Lynsey O’Brien was just 15, but the bartenders aboard Costa Magica kept the drinks coming at an average of one every 4.5 minutes. Within 45 minutes, the Irish girl, who was traveling with her parents on Jan. 4, 2006, was served 10 drinks—two “Sex on the Beach”, four “Woo Woos”, two vodka and mixers and a shot each of vodka and liqueurs. Her father, a self-made millionaire, was livid when he learned his daughter had been drinking. He took Lynsey to her cabin and tucked her in for the night. But sometime later, she awoke and tried to vomit over the ship’s railing. She ended up falling overboard instead—while her younger sister, Imelda, looked on in horror. Later that year, her death became the focus of a congressional hearing that highlighted out-of-control drinking aboard cruise ships and the lack of man overboard procedures. Paul O’Brien later wrote a book about the tragedy, Lynsey’s Law: Costa Coffin Cruise Ships & Obama. The grief-stricken father died last July at age 49.