Who among us hasn't done something petty and ridiculous, only to regret it a nanosecond (or two) later? A fit of pique. Or maybe just a fiteen of pique.
...allegedly found an unknown boat in the slip he uses on Old North Wharf on the morning of Sunday, Oct. 16. Believing it should not have been tied up there, Walpow taped signs to the boat’s interior GPS screens that read “Parking By Permit Only. Violators Will Be Towed" and then untied the vessel, allowing it to floatfree into the Easy Street Basin.
The 32-foot Hunt center-console boat - ironically named "Fair Play" - is worth approximately $500,000. After Wolpow untied it, the boat drifted dangerously past Steamboat Wharf, got pushed northward in the wash of the car ferry the M/V Woods Hole, then collided with the $5 million, 70-foot Viking sportfishing boat "El Jefe" causing damage to that vessel. It eventually ran aground near 22 Easton Street. (Source: Nantucket Current)God knows, it's annoying when someone borrows or outright takes something that's yours, something that you were counting on. So, go forth and be annoyed.
“I’ve heard people threaten to untie someone’s boat a thousand times over the years, but this is the first time that I know of where somebody actually did so,” [Harbormaster Sheila] Lucey said. She declined to comment further on the incident.
Damage estimates are pretty high, as one might expect given that Fair Play is worth half-a-mil, and El Jefe is a $5 mil boat. Initial thoughts are a few thousand bucks worth of damage to Fair Play, maybe upwards of $100K to El Jefe.
Which Wolpow can, of course, easily pay.
And it could have been a lot worse, of course. Someone and not just something could have gotten hurt.
George Regan, a spokesman for Wolpow, said Tuesday that his client is sorry.
”Marc has apologized to everyone involved,” Regan said. “It’s no big deal. Everyone will be whole. He’s sorry and life moves on . . . it will never happen again.” (Source: Boston Globe)
I'm sure Marc Wolpow is sorry. And life, as it pretty much always does, moves on. But I'm not sure I completely agree with George Regan that "it's no big deal."
Wolpow has embarrassed himself in front of family, friends, colleagues, and fellow Nantucket boat types. Maybe the ones who really know him are saying "typical Marc." But maybe there are others who are wondering if this is a one-shot hiccup in an otherwise exemplary, buttoned down life, or whether a impetuous, snotty a-hole is who he truly is. If nothing else, while life will move on, Marc Wolpow will no doubt be the butt of plenty of jokes moving forward, which may be a bit uncomfortable making.
On reflection, I do guess that Regan's right about it not being a big deal. I mean, it's not as if Marc Wolpow is giving private equity a bad name or anything...
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