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A Coast Guard hovercraft engaged in a marine rescue in the waters off Richmond, B.C., on June 28, 2026, after an unknown vessel capsized with several people aboard who were not wearing life jackets. Married couple Dorothy Stauffer and Brian Angus, seasoned boaters, saw five people in the water, but two people were too far away to rescue. Four people in total were pulled out, while six people remain unaccounted for as the search was called off that night. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Handout-Dorothy Stauffer (Mandatory Credit)

B.C. sailors tell of harrowing choices in rescue of charter sinking survivors

Jun 30, 2026 | 1:04 PM

PORT BROWNING HARBOUR, B.C. — Two British Columbia sailors who rescued survivors of Sunday’s charter boat sinking that claimed six lives in the Strait of Georgia have told of the harrowing choice to leave two people in the water in order to safely rescue others.

Brian Angus and his wife Dorothy Stauffer had set off from Vancouver that morning on their annual summer cruise when they saw three people floating together, then two others further away.

Angus says they focused on the three closest to them, getting them to hang onto the dinghy they were towing behind their sailboat, in a rescue hampered by a language barrier, but they then lost sight of the other two.

Angus is a former Air Canada pilot and Stauffer was a flight attendant for more than three decades and they say their emergency training kicked in during the rescue.