A BRITISH woman who was found dead aboard a £27million super yacht has been pictured for the first time.

Charlotte Condradie was found unresponsive in her cabin on Sunday night as the gleaming 170ft vessel lay moored in Palma, Majorca.

NINTCHDBPICT001063710648
Brit woman, 29, pictured after body found on £27m superyachtCredit: Facebook
 

A white yacht named "LIND" docked in clear blue water.
The gleaming 170ft vessel lay moored in Palma, Majorca
The alarm was raised shortly before 9pm when concerned colleagues went to check on her after she failed to respond to messages and answer repeated calls.

Moments later, the luxury yacht became the centre of a frantic emergency response.

Paramedics rushed to the docked vessel but, despite their efforts, Charlotte was pronounced dead at the scene.

Her sudden passing has stunned fellow crew members and triggered a police probe – though detectives say they are not currently treating the death as suspicious.

Charlotte’s body was taken to the Institute of Forensic Medicine in Palma for a post-mortem examination, which has yet to be completed.

A Civil Guard spokesman in Majorca confirmed today: “The dead woman was a 29-year-old British national.”

A well-placed source close to the investigation said: “Everything is pointing to her death being the result of natural causes.

“At this moment in time, it is not being treated as a crime although the results of the autopsy are still pending.”

Officers have interviewed her crewmates as part of routine procedure.

Although she held a British passport and had been based in Europe for several years, Charlotte is believed to have been born in Zambia.

Several relatives are understood to live in South Africa.

She had previously worked as a stewardess for SuperYachts International before taking on what is believed to have been a maintenance role on her current vessel.

In older Facebook posts, Charlotte shared photos of two horses she lovingly described as her “two babies” – a touching insight into her life beyond the world of high-end yachting.

At the time of her death, she was working aboard the custom-built motor yacht Lind, which can cost nearly £300,000 a week to charter during peak season.

The Cayman Islands-flagged yacht was built in the Netherlands and boasts exterior styling by award-winning designer Tim Heywood.

It can accommodate up to ten guests and 13 crew members and has a top speed of just over 15 knots.

Among its lavish features are an open-air cinema, jacuzzi, gym and inflatable trampolines.

The yacht’s reported owner is German billionaire Peter Alexander Wacker, who owns around 10 per cent of chemical giant Wacker Chemie AG, founded by his great-grandfather Alexander Wacker in 1914.

Wacker worked at BMW for a decade before joining the family firm in 1993 as a board member when it was still privately owned. As of April 2024, Forbes estimated his net worth at one billion dollars.

Guardia Civil officers and a Policia Portuària car behind caution tape along a dock lined with sailboats.
Her sudden passing has stunned fellow crew members and triggered a police probeCredit: Solarpix
 

A marina with numerous boats and yachts, seen from a higher vantage point through palm trees and buildings.
Officers have interviewed her crewmates as part of routine procedure