A photo provided by the U.S. Coast Guard shows a capsized boat off Florida's Atlantic Coast. Five migrants are feared dead after their boat capsized en route from the Bahamas to Florida in “a suspected failed smuggling venture,” officials said on Monday, April 14, 2025. (U.S. Coast Guard via The New York Times)

- Four survivors were rescued Sunday morning from a capsized boat 30 miles off Florida’s coast near St. Lucie.
- Survivors said the boat flipped soon after leaving Bimini; others clung on before drifting into the ocean.
- Officials called off the search after covering 1,240 square miles, citing low chances of recovery and dangerous smuggling practices.
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Five migrants are feared dead after their boat capsized on the way to Florida from the Bahamas in “a suspected failed smuggling venture,” officials said Monday.
The U.S. Coast Guard said Monday that it had suspended its search after covering 1,240 square miles over seven hours. Four people were rescued from a 25-foot vessel about 30 miles off Florida’s Atlantic coast, near St. Lucie, on Sunday morning, according to the Coast Guard.
Martin County Fire Rescue said in a statement that four survivors and one deceased victim were pulled from the water just before 10 a.m. Sunday. The Martin County Sheriff’s Department and the Coast Guard counted nine total passengers, but did not report the deceased victim reported by fire rescue officials. When asked, the sheriff, John Budensiek, was not aware of the death.
One of the survivors was seriously injured and the others had injuries that were not life-threatening, fire rescue officials said.
Budensiek said at a news conference Monday that the four people rescued were of Dominican and Haitian descent. According to interviews with survivors, the boat quickly capsized in the early hours Friday when it left the island of Bimini, Budensiek said. The Coast Guard said the boat capsized early Saturday.
Many of the migrants were initially able to cling onto the boat but “lost their grip and one by one drifted out into the ocean,” he said.
Only four were still alive — one woman and three men, including a 17-year-old — once the sheriff’s office was called around 8 a.m. Sunday to assist the Coast Guard and U.S. Customs and Border Protection with the rescue operation, Budensiek said.
A fisherman who was out with his family Sunday spotted the flipped vessel and was able to get close enough to give the migrants water, food and life jackets, the sheriff said. Because of rough sea conditions, his team needed over an hour to reach the boat. All four people who survived were transported to a hospital, where they were treated for water exposure and “serious sunburns,” Budensiek said.
The chance of recovering the remaining missing people “is probably pretty dismal at this point,” he said. “We believe they’re in the Gulf Stream, so they’re moving rapidly to the north.”
“The decision to suspend a search is always difficult and never taken lightly,” Chief Warrant Officer Edgardo Insignares said in a Coast Guard statement. Smugglers “routinely exploit” vulnerable migrants for profit, he said, “while putting their lives at risk aboard overloaded and unseaworthy vessels.”
—
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
By Remy Tumin/U.S. Coast Guard
c. 2025 The New York Times Company
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