision was made. I was not, I did not articulate any opinions
one way or the other.
But the thought was that once the ship went,
or the Titan went to depth, that the pressure
would be so intense that you didn't need any bolts.
You wouldn't be able to pry it off with a jack.
So they were trying to minimize the time
it took to get the mission specialist out of the Titan
after the mission ended.
And that decision was made.
The problem was no one anticipated
that the platform was going to be dropped with such force.
And you're also in the North Atlantic,
so the ship's going up and down.
There's a lot of factors that combine together.
The force of the platform hitting the deck of the, was that the Horizon Arctic that you're,
the Horizon Arctic it basically sheared off several balls and they shot off like bullets
and the as you know the titanium dome fell off.
Yeah, it just overall, there's just so many points
of failure on this thing.
It's a death trap, literally.
Yeah, and I mean, this is the titanium dome,
which is the end cap, there's two on either end
of the carbon fiber hull.
And he said it dropped and hit the deck,
and then bolts were like shooting
out like bullets. Okay, which just as somebody who's standing there watching this, I'm concerned
because yeah, obviously it should, it probably hit the deck pretty hard. What kind of pressures are
you dealing with under the water though? Like if it can't hold up to being dropped on the deck,
do you really want it under 6000 psi of pressure?
And you think it's gonna hold up there?
And he also said something like, I forget,
and I wonder if I'm gonna have him say this
in the clip later, but he said that they only used
a small percentage of the bolts,
and this was intended to make it easier
to get the people on the Titan out
once they brought it back up to the surface,
so they didn't have as many bolts to undo
Which is yeah, it's all about convenience
The the economics of it the efficiency it doesn't feel like they were thinking about safety at all
Safety's at the bottom of the list. I don't even know if it's on the list at this point
Like I mean, it's on paper on the list, but it doesn't seem like they're putting a lot of thought into it
Yeah
so let's take a quick break and we're gonna come back because
seem like they're putting a lot of thought into it. Yeah, so let's take a quick break and we're going to come back because Fred Hagen has
more to say and he actually gets on the Titan even after this, which it's kind of like,
I don't know if you have anybody to blame but yourself at that point.
I don't know.
Even me, the adventurer, I'm not doing that.
Yeah, exactly.
Let's take a quick break.
We'll be right back.
So I don't have a cat anymore because when I was pregnant I became suddenly
allergic to cats and the cat that I had at the time Rascal my OG I love her I
actually had to give her to my mom because I just I couldn't do it anymore
but I go over and visit Rascal all the time when I'm packed with allergy
medication and I love that cat and our next partner has made a huge
difference for the most important cat in my life, which is Rascal. And if you're a cat person,
you get it. You love them. They tolerate you and they will absolutely throw up on your favorite
sweater if you feed them the wrong thing. And that's why I had my mom switch to smalls. This
is cat food made with real fresh ingredients that are good enough to go in your fridge and honestly, Rascal used
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Okay, we're back. So Fred Hagen said after this little, you know,
little big issue with the bolts coming out
and the end caps just falling off,
Titan was not supposed to take any mission specialists down
for its next dive because of that incident.
So they weren't bringing any paying customers down.
But Hagen was like, well, I told Stockton Rush,
like we had agreed I was gonna be on the first dive.
And so I wanted to be there.
So he insisted and Stockton Rush said, okay,
which I don't understand.
But if you saw the waiver,
like they had them sign this waiver
and did you see something about it
when you're watching the documentary,
like how stupid that waiver was?
It was basically like, if you die or have bodily harm or like anything could happen, this is
very experimental, like you could die and basically you're signing that waiver before
you've been setting foot on the ship.
So Stockton Rush was probably like, whatever, if this guy like if there's an accident and
it doesn't go well, at least we can't, you know, Ocean Gate can't be sued because he
signed that waiver.
But Fred Hagan insisted to be on. So they go down on July 3rd. Titan's going to attempt to
dive again. And onboard Titan was Fred Hagen, Stockton Rush, Ph. Nargallet, and Scott Griffith,
who was the pilot. Now you may recognize the name Ph. Nargallet as one of the passengers who was on
Titan when it imploded in 2023. He was a legendary deep sea explorer,
a former French Navy commander who was known as Mr. Titanic
due to his decades of experience diving to the wreck.
Nargill had completed about 37 expeditions to the site
more than anyone else in the world.
And with his unparalleled track record,
he was highly sought after by Ocean Gate
to legitimize their Titan missions.
He joined as a mission specialist and a technical advisor.
So his public presence at the company lended tremendous credibility to Ocean
Gate. A few days after the titanium cap popped off, Stockton Rush put the
submersible back in the water, loaded it up with people, and it went as you
would expect.
We realized very early on that we had weighted
the Titan slightly off balance.
And the original intent was to go down nose forward
and kind of go down on a long gradual angle.
And we had unfortunately weighted it ass heavy.
So it began spiraling.
So instead of going down on a gradient,
we were going through a very, it wasn't a violent spiral,
it was a very slow spiral through the ocean.
And we descended through the shades of light
until we entered a world of utter darkness,
a complete absence of light, as you're aware.
So we basically free-fell, I believe it was for
two, two and a half hours, I don't recall the exact timeline,
but it was a few hours.
And because we were spiraling slowly through the void,
we were off course and we were caught in the currents
and we were in this kind of unusual attitude.
So when we were approaching the bottom of the sea bed,
we received a text message.
And again, communications were very erratic.
We would lose comms, which was not unusual,
because of the different climactic zones
and the ocean.
It was hard to get signals.
But it would come in and out.
But we received a text message that we were off course.
So at that juncture, we were all discussing all these things
together jointly.
We decided to throw the thrusters on and correct
our course and make our way towards what
we believed was the bow.
Now, you have to remember that the Titan only
has a sonar that can go out about 100 yards.
So when you're at the bottom,
you're basically operating in the blind
until you actually get within 100 yards of anything.
So you could actually go down
and completely miss the Titanic
because it's such a vast area.
So, but we were given a heading by the mothership
and we then threw on the port thruster.
And when we fired the starboard thruster, it failed to activate.
And as everyone in this board, I'm sure is well aware, electronics, saltwater,
and extremely intense pressure, they're just not always compatible.
Well, they're not compatible at all.
So the starboard thruster failed.
And we realized that all we could do was spin around in circles, like making right turns.
Doesn't that point just almost seem like a movie?
Like a fictional movie where it's like the bad news bears,
but submarine version.
Yeah, he's like, we just, you know,
we're kind of like driving in circles.
We were going on a descent with no control
and you know, it is what it is.
No, I mean, listen, there's going to be problems, trials and tribulations when you're doing something
that's never been done before. I'm not sitting here saying, oh, shame on you. You should
get it all right the first try. But it just seems like they went into these trials or
these experiments ill-prepared.
These were not trials at this point. They were running paying missions.
That's what I'm saying. They got other people down there with them.
Yeah. And I mean, they're having them sign a waiver's what I'm saying. They got other people down there with them. Yeah.
And I mean, they're having them sign a waiver,
so I'm sure they would say,
well, listen, these people knew the risk,
but that's, it's your company.
You have to understand,
it doesn't matter what waiver they sign.
If you bring a bunch of people down on that submersible
and they die, your business is done.
It's ruined.
Yeah, but Stockton Rush also knew he would die.
So he's on the Titan every time.
So he's not around to answer for it, right?
That is true. And I also think and it's horrible that this was the case
They were running out of funds and in order to continue to
Provide the financial stability to continue to do this project
They needed people to pay and so they were putting people on the sub before they should be on there.
And they probably knew it, but they had to, because they needed them to pay for those tickets.
And by getting those people on the sub, they could take the money they were paying and put it towards
improving, or I say, you know, I say that very lightly, improving the sub to make it better. But
they needed the money to do it. They were, they out of cash and the only way to get it fast was to
Promise the dream of seeing the Titanic and people were willing to pay a lot of money for that
Yeah, and and we know that they were running out of money
I think that's it several employees came forward and said we didn't have any money
I think that's what this really came down to yeah
And sometimes they would get like cash infusions and they'd be like we don't even know where it's coming from
Yeah, you know it we didn't have money
I'm sure Stockton would have preferred to go down and buy be on his own because it was really his mission
He wanted to do it. He clearly had no issue with being on it
But I think it was just a necessity in order to provide the funding needed to get the equipment and the material
To make the sub adequate for this trip
He needed to sell the tickets early. And this isn't a movie.
And he did.
He did sell them early.
This wasn't a movie that you're just going to show them an early cut of it
without having all the kinks worked out.
You know, there's life and death on the line here.
So that little piece of paper with the waiver, if you know going into it, the
dangers, and I said at the end of last episode, without a doubt to me, this is,
this is criminal negligence for sure.
And you're putting people at risk, their lives at risk knowingly,
putting their lives at risk without disclosing all the in and outs of where the company is right now
and what the level of expectations are on the sub that they've built.
It hasn't passed any tests. You did not disclose that to these people.
And therefore, you are criminally liable.
Yeah, and in fact, there's evidence that messaging that they were sending out to these people
was like really positive, like rah rah, like yeah, we're doing great, it's past these pressure
tests, everything's great.
And technically, they weren't lying, but they weren't talking about all the other issues.
They weren't being 100% transparent.
Are you a roller coaster person?
No, I used to be, not anymore.
So bad example, but we're going to go with it anyways.
Me and you go to Six Flags.
There's a roller coaster there.
It looks scary.
But millions of people have been on it.
It's been around for years.
And I convince you somehow to get on the roller coaster
with me.
We go on, no problems.
If there was a sign, and you signed the waiver
to get on the roller coaster, whatever.
But if there was a sign outside this roller coaster that said,
hey, just so you know, this is a new roller coaster.
It's going to be the best roller coaster ever. However, we have to tell you,
we've been running tests on it and we haven't had a successful test yet.
Do you still want to give it a shot? No, dude,
I'm not doing anything I have to sign a waiver to do.
That's like, I, and I know that's like a real basic version,
but that's essentially what's happening here
But they're not disclosing that information. No, I'm not signing a waiver where it says you could possibly die have fun on this ride
No, I'm not doing anything like that. Yeah, I don't even care if this roller coaster is completed
5,000 successful rides you look at those roller coasters and you just see all the bolts and you're like one of these, you know
It's final destination. That's what happened to us. It's final destination. One of these bolts could just go shoot now and all of a sudden
You're on a free ride to your death and I'm all set with it. I don't do it anymore. There's no reason
I don't think it's normal that humans were never intended to be put in these seats strapped in by the way those things that strap
You in you know, they're controlled by machines
and some 18-year-old kid who's got a summer job.
What if he accidentally falls and hits the thing
when you're on there and you're all of a sudden,
boop, your thing's just gone?
Oh my God.
The whole time I'm thinking this.
It's not even fun for me.
The whole time I'm thinking this, so no.
We need a video, like a 360 camera.
We need to put it on the front of a roller coaster
and you and I need to go on one.
I don't know if I could I could I would be a great video
I think everyone in the comments right now should pause and say listen we'd
really appreciate it Stephanie if you do this for us I mean you've seen me on a
plane so it's terrifying I don't want to sit next to on a plane that's for sure
no the people that sit next to me don't want to sit next to me either I was like
who is that woman clawing on to the little window like what is she doing why is she on her? Why is her feet on the seat itself? It was me. Oh, that's Stephanie
I'm curled up in a ball of terror and this is while we're on the ground. I haven't even sat yet
Yeah, that's the worst part the anticipation of the takeoff. Yeah. Yeah, maybe you should stay off the roller coaster
You didn't have been the person that gets me thrown out of the cart
No knowing my luck how my life goes
I'd be the one that fell to my death from the roller coaster
and I'd be a cautionary tale for everybody else
who would still ignore it.
Okay.
Well, Fred Hagen said, at this point,
they realized the dive wasn't going to work,
it wasn't gonna be successful,
so they had to go back up and they started dropping weights
so they could go back up,
but there was issues with this as well,
and I think this was the one where Stockton Rush was like, we have to like shake the submersible to make
the weights come off. So everybody had to like run from one side to the other. I don't
know. He did this on several missions where the weights were having issues coming off.
And he was like, all right, guys, like, let's get in here. We're going to stand up and we're
going to all run from one side to the other to make Titan sort of, you know, what is it, rock?
So that the weights fall off. I swear to God, this is crazy.
Kind of jiggle them loose. Exactly what you want to hear.
Yep, exactly. So they slowly started to ascend for the next three hours. And when they were
back at the surface, Titan had to be towed to St. John's for repairs. Mission two began
on July 7th and on board the Titan for this mission was Alan Estrada,
best known for his YouTube channel which documents his global travel adventures. So he goes on
adventures, he documents them, and Estrada would go down in Titan not only in 2021 but again in
2022 or he would attempt to go down. He would join the the mission in 2021 and 2022. And Estrada documented his experiences with Titan
in a four part series available on YouTube.
I highly suggest you watch them.
Really good, there are subtitles for those of you
who don't speak Spanish, but in part one,
which covers his July, 2021 mission,
he explains that the first mission was not successful
because Ocean Gate had faced technical challenges,
but the company was confident that this mission, his mission, mission
two, would be successful. And Estrada Films' Stockton Rush walking him through
the workings of Titan and how the mission would go and then they sat down
to chat at which point Stockton said this. I'd like to be remembered as an
innovator. I think it was General MacArthur said you're remembered for the
rules you break. And you know I've broken some rules to make this. I think it was General MacArthur said, you're remembered for the rules you
break. And you know, I've broken some rules to make this. I think I've broken them with
with logic and good engineering behind me, the carbon fiber and titanium. There's a rule
you don't do that. Well, I did. It's picking the rules that you break that are the ones
that will add value to others and add value to society. And that really, to me is about
innovation. It's taking it's not invention. You know, innovation is when you take an invention
and you make it accepted broadly.
You want to be remembered for the rules you break.
Dude, success.
You are a success in being remembered
for the rules you break.
He seems like a little boy.
He's all excited.
He's all wide-eyed and passionate.
And he seems like, he does, he sounds like a little boy
talking about this new bug he found
that's just the most exciting thing that's ever happened
I want to clear the deck quick because what Stockton did on every level was wrong
And he is a major reason if not the the sole reason no he's not the sole reason but a major reason why
He and all those passengers are dead. He ignored the signs. He intimidated and threatened people who pushed back against him
But do I think he was doing this knowing he was going to kill himself and those people?
Like I don't think that was his intent.
I do believe at his core, for whatever it's worth to any of you guys listening or watching,
he felt like he was an innovator.
Like he said in his own words, where he had to push the envelope to expand human capabilities
And he knew that because it had never been done before
There was going to be pushback and he was going to have to be forceful and continue to move forward and quote-unquote
Break some rules in order to prove what we were actually capable of doing
So I think in his mind the intent if this I hope I'm saying this right. Yeah, I think I understand what you're saying
The intent was good, but the execution was horrible see I don't
necessarily agree with you that the intent was good but what was it let's
talk about that what was his overall intent I think his overall intent was to
create a legacy and he didn't really care what that was in right like I think
he came from a very high profile,
successful family whose ancestors were all successful.
I mean, signers of the Declaration of the Independence,
like you've got buildings named after you in San Francisco,
you're growing up in the city
where you have big shoes to fill.
And most likely throughout his life and his childhood,
this is what was communicated to him by his parents.
Like you're gonna be something, you know,
and not in an abusive way,
but in like, you're going to be someone,
you're gonna be something, of course you are,
you're a rush, of course you are.
So I think Stockton grew up feeling
that he had a lot of pressure to succeed,
and not just succeed in life,
but to succeed in the way where like, I will be remembered, my will be synonymous with innovation and didn't really mad cuz remember you want to be an astronaut anyone do space and then he was like anyone to be a pilot and they're like your vision is not good enough for that he's like well i guess i'll go on the sea it was kind of like.
Okay well pivot pivot pivot like what can i do now that i can make my name and i think that think that that was his main issue. He would talk about this all the time.
Oh, I wanna be like Elon Musk,
and I wanna be like Richard Branson, and all these,
and I want my name to be among them.
It didn't really seem like he cared
how his name was remembered, as long as it was.
He was just trying to find an avenue.
Okay, so I don't think we're completely on a different page
because I agree with you.
I think there was a lot of selfish reasons
behind what he was doing.
He wanted the glory.
He wanted the fame.
He wanted, like you said, he wanted a legacy,
and he wanted to be remembered.
And he was gonna do it in any way he could.
And when the astronaut angle didn't work,
he decided to go into the sea.
I guess what I was trying to say is,
yes, it wasn't for the betterment of our society,
for our species, right?
It was for the betterment of Stockton Rush.
That I agree with.
But I do think overall, he was trying to do something that could potentially benefit our
species as a whole long term.
So I think-
Wait, I think if he had been successful-
If he was successful, correct.
Then what he had discovered and what he had achieved would have been beneficial, but I don't think that was his main goal
No, I don't disagree with you. I don't disagree with you. I can't I can't defend him
I don't disagree with you and because if it was he would have focused mainly on the research aspect of it
Which is what he was claiming that that's what ocean get got all these patents on right? That's what they claimed
They were interested in doing but all of a sudden we find out, like, no,
it was you wanted to get people to Titanic.
If that was not your main goal, you wouldn't have rushed it.
You would have listened to your engineers.
You would have listened to Lockridge.
You would have listened to all these experts saying,
hey, slow your roll, take it down a notch.
Like, you can do this, but take some more time
to make sure it's good.
No, you're not, there's nothing I can push back on.
You're not wrong. I mean, it's good. No, you're not, there's nothing I can push back on. You're not wrong.
I mean, it's just such a tough balance
because maybe I'm gonna get shit for this,
but I don't necessarily think like Stockton
was an evil person.
I think he was a mentally ill person.
See, I don't agree with that.
I don't agree with that.
Like we were watching the episode last week
and we were playing a clip
and there was a photo of him associated with it.
It was like a cartoon drawing.
And it was like him as a clown face and stuff.
I don't know how you feel about it.
I'm not trying to have you subscribe to whatever I'm believing, but I think that's wrong.
I mean I think it's disrespectful considering what has happened for me personally.
And I know I'm going to be the minority.
He's responsible for four other people losing their lives.
I agree.
I don't think so. I see that's that's the point right like we're like to me. I don't know like I think men have this
this need this passion to be like
You know on the cutting edge and like our founding fathers and like all those people, you know
The men who made America like these are people that are remembered far past their lifetime
But I think about I think about Amelia Earhart too and I mean she like pushing the envelope
like what she did was crazy.
Yeah, you're right.
It's not a man thing.
It's just a personality thing.
It's like like I am so inspired by those people because I don't have the courage to do it.
Like they did things that everyone told them you're crazy for doing this.
You're probably not going to make it and some some of them, like Amelia, they didn't.
But they were willing to take that risk.
Yeah, but Amelia Earhart wasn't like, oh, load up my plane
with paying passengers.
Let's go, and so I can make millions of dollars.
That's why this is a slippery slope, because on one hand,
I completely agree with you.
Like, he did it all the wrong way.
He was putting people in danger in order
to pay for what he was trying to build. Wrong. And every sense of the word. It's wrong. But when I watch videos
like that, and I could be, he could be fooling me just like he fooled a lot of people initially,
I believe when I look in his eyes that there was something there where like you had described,
like a little boy, like he was truly passionate about this
and he really wanted to get it done.
Now his intent behind it, like you said,
it might have had nothing to do with anybody else
visiting the Titanic, he just wanted his name attached to that.
He just wanted to be known as the person who did it.
Who did it, yeah.
What no one else could.
In spite of what everyone thought was possible.
Yeah, it's such a slippery slope.
When I see him talking like that,
yeah, I do see this like a wide-eyed like little boy
but what I also know is I've seen that same look on
people who are talking about conspiracy theories that they have spent their lives looking into and they are so passionate about it and
They just get this like bright-eyed sort of glassy look like they're on drugs
Honestly, and because it's it's bringing them so much dopamine, just this idea.
And so when I say those people are not nefarious,
these conspiracy theories that are so far possible
from being true, and they're crazy.
Like the lizard people thing.
Oh, they truly believe it.
That's dangerous.
But if you start telling me that the Earth is not flat,
I'm gonna have a problem. Or the flat earthers.
Yeah, and they will talk about this.
Like they know what the hell they're talking about.
And if you, as the layman, didn't know anything
about how the Earth actually looked,
you might be like, holy sh, the Earth is flat.
And you would believe it.
It's dangerous.
It's dangerous when people like this.
I think that's a great way to put it.
They believe what they're saying.
That's why I think he's mentally ill,
because it's like, you knew.
I think that's an extreme for you to diagnose him from.
No, because you said he was going to be on every single time that Titan went down, he
was going to be there.
He didn't think he was going to die.
How could you not, when you had every piece of information to show you that submersible
was not safe for repeated dives?
How would you go in there every time not being afraid
every single time that something was gonna go wrong?
So you put yourself in that position.
There's something wrong with you.
You don't have the self-preservation
that humans are built with to protect themselves.
I mean, I would argue that astronauts
going up into a rocket ship into space.
Way safer, way more.
I mean, we've been doing that since the 60s, man.
That's a different type of breed. I mean, I think there's a big jump from ignorance and lack of
self-awareness and mental illness. Like he had a lot of character flaws that contributed to the
decisions he was making, but I wouldn't go to the level of mental illness. I just I feel like when a human being loses the desire to keep themselves
alive and they do things consistently in the face of that like there's
something going on there that needs to be looked into. That's all. Like when you
continue to put yourself in a position where you're like I can die today and you
happily do it with a smile on your face and you continue coming back for more
That's it. That's an issue when you couldn't you make the same argument for
I'm not trying to equate myself
This is gonna sound horrible
But like I used to go in on search warrants and I would always put put myself in the front of the line
Knowing that I could be shot in the face. Yeah, I kind of would but I mean somebody's gonna do that
But like you guys are thrill seekers. It wasn't about thrill is about doing what I needed to do to get the job done. I don't know
I think that's different. That's like you're trained for these scenarios. You go through extensive training
So you feel confident yourself just like astronauts do they go through extensive training like hey if this happens
These are all the possible scenarios that could happen and you know how to react in every single one did Stockton rush
No, he couldn't even get them out of the
Andrea Doria and David Lockridge had to. So you can't even be confident in yourself that if sh** goes down
you'll be okay to handle it and get out of there. He couldn't have that confidence in himself because he didn't have that knowledge.
He didn't have that experience. So for the record everyone, Stephanie is saying I'm mentally ill. No, like I said, you have training.
How long did you go into training for this stuff?
No, I think where it's like basically like a military military is the same, you know
You put yourself in in the military wartime, but you're trained could you could you die? Yes, but you're I don't know
I don't know. Listen, I think you are confusion in our
inability to articulate exactly what we're trying to say is exactly what everyone's feeling.
Because...
It feels so weird.
There's some parts of it where you can understand
what was attempting to be done,
especially when you start to see the other crew members
of Ocean Gate, and you see their eyes light up
when they talk about how excited they were to be part of this,
and the anticipation that they could be part of something
this monumental.
They are genuinely excited about it.
Yeah, but they all eventually realized, holy shit,
and they backed off, but he didn't.
I get it, I get it.
And so my point being,
there was something good happening here,
and Stockton was the biggest problem
with the whole organization.
This could have been something that was monumental
to our human species,
and we could have had something really,
that would have been in the history books.
And instead it's a tragedy, and I don't know if anyone will ever attempt it again because of it, Monumental to our human species and we could have had something really that would have been in the history books and instead
It's a tragedy and I don't know if anyone will ever attempt it again because of it because now there's this black eye on it
Yeah, I do have thoughts on that. I just think if you look at Stockton Rush, he was a cult leader and
When you look at now, he's a cult leader
Yeah, cuz you look at the people who were like I think you're gonna get you for this episode
No, if you look at the people who are excited the ocean gate employees like yeah Of course when cults start everybody goes in and they're like, ah, this is awesome
But then after they're there for a while, they're like, oh, this is not awesome
And they they try to leave and they try to get out
Whereas the cult leader is the only one who always stays like firm because he has something to gain and he has something to lose
And it's like if anybody's been in a super corporatized environment you go in for these work meetings
They get you all pumped up,
and they're like, we're gonna sell, and we're gonna do this,
and you're gonna get trips to the Bahamas and Cadillacs,
and everybody's like, yes!
And then three months into the work, they're like, this sucks.
Nobody's getting Cadillacs. What the hell's going on?
And they're disenchanted by the whole setup.
It's pyramid schemes, you know? It's like that stuff, like MLMs.
They get you all excited, and then before you know it, you know, it's like that stuff, like MLMs, they get you all excited
and then before you know it, you have three pounds
of hideous leggings you have to sell
because you bought them all and then you don't want
to be a part of it anymore, but the leaders,
the people at the top are always the ones
who are like keeping that status quo.
So yeah, he was a cult leader, people were excited
because they didn't know the logistics,
but when they started to see the truth,
they were like, we gotta get out of this.
And Stockton Rush from day one to the last day,
never wavered, as a cult leader wouldn't.
I mean, listen, I'll let all you guys tell me what you think.
Maybe I'm wrong on all this.
I just don't see it as that.
And especially the fact that as a cult leader,
usually people will follow you to their death.
And as we can see, there are many people.
Well, I mean, some of them did, right?
Well, those were clients who were unaware
of what was going on.
If you notice, there wasn't many,
I think there wasn't many Ocean Gate employees
volunteering to go down with Stockton Rush.
Not all of them were unaware.
They were just very confident in him.
They were very confident in him.
They believed in him, yeah, I don't know.
Because he was smart, right? Like we were talking about last episode, he was smart. He knows what he's talking about. He's built planes, you know
But okay, so we're gonna go back to mission two, but first let's take a quick break
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So we're back to mission two with Alan Estrada and on day six of the mission, Estrada talks about how Ocean Gate was going to be performing a test dive with crew members only, no mission
specialists. So this is after they have obviously, you know, some issues and things are going
great. So he said, quote, being a test immersion,
it is expected to last less than the immersions
with mission specialists like me.
They'll stay at the bottom a couple hours
instead of the four hours planned for regular immersions.
This is why the platform launch has been set for 10.30 a.m.
while it would usually take place at 8 a.m. end quote.
And this is why I heavily suggest
checking out Alan Estrada's series
because you can see everything that's happening.
He's filming everything.
And Estrada said that there were some issues that came up.
This delayed the launch an hour while they did repairs and the crew went into Titan around
1130 a.m.
And then an electrical issue happened at 1700 meters, which forced the submersible to return
back to the surface.
So then Titan went back down again with only crew members.
And according to OceanGate's blog, this was the dive, the first dive, which would reach the Titanic.
The blog claims this happened on July 9th and on July 13th Ocean Gate put out a press release
showing pictures they'd taken while at the shipwreck, the quote-unquote shipwreck. However,
the pictures only showed the debris field around the ship. None of the photos show the Titanic itself.
Titan on this dive actually couldn't find the ship,
but this did not stop Ocean Gate
from claiming they had successfully made it to the Titanic.
Once again, very creative, questionable,
not super honest marketing.
So during that dive, the ballast tank stopped working,
and this was at a critical time crunch period because Titan was going to have to start their
ascent within 30 minutes or they, I don't know if it was they would run out of battery
or they wouldn't get back up to the support ship before the sun went down, which was kind
of important because they needed to be able to see to get the Titan back on the ship.
Either way, they had to start ascending within that 30 minutes.
So going up, as we already heard from Fred Hagen,
takes about three hours.
And Estrada said at this point, he's on the ship
and they're all like watching
and they're in the control room
and everyone's watching to see what's happening.
And the mission room was evacuated at this point
because they didn't want anybody who wasn't like, you know,
needed to be in the room. Yeah
So after trying to fix this issue for two hours Titan began to ascend using the propellers
But this was way too slow
Titan wouldn't reach the surface until 1 a.m
And they were expected back at like 5 or 6 p.m
And once again, we have an issue of do we have enough oxygen? Do we have enough battery?
Do we have enough life support to get us to 1 a.m.?
Probably not. So the pilot of the Titan then decided to initiate emergency protocol and abandon the ballast tank system altogether,
which allowed Titan to ascend a little bit faster getting to the surface around 8 p.m.
But still after dark.
But when they were there at the surface, more chaos ensued when the crew realized that without the ballast tanks, the submersible was too floaty and not steady enough to lock onto
the platform, the platform that's in the water. So they ended up having to send in divers who
anchored weights to Titan so it'd be easier to secure to the platform. The issues continued.
Like this is why you have to watch it because there was just issue after issue and he's watching and
Recording these people trying to get the Titan back on the support ship and they just can't so they're kept being issues
They couldn't get it. They couldn't get the sub on the platform. They had issues getting the platform on the ship
It seemed like a nerve-racking experience. They didn't have Titan back on the support ship until 4 a.m
But because Estrada was not able to experience an actual dive,
Stockton Rush invited him back the following year for another mission. But
before he left mission 2 in 2021, Rush also took Estrada and other mission
specialists into Titan for a shallow water test dive and Rush actually
allowed Estrada to drive the submersible. And some people are like, why did he do
that? Well, Alan Estrada has several million subscribers
Stockton Rush is looking for advertising for his submersible
So yeah, he's gonna do stupid things like let somebody who is not trained at all to pilot a submersible
He's gonna let this guy do it just wouldn't be driving it any worse than Stockton Rush based on
The previous previous missions. Why don't you watch the clip first and then say that.
I need to go a little bit up before...
No, we're pretty... you might have to go up a little bit. You're okay. You're pretty good height, but just be...
don't get much lower than this. So just inch forward.
Alan va a manejar el submarino.
I'm trying to go up. Are you pulling back on it? You're dead man. You gotta push the dead man all the time
Oh, all the time. All the time. You gotta hold better. It does nothing. Now pull up on that left stick
Oh shit
I'm a little higher next time I ran into a rock. Sorry for that.
Liar.
You're gonna get a ticket.
I can't, man. This is just too much.
They're treating it like a toy.
You know, not something that goes to 4,000 meters under the ocean.
Just hit a sharp rock that just scraped along the side of this carbon fiber hole.
The carbon fiber? Oh my god.
I don't know, man. It's painful. Don't worry. It's it's got that coating on it. Yeah, the coating will protect it
Yeah, what is that called? The only one thing that we have a cold gorilla coating if whatever it was
I know the wrong the Rhino the Rhino the Rhino coating. Yeah, don't worry. It's fine. The one the one thing we haven't really
Mentioned with Stockton rush a lot or at least I haven, and we've said a lot of things, mentally ill, cult leader,
I think stupidity would be a more simple way to describe it.
Like this is pure stupidity.
Yeah, like no impulse control kind of.
Right, like Stockton's smart enough to know,
I mean, as you said a couple minutes ago,
he's built airplanes.
He knows a little bit of something, right?
He's not a complete moron, but this is pure stupidity,
to have an untrained person with no experience
piloting a test submarine is moronic. He's a YouTuber. It's like letting me drive your
submersible. Who would do that? No one in their right mind. I wouldn't let you drive
my car. Exactly. That's what I'm saying. Derek, no. You don't know what this guy, like, you
don't know if he's right. You don't know anything about guy, like, you don't know if he's rockin'.
You don't know anything about him.
And I think that when it happened Stockton Rush inside was like, oh, this is bad.
But he was like, you just hit a rock.
It's fine.
Don't worry.
Yeah, just this huge gash on the side of the hole.
He didn't want to like reveal how like.
It cost a quarter of a million dollars to fix, but no big deal.
Yeah.
And I do think it's weird that this was the mission ocean gate touted actually reaching the Titanic mission, too
And they knew they had a very popular vlogger on the mission who's documenting everything and would eventually reveal that
Titan had only gotten to the debris field and had been unable to locate the actual ship because in the footage
Estrada's got his cameras and he's in you know, the control room and there's a woman she's like we made it
We like a like a cult member kind of she's like, we made it. We like a cult member kind of.
She's like, we finally made it to the Titanic.
And she's all like, her eyes are like glistening with tears.
She's like, we did it.
You know you didn't.
You couldn't find the ship.
You get to the debris field, which is quite large if you look into it.
And Alan Estrada's like, they made it to the debris field.
And then he's like posting pictures and there's no pictures of Titanic. It's like you didn't make it to the Titanic, but
Stockton rushes like we made it guys. We got to the table and everybody on the surface like we did it
We did it our precious leader. He came through
He said the date of the apocalypse was today and it is it is so yeah
Really weird that video is really a good video though because you can see even more from inside the sub.
We've had numerous videos and photos throughout these episodes, but you can see that titanium hole,
like that end cap, if you describe. Well, you have the carbon fiber hole.
The carbon fiber titanium end cap.
The titanium like end cap, and then you have that little acrylic viewing hole.
It's not even that big.
It's not that big, and that's why he wanted that kind of bubble look to make it a little
bit wider and to make it appear bigger, so
Yeah, no it makes more sense when you see it
And you can see even just me watching it all the points where these different materials are meeting up and melding together
Where those are potential failure points yes, they were it's not even potential failure points. They were failure points
They're all fail failure points where you have the titanium up against the carbon fiber the acrylic up against the titanium
They have to be adhered together somehow
It's never gonna be one solid piece and that's always an a point where something can go wrong and at that depth
You're dead
You're dead if something doesn't work, right? And that's why we're talking about this case
You're dead. You're dead if something doesn't work right and that's why we're talking about this case.
So mission three began on July 16th, 2021 just six days after mission two had concluded.
Once again there were issues.
This dive never reached the Titanic.
Mechanical problems resulted in Titan settling on the ocean floor for almost five hours due
to the weights once again not coming off.
I also found Ocean Gates's log of dives
through the Coast Guard investigation.
They have a bunch of documents,
so I found their log of dives.
And the drop weight motor failure incident is noted
as well as another incident two days before the 17th
where it says incident electrical cable fire
in Forward Dome from dehumidifier.
So they had an actual electrical fire on board
the Titan two days before they put it back in the water. This is just bananas to me. And then the
results were like no issue, no damage from the fire. But it's like, did you fix the problem that
caused the fire? Because there's no sign of that in the logs. So mission four began on July 22nd and three
dives were attempted over a course of eight days. And this was the mission that I'm probably going
to say this wrong, Scott Parazynski, who was a NASA astronaut would be on. And Scott actually had
a lot of involvement with Ocean Gate. I found an article where he eventually, I think in 2022,
became a part of their board of directors.
He was very vocal in talking about Ocean Gate and the Titan and talking about his mission.
He was very supportive of it. So looking at Ocean Gate's own dive log, there were multiple issues
during this mission. On this dive, both emergency ballast systems failed. One thruster stopped
working. The sub had no power for two hours, the sonar and navigation systems went dark,
and smoke started coming out of the emergency system when they tried to use it.
At the same time, their backup drop weight didn't work, and the sub was basically blind and half-paralyzed in pitch black miles beneath the surface.
It's like your only escape route caught on fire, your steering wheel locked up, your headlights went out, all while being trapped inside a metal can at the bottom of the ocean. Titan did
however reach the bow of the Titanic on July 28th, but during this dive when the
weights wouldn't come off and they couldn't ascend, Stockton once again
encouraged his passengers to start rocking back and forth from one side of
the submersible to the other to make the submersible like twist far enough on its
side so that the weights would fall off, which is exactly what they had to do.
And after 30 minutes of doing this, the weights did fall off.
There was one more mission in 2021, Mission 5, and various issues continued as Titan continued to bring down paying civilian passengers.
Overall, in 2021, Ocean Gate conducted five missions.
Out of these five missions, only two dives reached the Titanic bow
and one reached the stern. Four of the dives were canceled before getting to the bottom of the ocean,
so they went in and then they had to abort and come back up. Two dives reached the Titanic debris
field. So when you say like, oh, they had five missions and they reached the Titanic in two dives,
remember again, during each mission, there's multiple dives happening multiple dives. So
That's not a great track record. I'm sorry. It's just not it's not and it to me
I just I all I see when you're when you're reading that is dollar signs
They're getting as many people down there as possible because every time they send someone down
That's another quarter milli in their bank account to get to keep this mission going. It's not about the experience, it's not about giving these clients
or these mission specialists an opportunity of a lifetime.
It's about, hey, these are all walking ATMs.
Let's send as many down as we can because we need money.
That's truly what I believe.
That's my personal opinion.
This sub was not ready for this yet,
and yet it was the quickest way to get money.
And that's why they did it.
Because they needed the influx.
They were going to go under if they didn't have the money.
They had all this money going out and not really any coming in.
That's right.
Yeah, I agree.
So he was preemptively selling these tickets, even though it wasn't ready.
I'm happy that all of these people survived because I'm sure now...
I mean, they all didn't, right?
Well, the last all didn't, right? Well, not the last mission did.
And when I was watching the documentary, there was,
and I apologize, I don't know his name,
but it was another YouTuber who was on the mission
right before, maybe you're gonna get into this tonight,
but he was on the mission right before this
and he starts talking about it and he just breaks down.
He just breaks down in tears because he's like,
I feel so guilty because it could have been me
And I'm relieved it's not but then I'm also thinking about the people that were down there
Yeah, but it's only gonna it would have only ever been the five people so whether it happened on mission two or mission five
Obviously Titans not gonna be an operation after that. It just was a Russian roulette of which five of these people
You know or four because it's docked in rush and then fourlette of which five of these people, or four, because it's Stockton Rush,
and then four other people,
which four of these people are gonna come to their deaths
in this death trap, basically.
It could have been any of those missions.
Yeah, if I had to guess, Stockton Rush
was probably telling people,
hey, see, look, told you it was gonna work.
Yep. We're fine.
He was. He was very proud of himself.
So the missions continued in 2022,
and according to Ocean Gate's log
So did all the problems with Titan, but like I could talk for hours about going through their log and all the issues
But that would be boring and when we get the point
So that brings us to 2023 where blog and social media posts coming out of Ocean Gate would lead anyone to believe that their missions had
been nothing but a glowing success in
January of that year an article in The Guardian would lead anyone to believe that their missions had been nothing but a glowing success. In January
of that year, an article in The Guardian reported that Ocean Gate had taken 60 paying customers
down to the Titanic, and Ocean Gate posted pictures of their mission specialists on the
deck of the support ship, smiling, happy, toasting with champagne, just on a high from having done
something that very few human people have done. Now it's important to know that after completing
its 2022 Titanic missions, Titan was taken ashore.
And it was taken ashore to go through the winter
and be in storage until they resumed dives
the following spring and summer.
And this is very important.
And anybody who watched the Titan documentary
knows exactly what I'm about to
say.
So I want to talk about how exactly Ocean Gate stored Titan during their period when
they were not having it in the water, but first let's take a quick break.
We'll be right back.
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So after completing its 2022 missions,
Titan was taken ashore and stored on a dockside
parking lot, uncovered, without protection from the elements, from July 26, 2022 until
February 6, 2023.
Now this too, I think anybody would sound just ludicrous.
Ludicrous.
Leaving an experimental high-pressure submersible like Titan exposed to harsh marine and weather
conditions for so long was essentially skipping an entire suite of post-dive inspections and
maintenance.
The fluctuation from warm summer conditions to near-freezing temperatures could have and
most likely did degrade the composite bonds, creating thermal stress and accelerated micro-cracking
in the carbon fiber.
Additionally, since the submersible was uncovered, so keep in mind, they didn't put a tarp on it,
they didn't put it in a building, it's sitting next to like salt water in direct sunlight and
we know that sunlight can damage epoxy resins and adhesives,
which would weaken the joint interfaces and compromise the structural integrity of the bond lines.
And once again, it's sitting by the sea.
So as it's sitting there uncovered by the sea,
Titan was drenched in salt spray and humidity,
which you know what that does?
It corrodes metal components.
It compromises seals.
It degrades protective coatings,
like that half-assed rhino coating they did.
And although he was kept unprotected for over six months, there's no indication
that Titan received regular inspections, cleaning, or structural checks during this time.
They just put it there, they set it, and forget it.
And they came back in the following summer and they were like,
all right, let's bring this baby in the water.
So that's absolutely insane to me. I don't I don't understand
Why would they not have gotten like a bunker or a garage or even a tarp like something?
Something if anything like an insulated like something you could plug in to actually keep it at a certain temperature
Like I like a heated blanket
But like an industrial style one to kind of keep it regulated the temperature of the whole the materials put it inside
Yeah
Be the smartest thing you don't leave boats like that we winterize boats rent it rent a u-haul space or something
It's just on its side. Yeah, it's
Something something if they just put it in a parking lot and they were like see you later Titan
See you next year. Have a good winter, Merry Christmas, Happy New Year.
Weird.
So when Ocean Gate launched Titan for its descent
into the Atlantic on the morning of June 18th, 2023,
five men were seated inside its carbon fiber hull.
Each came from vastly different worlds,
but they shared a common dream.
To witness, with their own eyes,
the wreckage of the RMS Titanic.
And that morning, they began a 12,500 foot descent into darkness
and they would never return.
At the helm was Stockton Rush, who we already know maybe too much about.
Hamish Harding was a British billionaire, aviator and extreme adventurer.
If there was a record to break or a frontier to push, Harding was already on it.
He'd flown to space aboard Jeff Bezos's Blue Origin rocket. He dove to Challenger Deep in the Mariana
Trench and held multiple Guinness World Records. He saw the Titanic expedition
as the next great challenge, an ultimate feat to add to his list of extraordinary
achievements. And he posted enthusiastically on social media in the
days leading up to the dive, calling it one of the most difficult missions in the world. For Harding, this was more edge
of the earth to conquer. Now, P.H. Nardolet was also there and like I said, he wasn't
just an expert on the Titanic. He was part of its modern story. A former French
Navy commander and pioneer in deep sea exploration, Nardolet had visited the
Titanic wreck more than 35 times.
He'd led artifact recoveries, filmed documentaries,
and worked for years as director of underwater research
for RMS Titanic.
And so to many, he was called Mr. Titanic.
That's how he was known.
His name and his life was synonymous with the Titanic.
But as the years passed, it wasn't just expertise,
it became personal. His family has since said that he was obsessed with the Titanic. But as the years passed, it wasn't just expertise, it became personal.
His family has since said that he was obsessed with the Titanic. It haunted and fascinated
him. Even as concerns mounted over Titan's construction, its unorthodox materials, its
lack of certification, Nargale likely saw a chance to return to a site that had gripped
his soul for decades. He may have known the risks, but those who loved him believed that his lifelong bond with the Titanic, a shipwreck frozen in time
and tragedy, outweighed his doubts. For PH, it wasn't just a dive, it was a return to
a place he never truly left in his mind and in his heart.
The final two passengers were Shahzada Dawood, a Pakistani-born British businessman and philanthropist,
and his 19-year-old son, Suleiman.
Shahzada was a scion of one of Pakistan's wealthiest families and vice chairman of the
Dawood Hercules Corporation. He had a passion for science, sustainability, and adventure, but
it turned out to be his son, Suleiman, who was excited to see the Titanic. And by all accounts,
Suleiman had an insatiable curiosity about the world and wanted
to share this once in a lifetime journey with his father.
Now tragically reports later emerged that Suleiman may have been hesitant.
Some said he was anxious about the dive but he joined and he went anyways to please his
dad over Father's Day weekend which is really really sad.
Yeah that is that's terrible and that's the tough thing here.
You don't want anybody to die.
You know, these stories, it sucks,
but when you have a kid who's got their whole life
ahead of them, to have it cut short like that,
it just makes it that much harder to process,
because the young person who had apprehensions
about going in the first place and...
Well, he wanted to, and then it seems like kind of
on the cusp of it, he was like, I'm kind of nervous.
Yeah, I can understand why.
Totally.
They boarded Titan together,
unaware of the fate that awaited them.
At 5.15 a.m., the Polar Prince arrived
at the Titanic wreck site.
By 8.30 a.m., the five passengers and Titan
were aboard the launch platform.
Rush sealed the forward dome and prepared Titan were aboard the launch platform.
Rush sealed the forward dome and prepared for the dive, which would have been dive 88.
At 8.55 a.m., the platform was flooded, gently lowering Titan into the ocean.
By 9.18 a.m., Titan had disengaged from the platform and began its descent.
From this moment forward, text updates and acoustic pings marked the submersible's progress.
OceanGate used a numeric system to quantify the overall risk of each dive.
And this is something else that I had not known until doing more research.
And it just blows my mind.
So the risk index aggregates dozens of variables, weather, sea state, equipment health, crew readiness, into a single number, which would be the the number of how high the risk was. And
while OceanGate didn't publicly publish their exact scoring thresholds, the Coast
Guards investigation timeline confirmed that the final risk index for dive 88
was calculated at 35, and a risk index of 35 was the highest score ever recorded for any dive before
dive 88. That placed this mission at the top of the danger scale flagged by Ocean Gate's own risk
model, meaning Ocean Gate considered this dive to be at the limit of acceptable risk with multiple
warning flags. Yeah, that's the problem here, right? Because accidents can happen.
You have airplanes where all the precautions are taken.
Everything is measured.
Pilots do their best.
And then while up in the air, there's a bird strike.
Or there's something that you just can't plan for.
And there's a tragedy.
All the warning signs were here.
And they were ignored.
Which is why, to me, when people talk about,
oh, why are you covering this?
This isn't a crime.
No, yes, it is. It is absolutely a crime the they had the information
they should have not done this dive or many of the other dives and
They had complete disregard for human life
Not only themselves
but the passengers that they put aboard this thing and to have this information in your hands before diving and still say,
no, we're going forward. And if I had to guess it was Stockton Rush who made that final decision,
that is without a doubt criminal negligence and would apply to manslaughter in my opinion. But I would even say it's my opinion. It's right there, black and white. Those are the laws.
So I take back my opinion. That is what it is.
And as I said in the last episode,
if he were still alive and that submarine
had did what it did without him on it,
he'd be on trial right now and probably in prison.
Well, also keep in mind,
this was the first dive of the year
after months of Titan being stored out in the open
and the weather conditions on the day of the dive
were described as being challenging but acceptable.
And there was still obvious equipment concerns.
That's where all of these, this is where the dive score
of 35 came in, the highest risk score.
They're taking all of this into account
and they're still saying, go on, have fun.
Good news is here, the risk index works
because it was right.
Yeah, it was right, exactly. So this is a good system for people to use going forward because clearly it's ocean gates
It's ocean gates risk model. Well their own one that they developed. So at least we got something good out of ocean
Yeah, I mean it was probably a higher risk score if it had been somebody else's unbiased
Calculations, you know, so to stay connected to the support shipar Prince, Titan didn't use live voice communication.
Instead, it relied on text messages sent via acoustic modem,
which is kind of an underwater ping system
that converts short bursts of data into sound waves
that travel through water.
And that's actually really cool.
I looked into that, really cool.
And these messages were then received by the Polar Prince
and displayed on a console in the operations room.
Ocean Gate had also equipped Titan
with an acoustic transponder system
that sent location pings every five seconds back to the polar prints of their surface ship.
And this was part of what's called an ultra-short baseline tracking system,
a common method used in underwater navigation.
These pings would give the support ship team information about Titan's location,
their depth, the general direction and distance from the ship, et cetera.
At 918 AM, four minutes after Titan had disengaged
from the platform, the polar prince sent out a comms check.
And at the time, when they sent out the comms check,
the depth of Titan was approximately only 165 meters.
44 seconds after this, Titan sent a comms check
back to the polar prince.
At 954 AM, when Titan was at about,500 meters the polar prints sent out several messages
Asking the submersible if they could see the support ship on their evil logics display and when I say several I mean
seven with no response from Titan
Unbelievable and and you heard I think it was Fred Hagen, who was like, yeah, the communication with the surface ship was always spotty.
And that to me is unacceptable too. That's why I'm saying unbelievable.
The comms system has to be perfect. There has to be constant communication. There can never be blackouts.
There always were. Always were with their comms system. Always.
I mean, we're able to communicate with spaceships you know that are much further away I would think that they could have developed a comm system or purchased a comm system that
would have been adequate for this mission and again it's cutting corners. Well I remember
PlayStation remote controls are we serious? Not even the best one remember that guy was
like it wasn't even the best one. No no it's just crazy it's a suicide mission. Well I
remember Ocean Gate tweeting something out,
I think on that dive where they were like,
thanks to Starlink for helping us keep our comms.
So they seem to be using, I don't understand how,
I don't understand why the comms weren't better.
I don't, maybe it was something to do
with being underwater, I don't know.
To me with all of this, if they're going to 4,000 meters,
then the hole should be certified for 8,000. If the comm system is're going to 4,000 meters, then the hull should be certified
for 8,000.
If the comm system is going down to 4,000 meters deep, it should be accessible from
8,000.
That should be the minimum.
The fact that they were just spotty, that means that we were basically stretching the
capabilities of this equipment and these communications.
That's wrong.
We shouldn't be at the peak of what they're capable of doing.
We should be just right in the middle, at worst.
And so everything, there's a common theme there
where they're like, what do we need to spend
to get just enough?
And that's wrong, because things can go wrong.
And you should have the equipment on board
that if something does go wrong,
you're capable of handling that situation
and not having a catastrophe like this.
So I actually looked this up because you're right, we can communicate with, you know, spaceships in space.
But so I looked it up. And yes, in June of twenty twenty three, OceanGate did tweet out, quote,
Despite being in the middle of the North Atlantic, we have the Internet connection we need to make our Titanic dive operations a success." End quote. So Starlink confirmed that Ocean Gate's support ship was relying on satellite internet.
That makes sense.
But they couldn't use Starlink for deep water communication.
So multiple sources have clarified that SAT signals can't penetrate seawater.
100%.
That seems like common sense.
Yeah.
Starlink could have been used, but it looks like that's why there's always an issue with with communications when you're when you're in the water
You know does does ever do you think it's common knowledge what what starlink is at this point? I don't know is it?
I always see their satellites falling. I'm so apprehensive of like saying certain things now because it's like mansplainer
Oh, I don't know you want to explain it. I'll give you the first, I'll give you just a sentence.
They're using satellites.
The satellites are in space.
They're bouncing off the satellites in space
down to the little panels or the bigger panels that you have.
And that's why you're getting that service
throughout the world, and they're
able to position satellites in different parts of the world
to give areas of the world that wouldn't
have internet access to it.
But when you think about it, even your phones now,
the newer iPhones have the ability to be a sat phone. But you have to have a direct line of sight.
That's why when you're testing the SOS feature on your phone, they say, hey, go outside and
make sure you have a direct line of sight to the sky. So common sense, if you're underwater,
you're not going to have a direct line to the space and therefore it wouldn't work.
The only reason I know what Starlink is
Me explain her.
The only reason I know what Starlink is
is because one, I was on a long drive one night
and I was not the driver, I was the passenger
and I was looking outside and I saw what looked like,
I guess like a rope of stars falling,
and I was like, what the hell is that?
And I said to everybody in the car,
I'm like, oh my God, do you see this?
Do you see this?
And they're like, what is it?
So I looked it up and the Starlink uses
kind of lines of satellites.
And when they're falling, they're like being set on fire
as they enter the atmosphere,
which is making them glow and light up
and you can see them.
It's very cool to see, very cool.
I would love to see that one day,
but yeah, they can position them and move.
You just look outside sometime when you're driving
and I see them all the time now when I'm on long drives.
I think they did it over Ukraine where they moved into position over Ukraine
when they didn't have internet service where they can position them
and they can bounce the signal from the main satellite off these other satellites
to give a particular signal down to that area where it's positioned over.
And yeah, it's a pretty cool system and it takes you off the grid
and people are using it throughout the world now and like I just mentioned Ukraine when they were having their defense systems and needed communications
Starlink provided that to them so they were able to still keep that stuff operational
So it's a it's a great thing to have but yeah, it's not gonna work very well underwater
Yeah, so basically the polar prince was using Starlink so that they had one of their systems
So on the middle of the ocean, they still got internet exactly but Titan could not so they had to use this
Acoustic modem underwater ping system and obviously as we know
Super unreliable it doesn't always work. There's moments where you're out of communication for hours
It's not the good not a good thing when this this ship is not only your life support, your backup, but also supposed to guide you to the Titanic. So I wonder why, and this might be a stupid question
that someone who's an expert in this area could answer, but I don't know why there wasn't a
tethered system. I know it's deep and that would be a lot of cable, but some type of fiber optic
system where your communications and also the ability to control the sub from the mothership
would be capable, right?
Where you could send that tether down and let's say communication down below
goes out and they're unable to use the joystick. Well,
an operator back on the mothership could take control and get you back to the
surface.
So that just seems like there could have been some more precautions taken where
there'd be a secondary pilot on the mothership who could take over the ship.
If let's say the pilot down below becomes incapacitated
or gets sick or something.
You gotta have that backup.
Now, I'm answering my own question
because even if it was possible,
even if an expert came on right now and said,
yeah, Derek, we could do that, we do do that,
the answer here would be they didn't wanna spend the money.
So there are more advanced acoustic systems,
but Titan didn't use them.
And here's why.
There was no fiber optic tether.
Titan was untethered.
I'm wrong, boom.
Meaning it wasn't physically connected to the ship.
Most deep sea ROVs,
that's called remotely operated vehicles,
used tethers for communication and control,
but Rush believed in untethered freedom for his passengers
while eliminating the option,
which that eliminated the option
for stable high bandwidth data.
Oh, okay, so I'm not wrong in the sense it was possible.
He just chose not to use it.
You know why else he chose not to use it?
Because he's full of shit.
He didn't want to pay for it.
Oh, I want untethered freedom.
He didn't want to pay for it.
Fiber optics.
Fiber optic or advanced sonar arrays are expensive
Bulky and require more engineering more infrastructure
Ocean gate was cutting costs and streamlining systems and and as we know they did that at their the expense of reliability and safety
So he could have you think about all the robots that we do see that go down the Titanic the unmanned ones
They're all tethered. Yeah, of course. They all tethered. That's, that's what they use.
One of those to find the wreckage and to recover the bodies. Yeah. That, that's,
that's the standard. It seems like to me, and again,
it's probably very expensive and that's why he didn't want to do it.
But fiber optics with this, you know, you're traveling the speed of light.
So that communication would be awesome. You'd be able to hear everything.
There'd be a direct solid connection to the submersible where you would never
lose the ability to communicate.
And like I said, back up if Stockton or the other pilot goes down, essentially
the person at the mothership can operate the submersible like they operate those
robots, but they took away that feature, which is to me should have been the
standard.
No, it would cost too much.
Yeah, it would cost too much. Yeah. It would cost too much.
They needed to send a couple more mission specialists down before they could add
the tether. It's just ridiculous. We're not joking here.
We're not trying to make light of it. It's ridiculous.
Untethered freedom for my passengers.
I believe they don't see the tether above them. Trust me.
The passengers don't feel safer without the tether.
Okay.
You wouldn't see the frigging tether from inside that little window.
No, but he wanted them to really feel like they were down there on their own,
real explorers, you know? All right. Let's take our last break and we'll be right back.
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So, like I said, Polar Prince is sending out messages asking, can you see us? Can you see your support chip on your EvaLogix display? They
sent seven messages, no response from Titan. The Polar Prince is getting stressed,
okay? Now Titan did eventually send a message to the Polar Prince at 10 o'
9 a.m. after the support
ship had asked for a comms check.
When they didn't get a response to their seven messages, the submersible simply sent back
a K, which is shorthand for comms check.
So Polar Prince would send out a K, Titan would reply back K, and this is just them
making sure they're still in communication.
The Polar Prince again asked Titan if they could see them on their display.
They said this another three times before sending a message that said I need better comms from you to which Titan replied
Yes at 10 11 a.m. When the sub was at about 2100 meters
Titan then said quote lost system and chat settings. This is pH and quote pH and Arglay
He's he's talking for Stockton
so pH confirmed to the
polar prints that they could see the support ship on their screen and sent a
message at 10 15 a.m. that said all good here. At 10 27, Titan told the polar
prints that they were southeast of the bow and wanted to know if the support
ship was in the same location. The polar prints replied back quote, polar prints
not at bow making our way there end quote. At 10 30 a.m. the polar prints not at bow making our way there, end quote. At 10.30 a.m., the polar prints sent a message to Titan saying, quote,
your position jumps significantly each ping, end quote.
Which of course, because the actual communication,
the connection between these two vessels is spotty at best.
Yeah, of course it's going to look like they're jumping significantly.
At 10.38 a.m., polar prints told Titan to remember to write down the location and time when they
deployed the Ni-Skin bottle, which is a capped tube that is used to capture water samples.
And Titan replied back that they would not deploy the N-Skin bottles because it hadn't
been properly cleaned and it could contaminate the sample.
Now this pissed me off because remember, OceanGate had claimed the Titan was being used for research purposes
to scan the shipwreck in order to track its deterioration and to collect samples
in deep ocean water. In fact, in May of 2022, the company had sent a letter to the district
court about their plans for scientific missions to the Titanic and the letter said, quote,
every effort will be made to avoid contact
with the wreck itself,
and no artifacts or scientific samples
will be collected from the wreck itself.
However, this year the expedition does plan
to take free-floating water samples
throughout the water column and on the bottom
as part of OceanGate's scientific efforts
to collect environmental DNA with its partners
at the University of North Carolina
and the University of Edinburgh."
The previous June, OceanGate had a patent issued to them for systems and methods for
launching and recovering objects in aquatic environments.
In May of 2021, the legal and operational consultant to OceanGate, David Concanon, had
sent a letter to the district court, which oversees legal issues involving the Titanic,
and he said,
"...the exploration team will conduct annual surveys of the wreck in collaboration with scientific
and imaging experts from multiple organizations as part of an ongoing long-term study to document
the current condition of the Titanic Maritime Heritage Site, end quote. Ocean Gate like
to call their Titanic dives scientific missions, but if you peel back the layers, it starts
to look more like a carefully crafted illusion. They weren't just exploring the deep. They
were navigating around regulations. By labeling their paying passengers mission specialists
instead of tourists, Ocean Gate sidestepped safety rules that apply to commercial submersibles.
They went through the motions of science, filing patents, talking about water samples,
even claiming environmental research,
but in reality, a lot of it was smoke and mirrors.
On the Titan's final dive,
the crew didn't even deploy the end skin bottles
because it hadn't been properly cleaned.
That's not science.
That's a photo op dressed in a lab coat.
Basically, they're pretending
to do these scientific missions,
but it wasn't even important enough for them to clean
and put the collection bottles for the water back on Titan.
They didn't even have them.
The polar prince is like,
hey, don't forget to let us know,
because the polar prince is up there thinking
this is still what they're doing.
Don't forget to mark down when you do it
so we have the scientific data that we have to collect.
And they're like, hey, you know what?
We're not gonna do that
because they didn't even get cleaned properly properly we're just gonna go see the
Titanic okay absolutely ridiculous and the real engine powering Ocean Gate was
money Stockton Rush charged a quarter million dollars per seat he marketed the
experience as an elite adventure travel and hand-picked thrill seekers and
influencers to build hype he knew there was a market for the ultra rich
who wanted bragging rights that they reached 12,000 feet
below the ocean and the scientific veneer
that was a convenient shield.
One that made the whole thing look noble
even as internal warnings piled up
and safety corners were cut.
This was not exploration.
It was ambition unchecked.
And as we know, it would cost five people their lives. Yeah, I think it's a great way to describe it. ambition, unchecked. And as we know, it would cost five people their
lives. Yeah, I think it's a great way to describe it. Ambition, unchecked. You know, I don't
mind pushing the envelope, but we got to be safe in doing it. At 1047 a.m., when Titan
was at 3,356 meters, it sent its last message to the Polar Prince, and that message was
dropped two weights. Six seconds later, Titan was pinged for the final time.
And at 1049 AM, the Polar Prince sent a message to Titan that they'd lost tracking.
There was no response from Titan.
And there would continue to be no response as the Polar Prince sent messages every few
minutes.
The crew of the Polar Prince had expected Titan to ascend and reach the surface by 3
PM.
When Titan missed its scheduled check-in, Ocean Gate followed its emergency protocols. The polar prints launched a
grid search of the surface, sweeping back and forth across the area where Titan
should have popped up. But the ocean gave them nothing. No debris, no beacons, no
trace, just silence and a growing sense that something had gone terribly wrong.
When Titan failed to resurface as scheduled, when the polar prints had
already spent hours scanning the area, they hadn't found anything by
8 p.m. OceanGate's surface crew called in the Coast Guard, which and what followed
was an international race against time. There was aircraft filling the skies,
ships patrolling the waves, listening for anything. We saw this all unfold on the
news. The news was covering it every minute.
You could see at least on several news outlets
just footage of these.
Oh, we were all talking about it.
Even on social media, everyone was fascinated by it.
As soon as the news broke,
everyone was trying to figure out where they were.
And that oxygen countdown, Clark.
Yep, on all the news networks, yeah.
Was really stressful.
Once again, I can't imagine being a family member a loved one of these five passengers and turning on the news to see
That that that timer. Yes clicking down
Very so you get a bunch of loved ones being stuck at the bottom
Somewhere waiting for help and I do want to point out that while that was happening and on social media
People were just being awful horrible like oh a bunch of millionaires got themselves killed.
Like, so what?
What are we supposed to win?
And it's like, listen, when it comes to Stockton Rush,
I'm with you, but the others, I mean,
they just fell for his bullsh-t marketing,
like everyone else did.
They trusted him.
Yeah, we got Boeing and NASA,
all kind of believing Stockton Rush.
You got really, you know, scientific people
who followed him and were kind of on his side for a long time. And you expect these, you know, scientific people who followed him and were kind of on his side for a long time.
And you expect these, you know, regular people who, yeah, they have money, but outside of that, they're not experts or scientists in any way.
You expect them to know better.
So that was very disappointing to see how people were reacting on social media.
But obviously, we know that they didn't find anything.
Days passed.
Hope faded.
And then early on June 22nd,
a lone ROV pierced the deep darkness
and spotted the shattered remains of Titan on the seafloor.
In that moment, tragedy was confirmed,
an implosion, five lives lost.
And the deepest question now left for those above.
When Titan was discovered on the seabed in late June,
search crews recovered portions of the wreckage as well as presumed human
remains embedded within the debris field. These fragments, which were most likely
bits of bone, teeth, or tissue, were carefully retrieved by ROVs and safely
transported ashore. At the Armed Forces DNA Identification Laboratory at Dover
and Delaware, which is part of the DoD
medical examiner system, forensic experts successfully extracted DNA from these
remains and using methods designed to identify individuals from severely
degraded materials such as mitochondrial DNA testing, the lab was able to
positively match profiles to all five occupants of Titan. It was reported that
inside the sleeve of Stockton Rush's suit they found his ink pen, which was still intact, his business
cards, and stickers for the Titanic. Which is a little eerie to think about that.
Like his pen was still intact. You just, you don't understand what happened here.
So what did happen to the Titan at the bottom of the ocean?
That's the question everyone was asking.
Once the wreckage was found,
scattered like broken bones across the seabed,
just 1,600 feet from the Titanic's bow.
For a submersible designed to withstand crushing depths,
the sudden and catastrophic failure
raised serious concerns.
Experts and investigators believe Titan
suffered a violent implosion,
a structural collapse that would have occurred in milliseconds, giving those inside no time to react, no time
to suffer, just instantaneous death.
They said the hull would have collapsed inward at supersonic speed.
Temperatures inside the vessel could have briefly spiked to be hotter than the surface
of the sun from the compression, and the entire submersible was likely destroyed in milliseconds,
long before the human nervous system could register what was happening.
The US Coast Guard, after months of investigation and recovery efforts,
concluded that the pressure hull had failed catastrophically.
Though the full forensic analysis is still ongoing, and that just came out,
I think, this month or last month. I think in June,
the Coast Guard was like, hey, we're finishing up a report, you know, we'll release it when it's done, but it could still be months. We
don't know when it's gonna come out. So the full forensic analysis is still
ongoing. Several theories have emerged, most centered on the design and
construction flaws that plagued Titan from the beginning. One theory points to
the carbon fiber hull, a material never before used in a submersible at this
death. Unlike steel or titanium, carbon fiber is difficult to inspect and prone to delamination and
micro fractures. And these are once again tiny weaknesses that can and will
worsen with repeated dives. Stockton Rush had insisted on using this material for
its strength to weight ratio, but many experts warned it wasn't appropriate for
the extreme pressures of the deep ocean. There was also concerns about the 21-inch acrylic viewport, which was only certified
to depths of about 1,300 meters, far more shallow than the Titanic's resting place
at 3,800 meters.
And Titan's acoustic monitoring system, meant to detect stress in the hull in real
time, could only warn of a failure.
It couldn't prevent one.
In fact, some experts argue that once noises were detected, it may have already been too late. In the end, the Coast Guard seems to
believe that Titan imploded on its way down, likely before it ever reached the Titanic.
Wreckage was found in multiple large pieces, including both titanium end domes, and the
debris field was consistent with a sudden total structural collapse. So while there
may never be a way to know the exact second it happened or if the people on board
were getting you know any indications about that, all evidence does point to a fatal
flaw, ignored warnings, unproven materials, and a rush to reach the bottom of the
ocean that ultimately led to a tragedy 12,500 feet below the surface. And that's where we are.
Yeah.
And that's where it's going to be.
We talked about it.
Ignorance, some incompetence, a culture
where people were just following the leader because they
wanted to get a paycheck and they
didn't want to go against the guy
because they knew if they did, at minimum,
they would get fired.
And this was just a guy who did it all wrong
he there's multiple examples of what not to do when you're trying to do
something for the first time and we're gonna have some footage up here
probably as Stephanie was saying that last part where you're gonna see the
wreckage itself so you can get that visual if you're watching on YouTube but
I also want to go back to something I said in episode one or episode two where
I talked about my experiences as a diver and what we would use our hand clapping, right?
That's how we would communicate underwater because sound travels and I wanted to play something for you guys now if you haven't heard it yet because
Something that was heard very early on was by the NOAA. They had a moored passive acoustic recorder
That was about 900 miles away from where the Titan was last seen or pinged and
They recorded an acoustic signature that they now believe was the implosion. So I want to play that for you now
We'll be right back
So there you have it, and it's terrible to hear that because that is what it is. There's no doubt about it.
And the only thing you can take from it is the hope that it was instantaneous.
Like you said, they basically, before they even realized what was happening, it was already
over. And I hope that when the investigation is complete for all of this,
we as a society learn from it.
I don't want it to impede our thirst to explore and to evolve
and to get to higher limits as far as the human capability
and what we're able to accomplish on this little round globe that we live on,
right? Like I want to continue to push those boundaries, but I hope the lesson here is
that we do it in a safe way. You have to go in increments. It's not going to happen overnight.
We're not going to go from point A to point Z and not have tragedy like this. We have
to take baby steps and it can't be dependent on financial
status. There has to be a way to do it where we know going into it that it's
going to be expensive. There's going to be risks but they should be done
especially with now with AI and robots. They should be done with using those
devices. No human lives should be risked at any point during the experimentation
of pushing the boundaries of what we're capable of and And I hope that at the end of all of this,
that's what's taken out of it.
There's got to be people that are held accountable for sure from a legal
perspective, Ocean Gate, anybody else who's still here.
These families deserve justice. This should not have happened.
It was clearly preventable. And like I've said multiple times, yes,
Stockton Rush is not here. He cannot be held criminally liable.
But if there's anybody else who was pulling those levers or pushing those buttons
who knew what Stockton was doing and basically chose to do nothing about it,
basically went with the complacency defense,
they should be held accountable and it's not going to bring their loved ones
back, but those family members deserve answers.
And until they have them, we're gonna keep pushing for it.
Yeah, and you know, I think both Derek and I
have expressed the fact that Tony, Tony Neeson
was probably, you know, not as innocent, I guess,
as he has claimed to be in all the interviews
and documentaries he's done.
I think that he should definitely be looked into more. He was the head of engineering. I couldn't agree more. He was his
right hand man. At least that's what appeared. The only thing that saved him or might save him,
we'll see, is that he was fired and he's harping on that now. But how much did he let go? How much
did he look away from and say, oh, you know what? I don't want to be I don't want to be fired
We heard him do it and just you know
We don't know how much he did it, but we heard him do it just went in that meeting with David Lackridge, right?
We heard him have Stockton's back and be like, ah David Lackridge. Shush your mouth. We know what we're doing. Leave it to the experts
He shouldn't have done that and that does not look good for him
So nope
He's gonna have some answers and I hope the investigation is thorough and it gets to the bottom of it and the people that need
To be held responsible are and that these families who've lost loved ones
Are able to get as many questions answered as possible and that going forward with all the crimes we talk about right?
We're not gonna change it. We want resolution, but I've said it a million times. I look at it as a history book
we as humans do a lot of stupid
sh** and the important thing is to take it, learn from it, and never do it again. That's
the case here. We have to take this tragedy and we can't let it be in vain. We have to
see what went wrong here, which is pretty obvious, and apply it to future missions that
may go down a similar path. Checks and balances.
I hope that there's improvement in the future.
Yeah, and honestly my final thoughts are,
I don't think that Stockton Rush
cared what he was doing to this industry
that he claimed to be so protective over.
I don't think he cared because if something happened
in the Titan, if it imploded like it did,
he was going to be on board. And he wasn'toded like it did, he was gonna be on board.
And he wasn't, like I said, he wasn't gonna be there
to face the people who wanted him to be held accountable.
And I don't think he cared.
Like you said, oh, I don't think people will go down
in submersibles ever again.
Yeah, he completely destroyed that potential innovation
that could have been done safely,
that could have been done correctly,
because nobody will ever want to attempt it again.
Who would?
And I don't think he cared that that whole industry
that he claimed to be so important
would be unsuccessful after he died,
and that's a merciful,
because he wouldn't be around to be responsible for it,
and to be the person who was on the cutting edge of it,
and the person responsible
for bringing deep sea exploration to the mainstream.
If he couldn't be around to do it, I don't care. I don't think he cared if the whole industry went under and
nobody ever attempted this again. And that is the sad part. He really only cared about what he
wanted and how it made him look and what he would achieve as far as praise and accolades and
publicity from it. He knew that if there was an incident with that submersible and everybody died,
which if there was an incident, everybody was going to die.
There's no backups, there's no safe safeguards under the sea. He knew that
that would destroy the entire submersible industry. That's what those
people who were writing him letters were saying, hey you're gonna screw this up
for everyone. He didn't care because if he couldn't be the one to do it, he didn't
want anybody to do it and that sucks.
Yeah, I couldn't agree more.
It's a tragedy.
We're thinking of everyone involved.
Let us know what you guys think as far as not only Stockton,
but overall, do we try this again?
Does another company come in and learn
from the mistakes of Ocean Gate and try to explore
and get to these depths because it's not only
about the Titanic, it's about what's down there that could help us as a species, right? There's cures and all these
other things. So it is important. But ROVs can do that, right? What? Can't ROVs do that? I think so.
I think I don't think you need to send a human down there. I don't think you do. And I don't
think that it should be a tourist attraction. Not right now. I mean, 100 years from now when you and
I are long and gone, if this is like second nature, like riding a bike, sure,
no problem, maybe we do it then.
Oh, the Titanic won't be there by that time.
It's degrading. Well, the Titanic,
but there may be other things that we have to go explore.
But yeah, we're not there.
We're not even close.
And if, if you don't take anything else from this,
it's that we're not, we're not ready for it.
And we should definitely not be doing human trials.
Absolutely not.
But we want to hear your thoughts.
What do you think about it?
You and I talked about Stockton a lot. I'm interested to hear what you guys think.
What's your perception of Stockton Rush after this three-part series, after the documentary on Netflix, after everything you've seen online?
Where do you fall on it? It doesn't have to be a clear direct answer.
It may be a combination of things or you may have a feeling on it and you're gonna let us know but way down in the comments on YouTube leave a review leave your comments there
We've been reading everything. We'd really like to hear your thoughts any final words Stephanie
I know you already said your final thoughts about the episode
No, let's wrap it up and look forward to the next series and just like I like Derek said our thoughts are with the families
Anything that's stacked and rushed it did not reflect on his wife or his children.
This is not their doing.
Good thing to bring up, good point.
Yeah, it's just they lost somebody too.
And yeah, our thoughts are with them.
And anybody who went on that submersible
and saw what happened, they are probably struggling
with some survivor's guilt and some trauma as well.
So our thoughts and our hearts go out to all of them.
And that's it. We're moving on.
Guys, we appreciate you being with us. Until next time, everyone stay safe out there. We'll see you soon.
Bye. Thanks for watching!