Missing Titanic submersible live updates: Texts show OceanGate CEO dismissed concerns
Five people, including the company CEO, were aboard the sub when it imploded.
All passengers are believed to be lost after a desperate dayslong search for a submersible carrying five people that vanished while on a tour of the Titanic wreckage off the coast of Newfoundland, Canada.
The 21-foot deep-sea vessel, operated by OceanGate Expeditions, lost contact about an hour and 45 minutes after submerging on Sunday morning with a 96-hour oxygen supply. That amount of breathable air was forecast to run out on Thursday morning, according to the United States Coast Guard, which was coordinating the multinational search and rescue efforts.
Latest headlines:
- RCMP to investigate the deaths aboard Titan sub
- US taxpayer cost for search and rescue may be $1.5 million, expert says
- OceanGate CEO claimed sub was safer than scuba diving, texts show
- OceanGate co-founder defends development of submersible
- Sub's carbon-fiber composite hull was the 'critical failure,' James Cameron says
- Probe seeks answers on why Titanic sub imploded
- Navy likely detected sound of the implosion on Sunday: Official
- All lives believed to be lost: OceanGate
Head of Horizon Maritime, which owns the Polar Prince boat, holding out hope
The co-founder and Board chair of Horizon Maritime, the company that owns the Polar Prince boat that took the Titan submersible out to sea, is speaking out.
"We have been supporting the Titanic expeditions for several years," Sean Leet said, calling the Polar Prince "an iconic former Canadian Coast Guard icebreaker that has been upgraded with advanced technology."
"All protocols were followed" for the submersible's mission, he said at a news conference Wednesday, calling the missing sub an "unprecedented" situation.
Equipment heading to search site can reach the depths of the submersible and potentially take it to the surface, he said.
"We wish to thank everyone involved in this rescue mission, especially the U.S. and Canadian Coast Guards, the organizations that have made their marina assets available including the French government … [and] the many private companies that have dropped everything at a moment's notice," Leet said.
"Our thoughts and focus remain with the crew of the Titan and their families," he said.
Leet said he is holding out hope that the five-person crew will be brought home safely.
"We'll continue to hold out hope until the very end," he said.
US Coast Guard searches area where noise was detected
As crews scour the Atlantic Ocean for the missing submersible, the U.S. Coast Guard said it's searching in the area where underwater noise was detected.
The unidentified noise was detected Tuesday night and Wednesday morning.
The data on the noise was sent to the U.S. Navy to be examined, according to the Coast Guard.
"We have to remain optimistic and hopeful when we're in a search and rescue mission," Capt. Jamie Frederick, the First Coast Guard District response coordinator, said at a press conference on Wednesday afternoon.
The deep-sea vessel submerged on Sunday morning with five people aboard and a 96-hour oxygen supply, according to the Coast Guard. That amount of breathable air is forecast to run out on Thursday morning.
When asked about the search becoming a recovery mission, Frederick told reporters: "We're not there yet."
Canada sends ship with advanced, deep sonar
One of the ships the Canadian Coast Guard sent to the rescue effort, the John Cabot, is equipped with advanced, deep sonar, said Joyce Murray, minister of Fisheries, Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard.
"We've sent so many assets to the search team to help," Murray said. "Authorities still have hope in the mission."
-ABC News' Will Gretsky
Former passenger says his sub lost contact with host ship on all 4 trips
Mike Reiss, who has done four, 10-hour dives with OceanGate, including one to the Titanic, told ABC News his sub lost contact with the host ship on every dive.
"Every time they lost communication -- that seems to be just something baked into the system," he said.
With no GPS, Reiss said it took his crew three hours to find the Titanic despite landing just 500 yards from the ship.
Reiss said he signed "a waiver that mentions death three times on the first page.”
"It is always in the back of your head that this is dangerous, and any small problem will turn into a major catastrophe," he said.
He said the submersible is built simply and is "just propelled by two fans on the outside."
"Even I was able to steer and navigate the sub for a while," he noted.
Reiss said his greatest fear was that the sub wouldn’t be able to release the weights that force it to submerge once it was time to rise to the surface.
-ABC News' Gio Benitez and Sam Sweeney