Baltimore: Two bodies have been recovered from the site of the Baltimore bridge that collapsed into a river on early Tuesday when a ship crashed into it, said Col Roland L Butler Jr, superintendent for Maryland State Police.
On Wednesday, Butler said that a 35-year-old and a 26-year-old were recovered from a red pickup truck in the Patapsco River near the mid-span of the collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge. The six construction workers who were missing and presumed dead were from Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador, Butler said.
Governor Wes Moore told the families of the victims in Spanish, "Estamos contigo, ahora y siempre", which means, "We are with you, now and always."
Meanwhile, the ship was undergoing "routine engine maintenance" in the port beforehand, the Coast Guard informed. US Coast Guard Rear Admiral Shannon Gilreath said at a news conference on Wednesday that authorities had been informed that the ship was going to undergo routine engine maintenance before it lost power. But he said authorities were not informed of any problems.
Maryland Governor Wes Moore is taking a closer look at the aftermath of the bridge collapse in Baltimore. Moore boarded a Coast Guard ship with federal and local officials on Wednesday to better understand the path the ship that caused the collapse took and how the crash happened, the governor's office said. His office said his goal was to support the Coast Guard and other federal partners, thank first responders, and learn more about what happened.
One of the construction workers presumed dead in Baltimore was a 38-year-old father of two who dreamed of someday returning to his native Honduras, his brother says. Carlos Suazo says his brother, Maynor Suazo, had been in the US for 18 years but "always dreamed of, in his old age, retiring peacefully in Honduras". He describes him as the beloved youngest sibling among four girls and four boys.
"He was someone who was always happy, was always thinking about the future. He was a visionary," Carlos Suazo says. He last spoke to his brother on Sunday, when they had lunch to discuss planning for a family birthday party. He says the family hasn't lost hope his brother will be found alive.
Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said on Wednesday that it's too soon to say if regulations would be waived to rebuild the bridge and reopen the port. But he said President Joe Biden has said the federal government should "tear down any barriers, bureaucratic as well as financial" that could affect the timeline of any rebuild.