Navy warship reaches sailboat carrying ill toddler

Eric Kaufman, Charlotte KaufmanMail.com

SAN DIEGO (AP) — A U.S. Navy warship reached a crippled sailboat hundreds of miles off the Mexican coast and was preparing Sunday to complete the rescue of a sick 1-year-old girl.

The transfer of the child from the 36-foot boat to the ship was expected to start around dawn, Coast Guard Petty Officer 2nd Class Barry Bena said Sunday. “Sometime this morning as soon as they get some light they are going to take the child off the boat and bring her aboard the naval vessel,” Bena told The Associated Press.  

A small boat will be used to carry out the operation and it will be safer during daylight, especially since the child’s condition has stabilized, the spokesman said. The girl’s family — parents and a 3-year-old sister — were about 900 miles off Mexico on a cruise around the world when they sent a satellite ping for help to the U.S. Coast Guard on Thursday about her illness.

A family member said the Rebel Heart is owned by a San Diego couple, Charlotte and Eric Kaufman, whose daughter, Lyra, had developed a fever and a rash covering most of her body and who wasn’t responding to medications.

The California Air National Guard dispatched four rescuers, who parachuted into the water and reached the disabled vessel. The team was able to stabilize the girl and pointed the sailboat, which does not have steering or communication abilities, toward Mexico, the 129th Rescue Wing said in a statement.

The rescuers stayed aboard the Rebel Heart and are keeping watch on the ill child until the Navy frigate transfers them to shore. The girl still requires medical treatment, and the rescuers planned to stay with her until she reaches a hospital, the statement said.

USS Vandegrift churned through the Pacific at nearly 30 mph to reach the stricken boat, officials said. Bena said he wasn’t sure if it arrived late Saturday or early Sunday. The Vandegrift is equipped with an inflatable boat and a helicopter, but no decision has been made yet about the mode of transfer until officials can evaluate the sea conditions and other factors, said Lt. Lenaya Rotklein of the U.S. Third Fleet.

The Kaufmans, along with Lyra and 3-year-old Cora, were two weeks into a journey bound for the South Pacific islands and eventually New Zealand. Before the family left, Lyra had salmonella poisoning, but doctors cleared her to travel after she was healthy again, said Charlotte Kaufman’s sister, Sariah Kay English.

English initially was in daily email contact with the family but realized something was wrong when the communication stopped several days ago. English said she was told the vessel took on water every time the motor was turned on. It’s now slowly moving using only the sails.

When her sister first mentioned plans to sail with two young children, English recalled, “I thought it was nuts.” But English said the couple were always careful. Eric Kaufman is a Coast Guard-licensed captain who introduced sailing to Charlotte Kaufman during one of their early dates.

“They were not going into this blind. I knew they were doing this wisely,” English said. English said the couple made a network of friends who traveled around the globe with children and always stocked the sailboat with more food than they need.

“They were very overcautious. They’re not new at sailing,” English said. Unfortunately, “sickness sometimes happens.”

http://www.mail.com/news/us/2763252-navy-warship-reaches-sailboat-carrying-ill-toddler.html#.7518-stage-hero1-10

6 thoughts on “Navy warship reaches sailboat carrying ill toddler

  1. than CPS will probably get involved and say the parents were endangering the childs life by having it out to sea, thus starting a $$costly battle in the courts where only the system and the lawyers win, wont surprise me any, what will surprise me is if they really cared and this was all for the betterment of that child and not some scheme to ruin the parents.

    This “transfer” is big money..im sure someone will get the bill..might even be us the tax payers, but I bet they will try to extract it out of the parents.

    stay tuned..dam sure hope im wrong

  2. I do believe the folks who parachuted into the waters to save the child and others involved do truly care,as to how this story ends in long run only time will tell.

  3. They don’t tell us what happened to the boat. Why was it taking on water when the engine cranked up? How did it lose steering capabilities?

    The idiot had to hit something if the rudder was damaged, and that’s probably why it was taking on water too. I think this “Coast Guard-licensed captain” must have ran it aground somewhere, and then took it back out to sea without checking for damage, sick daughter and all, so I’m not so sure he was “very over-cautious”.

  4. “Charlotte and Eric Kaufman, whose daughter, Lyra, had developed a fever and a rash covering most of her body and who wasn’t responding to medications.”

    Vaccinations.

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