Skip navigation
sponsored by 

Honeymooner Gone in a Heartbeat

The cruise ship disappearance of George Smith remains a mystery

  FOR MORE INFORMATION
Learn how you can protect your children

Dr. Clint Van Zandt offers a DVD entitled "Protecting Children from Predators." Click here to learn more

COMMENTARY
By Clint Van Zandt
MSNBC analyst & former FBI profiler
updated 9:10 a.m. ET Jan. 24, 2006

Clint Van Zandt

E-mail

It was to be a picture perfect honeymoon for 26-year-old George Smith and his new wife, Jennifer Hagel Smith.  They and 2,500 other travelers boarded the Royal Caribbean cruise ship Brilliance of the Seas in late May 2005.  Their ship pointed its bow toward the Aegean Sea, sailing off for a tour of various Mediterranean ports of call, while the Smiths settled in to what would soon become their honeymoon from hell.  Less than a week into their dream cruise something happened that would forever change their lives, a nightmare that continues today.

We’ve all seen the picture of the Smiths in swimsuits aboard the ship so often on cable television that viewers have come to think of them in the same light as Natalee Holloway, another American there one moment, gone the next.  In the case of the Smiths, they, like Natalee, violated the rule of travel – always stay with your “wingman,” spouse, partner, friend, or the like; they are responsible for you; you, for them.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement

And, while some passengers on the cruise ship suggest the Smiths were a perfect couple, others noted obvious differences.  What we do know from the endless parade of cable news stories is that George Smith somehow went overboard on the morning of July 5, never to be seen again. 

Here is the time line of his last few hours as reconstructed from media interviews and statements by his wife, the cruise line, fellow passengers, and the many lawyers and talking heads that are now somehow part of this tragic story.
FREE VIDEO
Missing Honeymooner
Royal Carribean cruise lines is fighting PR war in case of missing honeymooner George Smith. Dan Abrams reports.

MSNBC

On the evening of July 4, George and Jennifer had dinner together in the ship’s dining room.  They returned to their cabin for awhile where George took off his sport coat and left it hanging on a chair.  In photographs taken the next day, this coat was there, but missing days later.  The Smiths left their cabin and headed for ship’s casino for a night of gambling and drinking.  Later, they moved on to the ship’s disco where they continued their social activities, again to include what some have described as heavy drinking.  Somewhere in this time frame the Smiths met up with four young men, described by some as “the three Russian guys (although other sources identify them as U.S. citizens) and the teenage kid from California.”  Exactly what they were drinking and in what amount throughout the night and early morning we do not know, but it is believed that absinthe was included in their choice of beverages. 

Absinthe, also known as “the green fairy,” depending on the brand you drink, is a very strong herbal liqueur with the taste of licorice, anise, hyssop, fennel, veronica, lemon balm, and wormwood, and has an alcohol content of up to 90%.  Some drink it with a sugar cube to help cut the bitter taste of the drink, but it’s the combination of various herbs, including wormwood, a potentially fatal plant extract, plus the high alcohol content, that gives absinthe its mythical qualities.  The sale of absinthe was banned in the U.S. 88 years ago, although its legacy as a mysterious, addictive, and mind-altering drink continues today.  Consumers, and this is perhaps a placebo effect, believe that absinthe will give them such a high and such a buzz, that they are willing to risk danger to their health, and life to consume it. 

It was in the early morning hours of July 5 that the Smiths and various others found themselves socializing in the disco, drinking shots of absinthe (which is not sold on the ship) and whatever else that may have been legally available in the bar.  Passengers suggest that both Smiths had been

drinking and were obviously feeling the effects of a night of imbibing.  One passenger, a younger school teacher from Phoenix, said she and a male friend were in the bar with the Smiths and that the Smiths were “heavily intoxicated.”  The witness said Jennifer was leaning on a male passenger, “flirting with him,” and because of this George called his new bride a “hussy.”  Jennifer, a former college athletic, pushed her husband away from her, straightened up, and dropped kicked him in the groin.  George went down and Jennifer was seen to stumble out of the bar.  The 24-year-old passenger Jennifer was leaning on said the kick George received was hard and that his pupils were dilated, a look the passenger says he’ll never forget. Nevertheless, Smith, appearing to recover, continued drinking with the group.

Some suggest that the altercation between the Smiths took place between 2:30 a.m. and 3:30 a.m.  Statements attributed to one or more of the four young men with George indicate that they helped him to his cabin before 4:00 a.m., but Jennifer was not there.  Then at George’s request they helped him look for his new wife around the ship.  She was nowhere to be found.  We also know that just before 4:00 a.m. the young men and George returned to Smith’s cabin.  A passenger in the cabin next door to the Smiths stated that he was awakened by loud noises and loud talk, perhaps in a foreign language, coming from the open balcony area of the Smith’s cabin.  He then heard a sound like furniture being moved about, followed by one last, loud noise, as if a couch had been dropped on or from the balcony.  The passenger, a deputy police chief, called the ship’s front desk at 4:05 a.m. to report this.  Ship security personnel arrived a few minutes later, but hearing nothing from the Smith’s cabin, they went away without entering. 

At least one of the young men with Smith has indicated that he and his friends walked George to his room a second time, and while one man was in the bathroom the others placed George into bed and they all then left the room.  It’s noted, however, that another witness reported seeing three young men leave the room.  Question – where was the fourth man and did he leave before the three, or stay on in Smith’s room for some unknown purpose? 

Somewhere around 4:30 a.m. Jennifer was found lying asleep or unconscious, and either drugged or inebriated (depending on whether you view this from the ship’s standpoint or Jennifer’s attorney’s standpoint) on the hallway floor by ship maintenance personnel.  She was on the same deck but the opposite side of the ship from her cabin, something that I know from experience is easy to do even without suffering from the effects of a long night of drinking.  A spokesperson for the cruise line indicates that Jennifer got to her feet and walked a short distance, where ship’s personnel, at the telephonic instruction of the ship’s nurse, put her into a wheelchair and pushed her to her cabin.  The employees had already determined her cabin number and had gone there looking for George to claim his wife, but he was not in the stateroom at that time.  Jennifer was wheeled to her cabin and placed on top of the bedding, claiming that she was otherwise all right. 

The Smiths had scheduled his and her massages for the next morning for about 10:00 a.m.  Jennifer allegedly said that when she awoke that morning she assumed that George had slept in another cabin that night, indicating that he had done this before on the cruise.  Wearing the same clothes she had on the night before, the same clothes that she had just slept in, Jennifer walked to the spa, arriving one and one half hours early for the massage appointment.  She allegedly asked if she could be seen early, even though her husband was not there (in her defense perhaps thinking George would meet her in the spa) and even though the appointment was supposedly for both of them at a later hour.  It was here that she was found by a ship’s officer and asked if she knew where her husband was. 

Jennifer was next to find out about the bloodstain on the life boat cover two decks below their cabin balcony.  She was later questioned by another ship’s officer, this in the presence of one of the four young men that were with her and George the night before.  The young man allegedly asked if blood had been found.  If he did, in fact, say this, was it because he had already heard about the blood from other passengers, or did he witness something in the Smith’s cabin that morning that lead him to ask this, or was it just a “lucky guess” on his part?


Sponsored links

Resource guide

Get Your 2008 Credit Score

Find a business to start

Try for Free

Search Jobs

Find Your Dream Home

$7 trades, no fee IRAs

Find your next car