The US Navy guided missile destroyer USS Fitzgerald arrives at the US Naval base, Yokosuka, in the Japanese prefecture of Kanagawa on June 17. The US and Japan launched a major search operation to find seven missing American sailors on June 17 after their navy destroyer collided with a container ship, crushing the side of the military vessel.
Commander: Ship endured 'significant impact'
01:45 - Source: CNN

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The 10,000-ton USS Fitzgerald and the ACX Crystal collided early Saturday

Japanese coast guard revises its crash time estimate to 1:30 a.m.

Washington CNN  — 

Nearly an hour passed before the crew of a container ship reported its collision with a US destroyer, according to the Japanese coast guard, raising more questions about the sequence of events that ultimately led to the death of seven American sailors.

The 10,000-ton USS Fitzgerald and the ACX Crystal, a 29,000-ton container ship flagged in the Philippines, collided early Saturday local time off Japan’s Izu Peninsula, officials said. The area sees heavy maritime traffic, with 400 to 500 vessels crossing it daily.

Initially, the Japanese Coast Guard said that the distress call from the ACX Crystal came at 2:25 a.m. on Saturday – five minutes after it crashed into the USS Fitzgerald at 2:20 a.m.

But after interviewing the ACX Crystal’s crew, the Japanese coast guard revised its crash time estimate to 1:30 a.m.

Japanese officials say a delay of 50 minutes or more between when the collision occurred and when it was reported would not be unusual for the merchant ship, as the crew could be busy determining damage to the vessel and avoiding other craft in the busy shipping lanes.

The US 7th Fleet is maintaining that the collision occurred at 2:20 a.m. – and both US and Japanese officials have declined to explain why there is a discrepancy regarding timing.

The US Navy guided missile destroyer USS Fitzgerald arrives at the US Naval base, Yokosuka, in the Japanese prefecture of Kanagawa on June 17.

Timing will play a critical role in determining exactly how the collision happened, particularly as the shipping data from Marinetraffic.com appears to indicate that the ACX Crystal made a sharp right turn at close to 1:30 am – the time that the Japanese coast guard said the crash occurred.

On Sunday, Vice Adm. Joseph Aucoin, commander of the US 7th Fleet, would not speculate on how the accident occurred, but said there would be multiple investigations into the collision, including one by the Navy’s Judge Advocate General and one by the US Coast Guard.

Other investigations could come from the Japanese and Philippine authorities, because of where the accident took place and the Philippine registration of the container ship.

Japanese officials say the investigations are expected to take months, if not years.

The US guided-missile destroyer suffered severe damage to its starboard side, while the container ship sustained light damage. A 7th Fleet statement said the collision caused “significant damage and associated flooding to two berthing spaces, a machinery space, and the radio room.”

Searchers found the bodies of the seven missing sailors on Sunday in the ship’s flooded berthing compartments.

President Donald Trump took to Twitter on Monday to offer his condolences.

“My heartfelt thoughts and prayers are with the 7 @USNavy sailors of the #USSFitzgerald and their families,” Trump tweeted.

White House press secretary Sean Spicer also commented on the incident – the first such White House remarks since the sailors were confirmed dead by the Navy.

“The President and the entire administration extends our thoughts and prayers to the sailors – the seven Navy sailors who lost their lives this past weekend,” Spicer said during an off-camera press briefing.

“Their deaths while on patrol in the Western Pacific are a sobering reminder of the dangers that the men and women of our military face every day,” he said.

A plane carrying the bodies of the seven sailors left Yokota Air Base outside Tokyo for the US on Tuesday morning, according to postings on US 7th Fleet social media.

CNN’s Yoko Wakatsuki, Alexandra Field, Brad Lendon and Kevin Liptak contributed to this report.