Harry Potter publisher Adrienne Vaughan killed in boat crash

The president of Bloomsbury USA publishing house was killed in front of her husband and two young children when their speedboat smashed into a sailing ship off the coast of Italy.

Adrienne Vaughan, 44, whose company is best known for the “Harry Potter” books, was launched on impact into the water, where she landed between the hulls of the two vessels and was fatally struck by the speedboat’s propeller, according to local media reports.

A harrowing video filmed by a wedding party guest on the hit sailing ship shows swimsuit-clad revelers dancing to the Backstreet Boys’ “Everybody” when chaos erupts.

“What happened?” one woman asks, as a horrified-sounding man replies: “This ship collided with us!”

“Jesus Christ,” another man cries out as the music stops and people rush to look over the sides, seeing Vaughan’s teen daughter bobbing in the waves amid debris.


Adrienne Vaughan, 44, president of Bloomsbury USA, with her husband, Mike White, left
Adrienne Vaughan, 44, president of Bloomsbury USA, right, was killed in a horrific speedboat accident in Italy Thursday.
Mike White/Facebook

Wrecked speedboat seen after deadly crash in Italy
The speedboat Vaughan’s family of four had chartered plowed into a sailing ship off the Amalfi coast near Naples.
Rai Radio1/Twitter

Mike White, Vaughan's husband, and their children, 14-year-old Leanna and 11-year-old Mason, seen after the crash
Mike White, Vaughan’s husband, and their children, 14-year-old Leanna and 11-year-old Mason, seen are seen after the crash in which the publishing executive was struck and killed by a propeller.
Cobra Team / BACKGRID

Others then saw the New York-based publishing president in the water being supported by her husband and children, according to Pietro Iuzzolino, a bartender on the rammed sailing ship “Tortuga.”

“She didn’t have an arm and the nape of her neck was white, as if no blood was flowing,” he told the Italian newspaper Corriere del Mezzogiorno. “It was terrible.”

Vaughan’s husband, Mike White, was also injured. He was transported to a hospital in Castiglione di Ravello, where he underwent surgery on his left shoulder, the local reports said.


The 130-foot "Tortuga" sailing ship that was rammed by speedboat
The rented speedboat smashed into the 130-foot “Tortuga” sailing ship that was hosting a wedding reception.
Cobra Team / BACKGRID

Their children — Leanna, 14, and Mason, 11 — were not physically harmed but treated for shock, the reports said.

The speedboat driver, only identified as a 30-year-old man, was also hospitalized with injuries to his ribs and pelvis — and allegedly failed toxicology tests after the crash, according to Italian news agency ANSA.

“We got the impression he was drunk,” said Iuzzolino, the bartender, who saw the speedboat driver vomiting after the crash.


The ship was carrying 85 wedding guests, including Germans and Americans
The ship was carrying 85 wedding guests, including Germans and Americans.
Cobra Team / BACKGRID

Vaughan and her family had chartered the 29-foot speedboat with a skipper and was touring the breathtaking Furore fjord off the Amalfi coast near Naples Thursday evening, when the vessel made an unexpected 180-degree turn and slammed into the 130-foot “Tortuga” ship, local media said.

The larger craft was carrying 85 people, including German and American tourists, who were celebrating a wedding.


Members of the Italian Red Cross traveling by boat to the scene of the accident
First responders rushed to the scene to rescue the family after the crash, which launched them into the water.
Cobra Team / BACKGRID

Helicopter seen arriving to transport Vaughan to a hospital
Vaughan’s condition was so grave that a medical helicopter was called in to airlift her, but she died before she could be taken to a hospital.
Cobra Team / BACKGRID

Iuzzolino said he was making a cocktail when he heard what he described as a “loud bang” — and then saw Vaughan and her family struggling in the waves.

Vaughan was rescued from the water and taken to shore, where first responders fought to save her life by performing CPR. A medical helicopter was later summoned to the scene to airlift the gravely injured tourist, but she died before she could be taken to a hospital, local reports said.


An ambulance is seen on a pier in Amalfi after Thursday's accident
Vaughan’s husband suffered injuries requiring surgery, but their children were not physically harmed.
Cobra Team / BACKGRID

The sailing ship’s 55-year-old captain tested negative for drugs and alcohol, according to local reporting.


Adrienne Vaughan, husband Mike White and their children at the Trevi Fountain in Rome
Less than a day before her death, Vaughan shared photos of her family taken in Rome.
Mike White/Facebook

Vaughan became president of the prestigious Bloomsbury USA in September 2021, after serving as executive director and COO for a year.

A graduate of NYU Stern School of Business with an MBA in finance, Vaughan previously worked as an executive for the Disney publishing group.

Bloomsbury USA did not immediately respond to messages Friday.