On 22 March 1993 at around 10 am, a group of eight schoolchildren and their teacher from
Southway Community College,
Plymouth were accompanied by two instructors from St Albans Outdoor Centre on a kayak trip in Lyme Bay from Lyme Regis to Charmouth, a distance of around two miles. The group ran into issues shortly after setting off. One of the students, Dean Sayer, capsized while still close enough to the shore to stand up. While Tony Mann assisted the group's teacher, Karen Gardner, the second instructor, rafted the pupils together. The group quickly drifted away from the shore due to the northerly, offshore, winds. The St Albans Outdoor Centre handyman was due to meet the kayaking group at Charmouth. At around 12:30 pm, when the pupils did not arrive, he reported them overdue to the centre's manager, Joe Stoddart. Stoddart did not immediately inform
HM Coastguard and instead searched the coast in a rescue boat and then from the shore in his car. At 2:45 pm, a local fisherman found an empty kayak floating about 3 miles (4.8 km) south-west of Lyme Regis. He radioed HM Coastguard Portland who tasked a Land Rover to search the bay from the cliffs. At around 3 pm, when the group were more than three hours overdue, Joe Stoddart informed
HM Coastguard of the missing party. At 4:20 pm HM Coastguard Portland tasked
Lyme Regis Lifeboat and a
Royal Navy helicopter to search for the group of kayakers. Norman Pointer and Tony Mann were rescued by Lyme Regis Lifeboat at 5:11 pm while the remaining members of the group were rescued by the Royal Navy helicopter between 5:40 pm and 6:40 pm. Four of the group, Dean Sayer, Claire Langley, Simon Dunne and Rachel Walker, died as a result of the incident. The coroner's verdict was that they had drowned. ==Inquest==