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A Bay Sailor’s Sad End

Despite an extensive search that lasted nearly eight hours, Bay Area sailor Casey Speed, 28, could not be found after he fell off his Sausalito-based Island Packet Kachina near Tiburon shortly before 8:30 p.m. last Friday. 

According to Speed’s wife, Lucinda, he had been drinking and was not wearing a lifejacket. Lucinda’s emergency call that evening triggered a rapid multi-agency response that included five vessels, a helicopter and a rescue diver unit.

The search was called off at 4:15 a.m. on Saturday. Coast Guard Lt. Simone Mausz was quoted in the Marin IJ as saying, "We searched past the survivability point, so the likelihood of us finding him alive at this point is pretty slim." Water in the Bay at this time of year is roughly 50 degrees. Kachina was anchored at the time of the tragedy, as the young couple had departed their slip at Sausalito Yacht Harbor earlier that day intending to have a quiet overnight on the hook.

A close friend of the couple, Tom Jeremiason of the Catalina 470 Camelot, says, "By all accounts Casey and Lucinda had a wonderful marriage and were frequently seen thoughout the Bay on Kachina." He remembers being impressed by them when he first met them during a Delta cruise in the summer of ’09: "Right off the bat you could tell Casey and Lucinda were a very special couple, and it was obvious they were very much in love. Both had a zest for the sailing life and, although Kachina was a work in progress, it was able to take them to places away from rat race of city life.

Casey and Lucinda Speed were wed on the bow of their boat, Kachina.

© Tom Jeremiason

"During that evening, Casey brought up the subject of marriage and mentioned that they were planning to be married in the next couple of months. Half jokingly, I mentioned that I was a reverend in the Universal Life Church and could take care of that for them. Surprisingly, they asked me if I could do the ceremony the next day." The next morning Casey and Lucinda dinghied Three River Reach to downtown Stockton and obtained a marriage license, and that afternoon the wedding ceremony was performed on Kachina‘s foredeck, with sailors from neighboring boats attending as witnesses.

"Casey told me that he didn’t have wedding rings," recalls Jeremiason, "so earlier that morning he had fashioned two rings out of copper wire and solder. They were the most beautiful wedding rings we’d ever seen.

"I am sure that Casey would want us to learn from this tragedy," he adds, "and, without judgment, reflect on the dangers of boating and alcohol."

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