Showing posts with label jennifer ellis seitz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jennifer ellis seitz. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Mexico calls off search for cruise passenger

Jennifer Seitz poses for a photo in October 2003, in Melbourne, Fla.
Mexican authorities have suspended their search for a Florida woman who apparently fell from a ship balcony during a Christmas week cruise. The woman's family believes she might have jumped overboard, but the FBI is still investigating whether someone pushed her. The Mexican Navy said late Monday it had ended its search for Jennifer Ellis Seitz, a Florida journalist, who was reported missing by her husband about eight hours after a surveillance camera captured a person falling overboard on Christmas night. The U.S. Coast Guard also called off its search Monday.

The 36-year-old woman's family said she had "previous emotional issues," but they said there were no outward signs of distress while on the seven-night cruise from Miami.

Seitz's mother joined her daughter and son-in-law on the cruise.

"Jennifer was in a very happy and uplifted mood both before and during the cruise," the Ellis family said in the statement. "She was excited about starting a new job and her future career with a local newspaper. She and her husband had been talking about starting their family."

Seitz and her husband, Raymond, were celebrating their one-year anniversary on the Norwegian Pearl cruise ship.

The ship docked Sunday in Miami. Norwegian Cruise Line said it was cooperating with the FBI.

Raymond Seitz has not been charged with any crime. A message left seeking comment at the couple's house Tuesday wasn't immediately returned. The paving company that employs him was closed until Monday.

The couple met in a weight loss support group; both had undergone bariatric surgery. She chronicled her weight loss journey for an Orlando TV station.

She was also a freelance writer, having written articles for The Tampa Tribune, The Ledger in Lakeland, and an online article titled, "Battling the Bulge Onboard," about how not to gain weight while aboard a ship.

On her Web site, Seitz described herself as an "avid traveler and an amateur chef." She was previously a reporter for Florida Today, a newspaper in Melbourne.

Raymond Seitz was arrested in April on a charge of domestic violence-battery after being accused of head-butting his wife. The charge was dropped after he entered a pretrial diversion program. Records show that she asked the prosecutor not to pursue the case.

A fellow passenger on the ship, Jim Nestor, told NBC's Today show Monday that Seitz and her new husband had "large and raw personalities."

Many of the passengers saw them as contestants on an on-board game called "The Not-So-Newlywed Game," modeled after a 1960s TV quiz show.

"They stood out a lot more than other people," Nestor, a retired police officer, told NBC.

Nestor, who appeared on the game show with his own wife, said he ran into Raymond Seitz a day after his wife was reported missing.

"I had given him my condolences, and he had a plastic bag filled with quarters, and he said to me that he was going to the casino to see if he could change his luck," Nestor said.

Monday, December 29, 2008

Coast Guard Suspend Search for Jennifer Seitz

Search suspended for missing cruise ship passenger, Jennifer Seitz.
Jennifer Seitz was reported missing just before 5 a.m. EST Friday on the Norwegian Pearl cruise ship by her husband. The ship was sailing off of Cancun, Mexico, at the time of her disappearance, and Coast Guard officials said surveillance footage showed a woman, believed to be Seitz, falling from the ship.

"We're looking to see if a crime was committed on the high seas," FBI Special Agent Michael Leverock said.

FBI agents spoke to the missing woman's husband when they met the ship at the dock on Sunday, and the FBI collected materials on the scene.

Norwegian Cruise Line told FOXNews.com that it was cooperating fully with the investigation.

The Coast Guard suspended its search Monday afternoon. It had used a C-130 aircraft to search for Seitz. Officials said it was standard procedure.

"The Coast Guard and Mexican navy conducted an exhaustive search for Jennifer Seitz, but have not located her," said Capt. Dean Lee, Seventh Coast Guard District chief of staff. "Our thoughts are with Jennifer Seitz's family and friends during this difficult time."

Seitz and her husband, Ray, are from Winter Haven, Fla., and had taken the cruise to celebrate their first wedding anniversary.

Jennifer Seitz was a former reporter for the Melbourne-based newspaper Florida Today.

Her family issued a statement Monday saying that although she "was in a very happy and uplifted mood both before and during the cruise" she "has had previous emotional issues."

"The family suspects that Jennifer chose an unfortunate ending to her life," according to the family's statement.

The missing woman was a temporary pollworker in Polk County from June through November, an official tells FOX News.

"We are deeply upset at the fact that she is missing," said Judy Walker, the director of community services with the Polk County elections office. "We certainly pray that she is found safely, and our hearts and prayers go out to the family that they find her safely."

Mexico's Fifth Naval Regional Command said in a statement it had found no sign of Seitz. The search was taking place just over 17 miles east of Cancun and beyond. Crews have covered more than 2,500 square miles searching for Seitz.

Norwegian Cruise Line said the ship returned to Miami Sunday after a seven-day western Caribbean cruise.