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The search for the missing UK tech entrepreneur Mike Lynch and five other passengers from a luxury yacht that sank off the coast of Sicily on Monday has resumed for a second day, according to local authorities.
Divers are attempting to find the missing people, who also include Lynch’s 18-year-old daughter and Jonathan Bloomer, chair of insurance group Hiscox and Morgan Stanley International.
Luca Cari, spokesperson for the Italian fire department, said divers resumed their operations at about 8.30am. A helicopter and a motorboat are carrying out the surface search.
‘’Dive times are 10 minutes per team, they’re going up and down all the time,” Cari told the Financial Times. “There’s no news, they’re looking for passages to access the boat.”
Cari said the divers’ efforts to access the yacht were hampered on Monday by furniture obstructing passageways. He said they managed to eventually reach the bridge but not cabins and were continuing to move obstacles to penetrate the rest of the ship.
“The operation is challenging . . . Diving to 50 metres is complex, as is staying there in a tight environment,” he said. “The work will go on until it is finished. It will take a long time to finish, the forecast is to work all day.”
Lynch’s yacht, Bayesian, sank early on Monday morning to a depth of approximately 50 metres after being hit by bad weather, according to the Italian coast guard.
On board were 22 guests and crew, of whom 15 were rescued, one was later found dead, and six remain missing. Lynch’s wife, Angela Bacares, was among those rescued.
Lynch, the former chief executive of Autonomy, was acquitted of criminal charges by a jury in San Francisco in June, vindicating the 59-year-old entrepreneur after a 12-year legal battle over the software group’s $11bn sale to Hewlett-Packard in 2011.
Among the passengers on Lynch’s 56-metre yacht were members of his legal team and their families, who had been invited on the trip to celebrate the courtroom victory.
Christopher Morvillo of law firm Clifford Chance, who represented Lynch, is also missing. Another Clifford Chance lawyer, Ayla Ronald, was rescued.
Monday’s yacht incident came on the same day as the death was confirmed of Lynch’s co-defendant in the US fraud case, Stephen Chamberlain, who was hit by a car in Cambridgeshire, England.
Chamberlain, a former vice-president of finance at Autonomy, went on to become chief operating officer at Darktrace, the cyber security company co-founded by Lynch in 2013.
Darktrace said the company was “incredibly saddened” by the “tragic death” of a “substantial contributor to the team in its early years”.
“Steve was much loved by his colleagues and leaves many friends at Darktrace. We extend our deepest condolences to his wife, Karen, and the rest of his family who are very much in our thoughts at this challenging time,” a spokesperson said.
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