Just hours before tragedy struck, Captain Sanfilippo made a frantic phone call from aboard a sinking vessel approximately 25 miles off the coast of Cape Ann.

On the line was his friend, Sebastian Noto. What unfolded during that call now offers a chilling glimpse into the final moments before the ship was lost in the freezing waters off Massachusetts.

According to accounts of the conversation, the captain sounded exhausted and overwhelmed as he described conditions deteriorating rapidly. He complained that the ship’s vents were freezing over as temperatures plunged to as low as -11°C (12°F), creating a dangerous and increasingly unmanageable situation on board.

“I give up. It’s too cold,” he reportedly said — a statement that underscored both physical exhaustion and the severity of the environment he was facing.

The vessel, already in distress, was battling not just mechanical failure but the brutal cold of the open ocean. Freezing air, icy spray, and failing systems combined to create a scenario where every decision carried life-or-death consequences.

But what has left the deepest impact is what came next.

As Captain Sanfilippo prepared to shut down the engine, the call took on a more desperate tone. According to the account, there was a cry for help — a final, urgent plea as he faced the reality that the ship could no longer be saved.

Investigators note that shutting down an engine in such conditions is a grave decision, often signaling that power, stability, or safety can no longer be maintained. In freezing temperatures, the margin for survival narrows dramatically, with hypothermia and rapid system failure becoming immediate threats.

Maritime experts say that vessels operating in extreme cold face unique dangers. Ice buildup can block vents, compromise airflow, and cause cascading mechanical issues. Once systems begin to fail, crews may find themselves with limited options and little time.

The ship ultimately sank, leaving questions about the exact sequence of events that followed the final call. Authorities have not released further details about rescue timelines or recovery efforts, citing the ongoing nature of the investigation.

What remains clear is that the final conversation captured the human reality behind maritime disaster statistics — a seasoned captain confronting the limits of endurance against unforgiving conditions.

Officials continue to examine weather data, vessel condition, and communication records as they seek to understand what went wrong and whether anything could have changed the outcome.

For those who have heard about the call, the words spoken in those final moments linger — a stark reminder of how quickly the sea can turn deadly, and how cold, silence, and isolation can overwhelm even the most experienced mariners.