-
Katrina rescuer is sued by boat owner
Katrina rescuer is sued by boat owner
Saturday, August 26, 2006
By Steve Ritea
A Broadmoor man who said he rescued more than 200 residents after commandeering a boat during the flood after Hurricane Katrina is being sued by the boat's owner for taking it "without receiving permission."
Mark Morice, who by the Wednesday after the storm said he "couldn't get more than a block or two without people screaming to me for help," took the boat "out of necessity. . . . I did it for my neighbors."
Among them was Irving Gordon, a 93-year-old dialysis patient who Morice carried from his flooded home, placed in the boat and rescued from distress.
"I don't know where we would be today if it weren't for him," Molly Gordon, Gordon's wife of 65 years, said Friday.
The lawsuit contends that boat owner John M. Lyons Jr. suffered his own distress, in the form of "grief, mental anguish, embarrassment and suffering . . . due to the removal of the boat," as well as its replacement costs.
E. Ronald Mills, Lyons' Metairie lawyer, who filed the suit in 24th Judicial District Court in Jefferson Parish earlier this month, on Friday accused Morice of "hubris."
Morice made no attempt to return the boat, Mills said, and it remains missing.
'Living in fear'
The Friday after the storm, Morice said, he left the city briefly to recover from a week of trolling the city's streets, "living in fear and sleeping with a shotgun." That day, after delivering 15 people to dry ground on Claiborne Avenue near the Orleans-Jefferson parish line, Morice said he parked the boat there and left it for other rescuers to use. Given the sum-of-all-fears atmosphere at the time, returning the boat "was the farthest thing from my mind," he said.
Molly Gordon said she was baffled by the lawsuit. "This man should be so grateful he had a boat that saved lives," she said.
During a news conference at his Napoleon Avenue home Friday, Morice and his attorney, Joseph A. Marino III, displayed photographs and showed video Morice took in the neighborhood, which showed desperate high-water scenes accompanied by a bone-chilling soundtrack of screams and pounding, apparently from people trapped inside attics.
Lyons' boat, an 18-foot, 1998-model 180 Sea Sport, was one of three Morice said he commandeered after water started rising in the neighborhood. Morice said one of the other boat owners told him he was glad Morice had been able to hot-wire his boat -- Morice said he actually got instructions on how to do it from Yamaha customer service -- and the other boat owner apparently has not complained.
Morice did try to borrow a boat the old-fashioned way. But because cellular phone service was out, Morice, a lawyer, said he began text-messaging several friends Tuesday asking if they had boats he could borrow.
But all the boats his friends suggested either sank or already had been put to use, Morice said. On State Street Drive, however, he noticed two boats that appeared usable and used bolt cutters to cut gate locks and check them out. Morice said he took Lyons' because the keys were in the ignition. He said he didn't know who owned it.
Morice used the boat to deliver Molly and Irving Gordon to nearby Memorial Medical Center on Wednesday, they said. The next day, as a nightmarish scene inside the dark, humid hospital was finally ending, Morice was one of 10 boaters who helped evacuate the last patients out of Memorial, he and the Gordons said, dropping them on dry ground at St. Charles Avenue.
Morice used gas siphoned from cars on the upper floors of Memorial's parking garage to power the boats he and several friends used in rescue missions that week.
Sometime in September or October, Morice returned to the home on State Street Drive and spoke to Lyons' wife, he said, explaining why he had taken their boat. He later e-mailed the Lyons a picture of him using the boat to rescue people.
In January, he received a letter from Mills noting that the Lyons had received less than half the replacement value of the boat and its motor from their insurance.
The letter asked Morice for $12,000 to "settle this matter."
Morice said he thought the letter was "a joke" and paid little attention to it until this month, when the lawsuit was filed.
The lawsuit accuses Morice of taking the boat "solely to promote himself and his law practice." Although he appeared in several newspapers in the storm's aftermath, Morice said he never sought the publicity.
Mills said Morice could have been more responsible when he took the Lyons' boat. "If I felt I had to take the boat I would have at least left a note," Mills said.
Morice's reaction? "Next time there's a major storm or natural disaster and I'm called to save lives, I'll try to remember to bring a pen and paper," he said.
. . . . . . .
Steve Ritea can be reached at [email protected] or (504) 826-
http://www.nola.com/news/t-p/frontpa...430.xml&coll=1
Nice to know Lyons has his priorities straight.....
Laissez les bon temps rouler!
Going to church doesn't make you a Christian any more than standing in a garage makes you a car.** a 4 day work week & sex slaves ~ I say Tyt for PRESIDENT!
Not to be taken internally, literally or seriously ....Suki ebaynni IS THAT BETTER ?
-
-
08-26-2006 09:51 PM
# ADS
Circuit advertisement
-
Re: Katrina rescuer is sued by boat owner
But all the boats his friends suggested either sank or already had been put to use, Morice said. On State Street Drive, however, he noticed two boats that appeared usable and used bolt cutters to cut gate locks and check them out.
Morice said he took Lyons' because the keys were in the ignition. He said he didn't know who owned it
Question... is it theft if the idiot leaves the keys in it. I think many insurance companies would say no. Don't believe me park your car in a bad neighborhood and when it's gone try to get the insurance people to pay for it. hahahaha Just another nut job wanting money for nothing
**** The views and opinions stated by kids=stress are simply that. Views and opinions. They are not meant to slam anyone else or their views.To anyone whom I may have offended by this expression of my humble opinion, I hereby recognized and appologized to you publically.
-
-
Re: Katrina rescuer is sued by boat owner
The guy did the right thing as for as I'm concerned. But I think he should have returned it afterwards. Or if he was going to leave it for other rescuers at least write a note and inform the owner who has it or tell the other people using it to return it after they're through with it.
-
-
Re: Katrina rescuer is sued by boat owner

Originally Posted by
stresseater
Question... is it theft if the idiot leaves the keys in it. I think many insurance companies would say no. Don't believe me park your car in a bad neighborhood and when it's gone try to get the insurance people to pay for it. hahahaha Just another nut job wanting money for nothing
That was my thought. If he's dumb enough to leave the keys in then he deserves to have it stolen. I just don't understand a boat is more important to John Lyons Jr than saving people. Where is his priorities. Whose to say that his boat could have been ruined by the Katrina if it wasn't used. Somedays (most days) I just don't understand people.
In memory of my brother Larry
4/3/81-7/17/05
Bring on the freebies!
-
-
Re: Katrina rescuer is sued by boat owner
Shame on that man. Sounds to me like he was not properly insured.
Ugh
-
-
Registered User
Re: Katrina rescuer is sued by boat owner
yea, lets see, would you rather have 200 people alive instead of dead, or 12,000$. If you took the money, you are a disgrace to the human race
-
-
Re: Katrina rescuer is sued by boat owner

Originally Posted by
gmyers
The guy did the right thing as for as I'm concerned. But I think he should have returned it afterwards. Or if he was going to leave it for other rescuers at least write a note and inform the owner who has it or tell the other people using it to return it after they're through with it.
I would think under the circumstances that returning a "borrowed" boat was the least of the concerns of the rescuers. If it had not been taken for rescue I am sure someone with less honorable intentions would have "borrowed" it instead.
It is the Right of the People to Alter or Abolish Government
-
-
Re: Katrina rescuer is sued by boat owner
Yeah like the"borrowed" tv's, stereos, and guns.
**** The views and opinions stated by kids=stress are simply that. Views and opinions. They are not meant to slam anyone else or their views.To anyone whom I may have offended by this expression of my humble opinion, I hereby recognized and appologized to you publically.
-
-
Re: Katrina rescuer is sued by boat owner
I don't think this case will go very far.
First off, in times of great crisis such as those when the boat was commandeered, there is some kind of good Samaritan law that would prevent the guy who used it from being held responsible.
He can prove without a shadow of a doubt that he was a hero and not a thief. I am sure he had no idea who the boat belonged to when he used it to rescue all of those people, that was irrelevant at the time. How could you return a boat to someone if you had no idea who it belonged to? Returning it to the same place he found it may not have been possible, his own life could have been in danger had he tried to do so.
The fact is that the boat was needed and he used it. If the owner was so concerned about his precious boat, maybe he should have loaded it up and moved it out of harms way before it got so bad down there. I really feel like a jury is going to balk at the boat owner's claim once they hear the whole story. It will most likely be thrown out of court.
Andrea
-
-
Registered User
Re: Katrina rescuer is sued by boat owner
people can be so stupid. i think that man did a great thing saving lives.
Crys101 
-
-
Re: Katrina rescuer is sued by boat owner
I think in the long run the lawyer is going to regret taking this case. I bet he's going to get a lot of negative publicity. At least he deserves to get it.
This case is as bad as the one where the doctor saved an accident victims life and he turned around and sued the doctor.
-