Judge dissmisses charges against duck boat employees

FILE - In this July 23, 2018, file photo, a duck boat that sank in Table Rock Lake in Branson, Mo., is raised after it went down the evening of July 19 after a thunderstorm generated near-hurricane strength winds.
FILE - In this July 23, 2018, file photo, a duck boat that sank in Table Rock Lake in Branson, Mo., is raised after it went down the evening of July 19 after a thunderstorm generated near-hurricane strength winds.

LIBERTY, Mo. -- A federal judge has dismissed neglect and misconduct charges against three employees of a tourist boat that sank on a Missouri lake in 2018, killing 17 people.

U.S. District Judge Doug Harpool filed an order Wednesday upholding a recommendation made in September.

Kenneth Scott McKee of Verona, the captain of the duck boat; Curtis Lanham of Galena, the general manager of the boat's operator, Ride the Ducks Branson; and Charles Baltzell of Kirbyville, the manager on duty that day, were charged with neglect and misconduct after the amphibious vehicle sank during a storm on Table Rock Lake near Branson. McKee also was charged with failure to properly assess the weather before launching the boat and not telling passengers to use flotation devices.

The boat had entered the lake July, 19, 2018, despite severe weather warnings. Riders from Missouri, Indiana, Illinois and Arkansas were killed; 14 people survived.

U.S. Magistrate Judge David P. Rush ruled in September the federal government doesn't have jurisdiction because Table Rock Lake isn't considered a navigable waterway, which means it doesn't support commerce.

"While the events of July 19, 2018, remain an unfortunate accident and tragedy we're pleased that both Judge Harpool and Magistrate Judge Rush have sustained the admiralty dismissal motion," McKee's attorneys, J.R. Hobbs and Marilyn Keller, said.

Federal prosecutors could appeal the dismissal. Don Ledford, a spokesman for the U.S. attorney's office in Kansas City, Mo., said the office wouldn't comment on the judge's decision.

Ripley Entertainment, which owned the former World War II vehicle, settled 31 lawsuits related to the sinking. The boats, once a popular draw in the southwest Missouri tourist town, haven't returned to the lake since the sinking.

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