Survivor of boat disaster: ‘Sleeping to swimming’ in minutes

In this photo provided by Ashley Boggs, Boggs’ fiance Brock Rainey, a crew member on the Scandies Rose, smiles in a selfie. The U.S. Coast Guard has called off the search for five crew members, including Rainey, of the crab fishing vessel that sank New Year’s Eve off Alaska. The decision came after the service said it had exhausted all leads and considered the chances for survival. (Brock Rainey/Courtesy of Ashley Boggs via AP)

A ball cap with the name of the crab fishing boat Scandies Rose rests at the Seattle Fishermen’s Memorial, Thursday, Jan. 2, 2020, in Seattle. The search for five crew members of the Scandies Rose in Alaska has been suspended, the U.S. Coast Guard said after two other crew members of the vessel were rescued after the 130-foot crab fishing boat from Dutch Harbor, Alaska, sank on New Year’s Eve. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)

JUNEAU, Alaska — A survivor of a Alaska crab boat sinking that left five fellow fishermen missing said the crew went from “sleeping to swimming” in minutes as rough seas and ice threatened to sink their vessel on New Year’s Eve.

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