It was supposed to be a ‘victory’ celebration trip for British tech tycoon Mike Lynch after being acquitted of fraud charges.
Joined by his nearest and dearest on £30million superyacht Bayesian, the 59-year-old father-of-two from Suffolk wanted to toast to his ‘second life’ after almost a year under house arrest.
But just before 5am on Monday, his sailing party to sunny Sicily unfolded into a tragedy when his superyacht – carrying 10 crew members and 12 passengers – was hit by a freak waterspout caused by bad weather and sank near Palermo.
Last night, Lynch – once dubbed the British Bill Gates and worth an estimated £852million – and his daughter Hannah, 18, who completed her A-levels this summer and has a place to read English at Oxford University were among six missing and feared dead.
The body of one man, thought to be an onboard chef, has been found, while specialist divers fear those unaccounted for could be in the hull of the ship after getting trapped in their cabins.
‘They were in the wrong place at the wrong time,’ Salvo Cocina of Sicily’s civil protection agency said last night.
What’s more, in an extraordinary twist, the tragedy comes days after Stephen Chamberlain, an ex-colleague of Mr Lynch – who he had successfully fought a fraud case with – died after being hit by a car.
Here is everything we know so far…
British tech tycoon Mike Lynch (pictured above) is missing after his superyacht sank off the coast of Sicily
An emergency and rescue service boat navigates on the sea near the site where a luxury yacht sank, off the coast of Porticello, near the Sicilian city of Palermo, Italy, August 19
Lynch’s attorney Christopher Morvillo (pictured) and his wife Nada are also missing
Chairman of Morgan Stanley International, Jonathan Bloomer (pictured), and his wife are also yet to be found
Mike Lynch’s superyacht Bayesian (pictured) was anchored off the coast of Porticello, near Palermo, Sicily, when a waterspout struck the area just before 5am on Monday, wrecking the boat and causing it to rapidly disappear beneath the waves
Mr Lynch had reportedly invited guests from the legal firm Clifford Chance as well as his company Invoke Capital to celebrate him being acquitted of fraud charges. One of the guests, Ayla Ronald, had tragically posted a picture of a serene sunset and calm waters to her Instagram story just hours before a freak waterspout sank the yacht
Mr Lynch’s wife Angela Bacares (right) was among the 15 people who were rescued from the yacht
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In a cruel twist in the yacht tragedy, it was revealed last night that Mr Lynch’s ex colleague and co-defendant in his US fraud trial, Stephen Chamberlain (pictured), has died in hospital after being hit by a car on Saturday
What was Mr Lynch ‘celebrating’ with his guests on the yacht?
The tragedy comes just weeks after Mr Lynch was acquitted of criminal charges by a jury in San Francisco in June, vindicating the entrepreneur after a 12-year legal battle over the $11bn sale of his firm, Autonomy, to Hewlett-Packard in 2011.
The 59-year-old, who was a billionaire at the height of his wealth, has previously been dubbed Britain’s Bill Gates after he made his fortune thanks to his company. Its software drew on the Bayesian mathematical theory after which the yacht was named.
Mr Lynch had invited guests from legal firm Clifford Chance as well as his own company Invoke Capital to celebrate him being acquitted of the criminal charges, the Telegraph reports.
The father of Ayla Ronald, who was part of Mr Lynch’s legal team, confirmed that the sailing trip was supposed to be a celebration of the tycoon’s acquittal.
Dr Cipolla said that Ms Golunski, who is listed as working for Mr Lynch’s company Invoke Capital on LinkedIn, told doctors at the hospital that the sailing trip was part of a ‘corporate holiday’.
Who is Stephen Chamberlain? Mr Lynch’s friend and co-defendant found dead in car crash
Mike Lynch’s ex colleague and co-defendant in his US fraud trial has died in hospital after being hit by a car on Saturday, his lawyer has revealed.
Stephen Chamberlain was fatally injured just days before billionaire tech tycoon Lynch went missing off the coast of Sicily when a superyacht was caught in a freak ‘whirlwind’.
Chamberlain, Autonomy’s vice president of finance alongside chief executive Lynch, was hit by a car in Cambridgeshire on Saturday morning and was placed on life support.
Chamberlain was hit by a car in Cambridgeshire on Saturday morning and has now died
Chamberlain had faced the same charges of fraud and conspiracy as his former boss Lynch
In a new statement, Chamberlain’s lawyer Gary Lincenberg told MailOnline: ‘Our dear client and friend Steve Chamberlain was fatally struck by a car on Saturday while out running.
‘He was a courageous man with unparalleled integrity. We deeply miss him.
‘Steve fought successfully to clear his good name at trial earlier this year, and his good name now lives on through his wonderful family.’
Days later, Lynch was one of six people reported missing after a luxury yacht was struck by an unexpectedly violent storm and sank off Sicily early on Monday.
Chamberlain faced the same charges of fraud and conspiracy as his former boss for allegedly scheming to inflate a company’s value before it was sold. Both the men were acquitted of all 15 charges by a jury in San Francisco in June.
After leaving the company, Autonomy, in 2012, Chamberlain worked as chief operating officer for cybersecurity firm Darktrace and volunteered as a finance director for Cambridge United soccer club, according to his LinkedIn profile.
Cambridgeshire Police appealed for witnesses after a collision between a pedestrian and a car in Newmarket Road in Stretham, Cambridgeshire, saying a man in his 50s had been taken to hospital with serious injuries.
A police spokesperson said on Monday there was no update on the pedestrian’s condition.
The law firm that represented Chamberlain in his trial did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
What happened to the superyacht and what was the weather like when it sank?
The superyacht was lit up and illuminating the night sky when a water spout suddenly occurred in close proximity to the boat early Monday morning.
Just before 5am, the Bayesian became caught up in the spout and then suddenly disappeared, according to witnesses, who have described the moment the yacht went down as very sudden, claiming it was as if it just disappeared.
‘The boat was all lit up. Around 4.30 am, it was no longer there,’ said one witness cited by Italian news agency ANSA. ‘A beautiful boat where there was a party. A normal joyous vacation day at sea turned into tragedy’.
‘The boat was not far from the port. It took very little to raise the anchor and head for the port. Evidently they were surprised by the storm that suddenly hit and they were unable to avoid sinking,’ a man in Porticello told Italian news agency ANSA.
Fisherman Pietro Asciutto said: ‘I was at home when the waterspout hit. I immediately closed all the windows. Then I saw the boat, it had only one mast, it was very large. I saw it sink suddenly’.
The Italian Coastguard said in a statement that a nearby boat offered assistance to people before emergency services arrived.
The Sir Robert BP, a Dutch sailing ship which had been anchored by the Bayesian, is believed to have rescued the 15 survivors.
Karsten Borner, the captain of the boat, has described how his vessel was battered by strong gusts, with his team working to stabilise it and manoeuvre it to avoid hitting the Bayesian nearby.
Borner told the BBC: ‘After the storm was over, we noticed that the ship behind us was gone.’
The superyacht was docked off the coast of Porticello, near Palermo, when a waterspout hit the area just before 5am Monday morning
Experienced cave divers for deep sea recoveries arrive at the pier as a rescue operation continues for the missing people who were on board a sailboat that sank, in Palermo, Sicily, Italy, August 19
A weather map shows how Mike’s Lynch’s superyacht was buffeted by winds of up to 150mph before it sank
Captain Karsten Borner told the BBC: ‘After the storm was over, we noticed that the ship behind us was gone’
Italian Coast Guard Command teams and firefighters are carrying out search and rescue operations with helicopters and ships to find missing people after a yacht sank on Monday due to a storm east of Palermo in southern Italy on August 19
Italian Coast Guard Command teams and firefighters are carrying out search and rescue operations with helicopters and ships to find the missing people after the Bayesian sank
Experienced cave divers for deep sea recoveries continue the rescue operation for missing people who were on board a sailboat that sank off Porticello, near Palermo, Sicily, Italy, August 19
Emergency response teams are seen at the harbour near where the boat sank Monday morning
‘We managed to keep the ship in position, and after the storm was over, we noticed that the ship behind us was gone,’ he said.
The Sir Robert BP, a Dutch sailing ship which had been anchored nearby the Bayesian, rescued 15 passengers (pictured above is a file image of the Sir Robert BP)
The British-flagged Bayesian is thought to have arrived in Porticello after a stopping in Milazzo, around 100 miles up the coast towards the Italian mainland
Did the mast snap and cause the yacht to sink?
The enormous 246ft-high aluminium mast on Mike Lynch’s superyacht could have been what caused the vessel to capsize and sink rapidly, according to an expert.
The Bayesian had the tallest aluminium mast in the world at 246ft, which broke during the waterspout, causing the ship to sink after the weight of the mast took the hull beyond the ‘down-flooding angle’, technical consultant and nautical expert Gino Ciriaci told Italian website Corriere Della Sera.
He added that even if the mast was made of steel, it would not have changed anything, as a mast that tall would have exerted a pressure of ‘tens of tons’ due to the wind and said it is ‘normal’ that the boat could sink based on its technical characteristics.
Mr Ciriaci, who was a shipyard manager in Rome and is authorized by the Italian Ministry of Industry (Consap) to carry out technical assessments following accidents, said a mast can break in ‘particularly extreme conditions’.
He said once the mast has fallen, the boat pitches and rolls with the waves much more vigorously without the mast and sails to dampen its movements.
In the case of the Bayesian – which has a gross tonnage of 473 tons -, he said the waterspout was so violent that the boat heeled over, tilted and put the edge of the deck under water, and at that point, the water began to enter and the boat sank.
Both the hull and the superstructure, the part above the main deck, were made from aluminium
The enormous 246ft-high aluminium mast on Mike Lynch’s superyacht (pictured from above) could have been what caused the vessel to capsize and sink rapidly, according to an expert
The group were staying on the vessel, which has been named as the Bayesian – a luxury yacht which sails under the British flag
A handout photo made available on August 19 by Perini Navi Press Office shows the ‘Bayesian’ sailing boat, in Palermo, Sicily, Italy
The Bayesian, which was previously known as the Salute, was a 56m long vessel built in Viareggio, Tuscany, by luxury shipmaker Perini Navi in 2008
Who is still missing?
Superyacht owner Mr Lynch is among those missing after he made a tearful return to Britain weeks ago after he was acquitted of fraud charges that could have landed him 25 years in a US jail.
Mr Lynch, who is one of the UK’s richest men and worth an estimated £852million, had spoken of his ‘indescribable’ relief at being acquitted and joy at returning to Britain, and texted one friend saying it was ‘so wonderful to be home’.
The father-of-two had also spoken at his delight at being able to spend time with his daughters, aged 21 and 18, and their six dogs.
His wife tragically revealed on Monday that not just her husband was missing after their yacht sank, but also their 18-year-old daughter Hannah.
Hannah completed her A-levels this summer and had secured a place to study English Literature at Oxford University, according to the Times.
Two more passengers on board the Bayesian who are still missing are the chairman of Morgan Stanley International, Jonathan Bloomer and his wife.
Mr Bloomer is a close friend of Mr Lynch and was confirmed missing by Italian Authorities alongside his wife.
According to his Linkedin profile, Mr Bloomer is the chairman of insurance provider Hiscox and was formerly the chief executive of Prudential before being ousted in a boardroom coup in 2005.
The other two yet to be found are Mr Lynch’s attorney Christopher Morvillo and his wife Nada.
Attorney Gary Lincenberg, who represented Mr Lynch’s co-defendant Stephen Chamberlain in the high-profile fraud case, said Morvillo and his wife ‘are presumed to be passed away’ after the yacht went down near Sicily.
Mr Lincenberg told Business Insider that ‘Chris and his wife are gone’.
British tech tycoon Mike Lynch is among those missing after the Bayesian superyacht sank
Mr Bloomer (pictured in 2002) is a close friend of Mr Lynch and was confirmed missing by Italian Authorities alongside his wife
Experienced cave divers for deep sea recoveries continue the rescue operation for missing people who were on board a sailboat that sank off Porticello, near Palermo, Sicily, Italy, August 19
Where could the six missing passengers be?
There are fears that those who are still missing became trapped in their cabins, with divers earlier reporting that they saw ‘bodies through the portholes’ of the yacht, according to Italian media.
Francesco Venuto, the spokesperson for Sicily’s civil protection agency, also told the BBC that they ‘think [the corpses] must be there [in the boat]’.
He added: ‘We’ve been searching all day with helicopters and boats, we’ve found nothing. That wouldn’t make sense, in [these] conditions we should have found something by now.’
Expert divers reached the hull on Monday morning, with more specialist teams brought in as the day went on cables reportedly fixed between the yacht and the surface to allow easier descent.
‘The specialists are able to get into small spaces underwater,’ a spokesman said.
The UK Marine Accident Investigation Branch is deploying a team of four inspectors to Italy to conduct a preliminary assessment.
Fisherman Fabio Cefalù said he had seen a flare from shore at around 4.30am and immediately set out to the site but by the time he got there, the Bayesian had already sunk, with only cushions, wood and other items from the superyacht floating in the water.
‘But for the rest, we didn’t find anyone,’ he said from the port hours later. He said that he immediately alerted the coast guard and stayed on-site for three hours, but didn’t find any survivors. ‘I think they are inside, all the missing people.’
Divers operate in the sea to search for the missing, including British entrepreneur Mike Lynch, after a luxury yacht sank off Sicily, Italy August 19
Cave divers arrive to join in the rescue operation in Palermo, Sicily, on August 19
What is a waterspout?
The US National Ocean Services says that waterspouts are a whirling column of air and water mist.
There are two different categories of waterspouts.
The first are fair-weather waterspouts which form along the dark flat base of a line of developing cumulus clouds.
And the second type are known as tornadic waterspouts, which as their name, suggest share similar characteristics to land tornadoes. They develop downward in a thunderstorm and form over either water or move from land to water.
It appears likely that it was a tornadic waterspout that struck Mr Lynch’s yacht. Although they are more common in tropical waters – such as off the coast of Florida – they can appear anywhere.
Last year an astonishing 15 waterspouts were recorded in one day off the coast of France, Italy and Spain by the International Centre for Waterspout Research.
The cause of this potential waterspout could have been caused by the stormy weather Italy has endured in the past few days which have led to floods and landslides across the country, according to The Guardian.
A waterspout off the coast of Cornwall. Following the tragic incident, attention has been drawn to the ocean phenomenon with many wondering what they are and what risk they pose to ships
Nautical maps show the last known location of the Bayesian just after 2am local time on Monday, when it was at anchor
A frantic search is underway at the site of the shipwreck after the Bayesian sank Monday morning
One body has been found
Tragically, the body of a man was found floating alongside the sunken vessel on Monday.
Authorities identified the man as Canadian Ricardo Thomas, who was working as the boat’s chef and was the only crew member unaccounted for.
His body was recovered, and police divers spent the day trying to reach the hull of the ship, which was resting at a depth of 163 feet off Porticello where it had been anchored, rescue authorities said.
Who are the survivors?
Mr Lynch’s wife Angela Bacares, 57, was among the fifteen people who were rescued from the 180ft yacht, which had been carrying ten crewmembers, Mr Lynch, herself, their daughter and nine guests.
She has revealed that the first sign of the freak waterspout that sunk the luxury sailboat Bayesian just before 5am this morning was a ‘slight tilt’ that woke her up.
Ms Bacares told Italian media that both her husband and their daughter Hannah, 18, are missing after the yacht sank as she anxiously waits for updates.
She told La Repubblica that she and her husband woke up at 4am when the boat suddenly ’tilted’.
Mrs Bacares said that they were not worried at the time, but that she still got up to see what was happening, until glass shattered and created confusion on board.
She sustained abrasions on her feet – likely after walking on glass shards during the sinking – which have left her unable to walk and sitting in a wheelchair, La Repubblica reports, while she also has bandages on others part of her body.
‘The survivors are very tired and are constantly asking about the missing people,’ Doctor Domenico Cipolla, Director of Paediatric Admission and Medicine and Surgery at ‘Di Cristina’ hospital in Palermo, said.
Mr Lynch remains missing while his wife Angela (pictured) survived and is recovering
Charlotte Golunski, 36, and her young daughter Sofia were two of 22 people aboard the superyacht when it was battered in a storm before sinking a few hundred metres from the port of Porticello on Monday morning
Survivor of the Sicily yacht sinking Charlotte Golunski, who fought to save her baby in the storm
‘To my knowledge, there is only one body that has been found, the others are still missing. We have given the survivors this information, but they are talking and crying all the time because they have realised that there is little hope of finding their friends alive,’ he added.
British mother Charlotte Golunski and her one-year-old baby called Sofia were reported to be among those rescued by a nearby sailboat, with Dr Cipolla confirming that they were treated at the Di Cristina hospital.
‘By the way, I know that there were some young people on board, some very young people. They are very tired and they continually thank us for the care and attention we are giving them and the little girl. They are very tired but they are very sweet people,’ Dr Cipolla said.
Ms Golunski, 36, has described how she momentarily lost her daughter in the ‘fury of the waves’, before finding her and managing to get them both to safety.
‘I held her afloat with all my strength, my arms stretched upwards to keep her from drowning,’ Ms Golunski said.
‘It was all dark. In the water I couldn’t keep my eyes open. I screamed for help but all I could hear around me was the screams of others.’
The mother, who is in hospital with her baby where she received treatment for a minor shoulder injury, abrasions and a ‘wound that needed stitching’, according to Dr Cipolla, described the ordeal as ‘terrible’, detailing how ‘in a few minutes the boat was hit by a very strong wind and sank shortly after.’
A survivor leaves the Coast Guard Headquarters after a sailboat sank in the early hours of Monday, off the coast of Ponticello, near the Sicilian city of Palermo, Italy, August 19
Ms Golunski and her little girl were taken to be assessed at the Children’s Hospital in Palermo. The baby is said to be doing fine and is unharmed, with tests only carried out as a precaution.
The child’s father, a British man called James Emsilie, 36, was taken ‘to the adult emergency room where his wounds were sutured’ before he was reunited with Ms Golunski and their daughter Sofia, Dr Cipolla said.
Five other people were taken to the Bagheria territorial emergency point. Others reportedly required no hospital treatment, and spoke to authorities about what happened as the incident is being investigated.
Also among those rescued was Clifford Chance lawyer Ayla Ronald, 36, from London, and her partner.
Her father Lin Ronald said that she was part of Dr Lynch’s successful legal team who were invited to go on the sailing trip.
Mr Ronald said: ‘I have texted with my daughter. She has only said to me that there are deaths, and she and her partner are alive.’
His daughter Ayla had tragically posted a picture of a serene sunset and calm waters to her Instagram story just hours before the superyacht sank.
Other survivors included Irish woman Sasha Murray, 29, Matthew Fletcher, 41, from London, James Calfield 51, from New Zealand, Myin Htun Kyaw, 39, from Myanmar and the French Captain Matthew Griffith.
Also among those rescued was Clifford Chance lawyer Ayla Ronald (pictured), 36, from London, and her partner
Her father Lin Ronald said that Ayla (pictured) was part of Dr Lynch’s successful legal team who were invited to go on the sailing trip
Mr Ronald told the Telegraph: ‘I have texted with my daughter. She has only said to me that there are deaths, and she and her partner are alive’ (pictured: Ayla Ronald)
British tech tycoon Mike Lynch had reportedly invited his family and friends on the sailboat to celebrate charges of fraud being dropped
Who is Mike Lynch?
Mike Lynch was celebrated as a British business success story.
Born in Ilford, Essex in 1965, he earned a PhD from Cambridge before founding one of the UK’s most successful technology companies, Autonomy, in 1996.
The married father of two daughters was awarded an OBE in 2006 for services to enterprise.
That same year, he was appointed to the board of the BBC – and was later elected to then-prime minister David Cameron‘s council for science and technology in 2011.
He advised Mr Cameron on subjects including ‘the opportunities and risks of the development of artificial intelligence (AI) and the government’s role in the regulation of these technologies’.
But he later became embroiled in a bitter fraud lawsuit stemming from the disastrous $11billion (£8.3billion) sale of his company Autonomy to Hewlett-Packard in 2011.
The legal battle endured more than a decade, and in March this year Lynch found himself in a San Francisco courtroom to defend himself against fraud and conspiracy charges.
The 59-year-old tycoon had spent much of the previous year living under house arrest with an electronic tag attached to his ankle.
Mr Lynch had potentially faced up to 20 years in a US prison if found guilty of 16 counts of conspiracy, and securities and wire fraud, which he denied.
In June he was cleared of all charges – a major victory for the tech guru.
Mr Lynch (second left) is seen in the early days of his techology firm Autonomy in Cambridge
Pictured above is Mike Lynch’s Suffolk home, where he keeps rare breeds of cattle and pigs
The 59-year-old, who was a billionaire at the height of his wealth, has previously been dubbed Britain’s Bill Gates after he made his fortune thanks to his company Autonomy (file image)
According to an events worker who did work at Mr Lynch’s Chelsea home, the businessman had a miniature model of the Bayesian yacht and photos of it on the water in his hallway.
‘When I asked him about he told me about its size and how much his family loved spending time on it,’ the anonymous staff member told The Times.
‘They had a personal chef who worked both on the boat and in their home. When I visited there were leftovers from their last boat trip in the fridge which he let the serving staff have.’