Crime & Safety

GoFundMe Made For Indianapolis Family In Fatal Duck Boat Tragedy

Only two of 11 members of Indianapolis family survived in Branson, MO duck boat accident last Thursday, and 17 total were killed.

INDIANAPOLIS, IN — A GoFundMe page has been organized for funeral arrangements of the nine members of an Indianapolis family killed Thursday night when a duck boat sank in a thunderstorm near Branson Missouri. According to the page, two members of the family survived, including Tia Coleman, who lost her husband and their three children.

"Any donations will help in laying our nine loved ones to rest," organizer Leeta Bigbee said in a post on the page.

On Sunday night, more than $380,000 of a $1 million goal has been raised.

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As of Friday, authorities have called off the search for survivors after the amphibious tourist boat capsized near Branson, which also left seven others injured. The boat overturned during a severe thunderstorm on Table Rock Lake, authorities said. Four children from the Indianapolis family are among the dead, and the 17 victims range in age from 1 to 70.

WRTV added that two other members of the Indianapolis family survived the accident, which is being called a "mass casualty."

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"I lost all of my children. I lost my husband. I lost my mother-in-law and my father-in-law. I lost my uncle. I lost my sister-in-law… And I lost my nephew," survivor Tia Coleman of Indianapolis told the local Fox station. "I'm okay, but this is really hard."

RELATED: 9 Indianapolis Family Members Die In Missouri Duck Boat Tragedy

Coleman also told the outlet the boat captain told passengers not to worry about grabbing life jackets as they boarded.

Authorities have released the names of all 17 people killed:

  • William Asher, 69, from Missouri
  • Rosemarie Hamann, 68, from Missouri
  • Janice Bright, 63, from Missouri
  • William Bright, 65, from Missouri
  • Angela Coleman, 45, from Indiana
  • Arya Coleman, 1, from Indiana
  • Belinda Coleman, 69, from Indiana
  • Ervin Coleman, 76, from Indiana
  • Evan Coleman, 7, from Indiana
  • Glenn Coleman, 40, from Indiana
  • Horace Coleman, 70, from Indiana
  • Maxwell Coleman, 2, from Indiana
  • Reece Coleman, 9, from Indiana
  • Leslie Dennison, 64, from Illinois
  • Bob Williams, 73, from Missouri
  • Lance Smith, 15, from Arkansas
  • Steve Smith, 15, from Arkansas

Stone County Sheriff Doug Rader confirmed 31 people had been on the amphibious "duck boat" when it sank. He blamed winds in excess of 60 miles an hour for the accident.

A witness onboard the Branson Belle, a showboat docked nearby, captured video of the duck boat being battered by waves shortly before the accident.

Duck boats — like the one that sank in a thunderstorm Thursday night near Branson, — have been involved in a series of accidents across the country since at least 1999, when a similar incident killed 13 people on Arkansas's Lake Hamilton.

In that case, the National Transportation Safety Board blamed poor maintenance rather than severe weather, but other aspects are eerily similar. As with the tragedy in Branson, more than half the amphibious boat's passengers drowned, unable to escape the sinking craft. Also as with Branson, three children were among the dead.

In the Hamilton Lake accident, the NTSB ruled that a canopy likely trapped passengers on the doomed boat. Branson's duck boats were also enclosed by a canopy.

Originally designed to ferry troops from ship to shore during the Second World War, duck boats resemble a cross between a bus and a boat. Critics have said the crafts are poorly designed, leading to a slew of accidents on both land and water, including one in 2002, 2010, 2011, 2015, and 2016

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On Friday, the company behind Boston's Duck Boat Tours issued a statement on the Missouri tragedy, saying, "Our thoughts go out to the families of all those involved in yesterday's tragedy in Branson, MO ... The incident is currently under investigation, so it would not be prudent for us to comment or speculate as to what may have caused the incident, but extreme weather seems to have been a major factor."

"We are deeply saddened by the tragic accident that occurred this evening at Ride The Ducks Branson," said duck boat operator Ripley Entertainment in a statement released Friday morning. "This incident has deeply affected all of us. We will continue to do all we can to assist the families who were involved and the authorities as they continue with the search and rescue."

The search and rescue effort is now over. Authorities said shortly before noon that all bodies had been recovered. An investigation is still ongoing in Branson to determine exactly what went wrong and who, if anyone, is to blame.

Ripley Entertainment president Jim Pattison Jr., said in an interview with CBS that, in hindsight, the boat shouldn't have been in the water. But he defended the company's decision not to suspend tours, telling the New York Times that the thunderstorm that sank the boat "came out of nowhere," adding, "It was almost like a microburst."

But a meteorologist with the National Weather Service disagreed with that assessment, telling the paper there had been more than half an hour's warning before the storm struck.

It's not clear if the company was monitoring severe weather alerts.

Image courtesy of GoFundMe, a Patch partner.

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