HomeUSMystery Deepens: Sailboat's 11-Hour Disappearance Coincides with American's Vanishing in the Bahamas

Mystery Deepens: Sailboat’s 11-Hour Disappearance Coincides with American’s Vanishing in the Bahamas

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According to information acquired by Fox News Digital, the signal from Brian Hooker’s sailboat ceased on the night his wife, Lynette Hooker, disappeared while they were in the Bahamas.

Brian Hooker informed officials that Lynette was swept off their dinghy by turbulent waters after they departed from Hope Town in the Bahamas around 7:30 p.m. on April 4. He eventually reached Marsh Harbour at approximately 4 a.m. on April 5, authorities reported.

The couple was making their way back to their sailboat, the Soulmate, which they had made their permanent home since retiring. They often explored the U.S. and Caribbean in their sailing adventures, as documented on their social media profiles.

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(C and L) Brian Hooker and Lynette Hooker (R)

Family members noted that Brian and Lynette Hooker had been married for about 25 years. (The Sailing Hookers on YouTube and Instagram)

Fox News Digital accessed data via the marine tracking service VesselFinder, revealing that the Soulmate’s Automatic Identification System (AIS) went offline at 9:29 p.m. on April 4. This system, which transmits a vessel’s identity, speed, and location, remained inactive until 8:40 a.m. the next day, resulting in a communication gap exceeding 11 hours.

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Soulmate stopped transmitting AIS data for over 11 hours, according to data from Vesselfinder. (Fox News)

Blaine Stevenson, a friend of Brian Hooker’s, previously told Fox News Digital that after spending about three or four hours searching with rescue officials on April 5, Brian returned to his sailboat and stayed there for roughly 24 hours.

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Kenneth Engerrand, an adjunct professor of maritime law at the University of Houston Law Center and shareholder in the Brown Sims law firm, told Fox News Digital the timing of the AIS going dark is “highly unusual.”

There are ways that it can stop transmitting. Catastrophic power failure, things like that. The mechanism in a collision goes to the bottom of the ocean, something like that, or it’s turned off. It doesn’t just go off and then come back on,” Engerrand said.

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Brian Hooker leaving Central Police Station in Freeport accompanied by lawyer Terrel A. Butler

Brian Hooker leaves Central Police Station in Freeport, The Bahamas, on April 13, 2026, after being released from custody. He was questioned about the disappearance of his wife, Lynette Hooker, who he says fell overboard from their dinghy earlier this month. (Matthew Symons for Fox News Digital)

“If [the AIS] had stopped altogether and never came back on, then you would assume there was some sort of catastrophic failure on the system. But when it went off and then came back on some hours later, that’s an action whereby the system was turned off or disabled,” he added.

Notably, there were three more instances from April 10 to 13 where the AIS wasn’t transmitting data.

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U.S. Coast Guard investigators searching the boat Soulmate docked at a station in Fort Pierce, Florida

U.S. Coast Guard investigators search the boat Soulmate docked at their station in Fort Pierce, Fla., on May 13, 2026. The vessel belongs to Brian Hooker and his missing wife Lynette Hooker and was brought back to the U.S. from The Bahamas by the Coast Guard. (Fox News Digital)

Brian Hooker hasn’t been charged with a crime. He was detained for five days by Bahamian police after his wife disappeared, but wasn’t charged.

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Sometime between May 8 and 10, Brian and Lynette Hooker’s sailboat, Soulmate, was seized, a source familiar with the investigation told Fox News Digital. Soulmate was seized 40 nautical miles off the coast of Melbourne, Florida, according to the U.S. Coast Guard.

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In a news release, the Coast Guard said the seizure was part of a “complex surveillance and interdiction operation.” The sailboat was taken to Coast Guard Station Fort Pierce, where it is being processed for potential evidence.

Brian Hooker’s Michigan-based attorney previously asked Americans to give him the benefit of the doubt in an interview with ABC News.

“I would ask those watching to treat him the way you would want to be treated, to give him the benefit of the doubt, and to consider that not all of us, nor you, considering your own relationships, the way you speak to one another, we all handle things in different ways,” Crystal Marie Hauser said.

Fox News Digital reached out to Hauser for comment.

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