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Officials end search for Catalina ferry passenger who went overboard; ‘Don’t give up on him,’ sister says

Passengers wait in line to board a Catalina Express ferry
Passengers wait to board a Catalina Express ferry at the Boat Terminal in Avalon on Catalina Island. Authorities ended their search Friday night for a man who went overboard from a Catalina Express vessel off Long Beach on Thursday evening.
(Los Angeles Times)
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The search for a man who went overboard on a Catalina Island passenger ship off Long Beach was called off Friday night, authorities said.

The Los Angeles County Fire Department received a call shortly before 6 p.m. Thursday about a man who had either fallen from or jumped off the Catalina Express when it was about three miles off the coast. The man had not been located overnight, and the search continued at dawn Friday, with roughly 100 personnel scouring more than 100 square miles of water.

Keion Dade
Keion Dade
(Family photo)

The man was identified as 24-year-old Keion Dade of Moreno Valley.

Rescue teams — including the U.S. Coast Guard, Los Angeles County Lifeguards and a sheriff’s office dive team — concluded their efforts at 8 p.m. Friday after searching for about 27 hours, said U.S. Coast Guard Petty Officer Richard Brahm. The search included 22 boats, airplanes and helicopters, with teams scanning 600 square miles of water.

Brahm said the Coast Guard relies on a computer program that determines the maximum time a person could survive in the water based on factors such as the water temperature and the person’s age and weight. The program said Dade could survive 25 hours.

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“We normally go a little bit longer than that,” Brahm said. “We couldn’t find him.”

Kiami Dade, 22, described her brother as a social, funny and loving person who dresses sharply and loves God. He’s the kind of big brother who looked out for her by telling boys to stay away. The former Canyon Springs High School prom king was preparing to start a commercial trucking business with his dad and brother, she said.

Keion and his girlfriend went to Catalina Island for fun, his sister said. After he went overboard, passengers said he waved his hands in the water, but by the time the boat circled back he couldn’t be found.

Kiami said the timing doesn’t make sense.

“If they stopped immediately, why didn’t they see him in the water?” she said.

Greg Bombard, president of Catalina Express, told reporters that deckhands saw the man go overboard from the stern of the vessel.

“When they saw him hit the water, they threw a life ring over,” he said.

A crew member said the man was seen jumping from the boat, Long Beach fire spokesperson Brian Fisk said.

Brahm said the investigation remains ongoing into whether Dade jumped or fell. The ferry company provided investigators with video from the ship.

Kiami said she holding out hope that her brother is on a boat or reached land somewhere, perhaps disoriented. On Saturday, she and Keion’s 10 other siblings, as well as extended family members and friends, continued to comb the Long Beach pier.

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The family was devastated by news that the Coast Guard had called off the search.

“Naya Rivera, that celebrity from ‘Glee,’ had a search party going on for a week,” Kiami said, referring to the actress who drowned last year at Lake Piru. “I know she’s bigger than my brother, but we’re all people, so why did he only get 24 hours? We’re living a nightmare.”

Kiami started a hashtag on social media — #BringKeionHome — to spread the word about her missing brother. Family members chartered boats Friday and searched the ocean until dusk. They plan to hand fliers out on different beaches in the coming days.

“Just don’t give up on him,” she said. “He’s out there. We know he is.”

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