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The husband of a Michigan woman who mysteriously disappeared while at sea in the Bahamas is asking for the “benefit of the doubt” as inquiries into her disappearance continue to intensify.
Brian Hooker has found himself at the heart of an investigation filled with suspicion, nearly three weeks after his wife, Lynette Hooker, vanished without leaving any clues behind.
Firmly denying any involvement in her disappearance, Brian Hooker maintains that it was a tragic accident.
His lawyer, Crystal Marie Hauser, told ABC News that he would never harm his wife of 25 years, and she urged the public to avoid jumping to conclusions.
“We all handle things in different ways,” Hauser remarked.
‘Be open-minded to the fact that just because Karli and Darlene are making these claims, there’s absolutely no evidence to support any of the allegations – absolutely none.’
Lynette Hooker has been missing since April 4, when the couple set out from Hope Town toward their yacht, Soulmate, anchored near Elbow Cay.Â
According to Brian Hooker’s account to authorities, the couple encountered rough weather during the short journey in a dinghy, when suddenly his wife fell overboard in high winds.
Lynette Hooker, 55, has been missing since April 4 after disappearing in waters near Elbow Cay in the Bahamas. Her husband, Brian Hooker, told authorities she fell overboard from a dinghyÂ
Michigan-based attorney Crystal Marie Hauser said Brian Hooker ‘would never’ harm his wife and urged the public to give him the ‘benefit of the doubt’
Brian Hooker, 59, right, has maintained his innocence and insists his wife, Lynette, fell overboard in rough conditions on the water
He told investigators that Lynette was attached to the boat’s kill-switch key, which shut down the motor when she went into the water, forcing him to paddle alone through the night to reach shore.
Days later, police detained and questioned him in connection with the disappearance but he was released without charge on April 13.
In an interview with ABC News the following day, Brian Hooker said he was staying in the Bahamas to help find his wife.
‘My only focus is to go back to the boat and then hire or beg people to help me go find some areas to search,’ he said, adding he would continue looking ‘no matter how likely or unlikely that is.’
But within hours of that interview, he left the Bahamas. His Bahamian attorney said the decision was driven by a need to be with his terminally ill mother.
The abrupt departure only deepened the unease already surrounding the case.
Lynette’s daughter, Karli Aylesworth, has traveled to the Bahamas herself and publicly questioned her stepfather’s account.
‘I don’t understand how she drowned or got floated away,’ she told ABC News. ‘It just made me be more, ‘Why didn’t he do this? Why didn’t you do that? Why did that happen?”
Her grandmother, Darlene Hamlett, added another layer of concern, describing the couple’s relationship as volatile.
Bahamas bartender Ken, 38, who served Brian and Lynette Hooker the night before she was lost at sea, says he doesn’t believe the timeline of her disappearance adds up
The bartender said he was doubtful of Brian’s story that it took him all night to paddle across Embow Cay (pictured) after his wife went overboardÂ
The couple have been married for over two decades and frequently sail around the CaribbeanÂ
Brian Hooker told ABC News his ‘sole focus’ was to continue searching for his wife ‘no matter how likely or unlikely that is.’ He left the Bahamas shortly after this interview, above
Yet the most striking new challenge to Brian Hooker’s timeline has come not from family – but from a bartender who saw the couple only hours before Lynette vanished.
Ken, 38, who works at the Abaco Inn in Elbow Cay, recalled serving the couple drinks on the evening of April 3.Â
He said they arrived around 6pm, ordered multiple rounds of rum and Cokes, and it appeared, at the time, entirely unremarkable.
But after learning of Lynette’s disappearance, he began to question the sequence of events described by Brian.
‘What catches my eye is they left here at 7, 7:30pm and [her going missing] supposedly happened right after they left here, and he didn’t make it over there until 4am or something like that, in 25-mph winds,’ he told the New York Post.
‘It’s only four miles that way. It shouldn’t have taken eight to 10 hours to get there,’ he added. ‘Even if he was only floating, it should have been a much quicker time.’
Brian Hooker has consistently denied any involvement in his wife’s disappearance, maintaining that the conditions on the water – high winds and strong currents – turned a routine trip into a nightmare.
Lynette’s daughter, Karli Aylesworth, has publicly questioned Brian Hooker’s account of the incident saying she does not understand how her mother could have drowned or drifted away
Karli Aylesworth has been in the Bahamas in the search for her mother and to try and get a better understanding as to what might have happened
Authorities continue to investigate the disappearance but Lynette Hooker has not been found
Brian and Lynette Hooker are seen alongside her daughter, Karli Aylesworth, right
In a Facebook post shortly after the incident, he wrote: ‘I am heartbroken over the recent boat accident in unpredictable seas and high winds that caused my beloved Lynette to fall from our small dinghy near Elbow Cay in the Bahamas.’
‘Despite desperate attempts to reach her, the winds and currents drove us further apart. We continue to search for her and that is my sole focus,’ he added.
Still, questions continue to mount.
Aylesworth has openly suggested she does not believe the incident was accidental, telling NBC News: ‘I hope this was just a freak accident, but I just have a hard time believing it at the moment… I just want to know the truth.’
She has also alleged there was a history of domestic violence in the relationship.