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The mystery surrounding the disappearance of two boaters off Florida’s coast has taken a new turn as the FBI assumes control of the investigation. This follows an extensive search effort by the Coast Guard, which has now been suspended.
Randall Spivey, 57, and his nephew, Brandon Billmaier, 33, embarked on a fishing excursion approximately 100 miles from Fort Myers. Their vessel, a 42-foot Freeman boat, was later discovered adrift with the engine still running, but no sign of the two men. The Fort Myers News-Press reported on this development, highlighting the eerie circumstances of the boat’s discovery.
The Lee County Sheriff’s Office has confirmed that the FBI is now leading the investigation into this baffling disappearance. An FBI spokesperson, in a statement to WFTX, emphasized the agency’s readiness to support local law enforcement with any resources or techniques that could enhance the investigation.
Both Spivey and Billmaier are practicing attorneys, according to the Palm Beach Post. Their unexpected vanishing has prompted an outpouring of concern from their family, who have expressed their understanding and support for the Coast Guard’s decision to halt the search operations.
As the investigation progresses, the focus now shifts to the FBI’s efforts to unravel the mystery behind this unsettling incident along the Florida coast.
Following the suspended search, the lawyers’ family expressed that they support the Coast Guard’s decision.
“In a private briefing with Coast Guard leadership, the family was informed that, given the enormous amount of time, resources, and strategic effort focused on the most logical search areas, there is the highest degree of confidence that if Randy and Brandon were on the surface of the water, they would have been found,” they said in a statement.
“Few people were more concerned about the safety of innocent people than Randy and Brandon. We know—without question—that they would reach the same conclusion as the experts: that everything possible has been done. They would ask that this decision be respected and that the bravery and heroism of those who searched—those in the air and on the water doing the real, dangerous work—be honored.”
[Feature Photo: Lee County police]