We know the Globe is in crunch-time negotiations with New York Times management to reach a $20 million cost-cutting consensus before the May 1 deadline, so we’re not even mad about “ Lynn gambling ship now in bankruptcy .” Just disappointed. This front-page piece is a model of armchair reporting, suspiciously similar to Lynn’s ItemLive.com article, “ Lynn Bet Boat Goes Broke .” We didn’t see a single additional factoid not appearing in ItemLive’s story, which ran yesterday. The Globe appears to have simply conducted a second interview with James Cowdell , the same source used by ItemLive, for a couple of slightly different quotes. It’s even more of a shame because this is a story ripe with potential for investigative reporting. Around midnight last October the SS Horizon’s Edge, a “ Las Vegas Style Casino ” cruise ship, sailed away from its pier in Lynn Harbor and never returned. A note left on the door declared simply that the ship had departed. After five years of twice-a-day sailing, charging rates of $27 per person on weekdays and $37 on weekends, the 500-passenger-capacity ship vanished overnight. During the past few months, Horizon’s Edge has managed to accrue a sizable tab. Horizon’s Edge Casino Cruises, LLC now owes $15,000 for three months worth of pier rent to Economic Development & Industrial Corporation (EDIC), $2,383.61 to Lynn Water & Sewer, and up tp $200,000 in a lawsuit for damages to the dock. Not anticipating any forthcoming money, the city of Lynn

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Lynn Ship and Globe Reporting Disappear