The captain of the Italian liner Costa Concordia said he was told by managers to take his ship close in to shore on the night it ran aground and capsized, according to bugged conversations leaked to Italian newspapers.
The daily La Repubblica published transcripts of a conversation Captain Francesco Schettino had with an unknown person identified only as Fabrizio in which he implicates an unnamed manager of the vessel's owners Costa Cruises.
"Fabri ... anyone else in my place wouldn't have been so nice as to go there because they were breaking my balls, saying go there, go there," Mr Schettino says in the conversation, taped while he was being held following his arrest over the incident.
"...the rock was there but it didn't show up in the instruments I had and I went there ... to satisfy the manager, go there, go there," he says.
The conversation, in a thick Neapolitan dialect which the transcription translates into standard Italian, was apparently taped without the knowledge of Mr Schettino, while he was being held in custody after the incident. It was posted on the website of the daily La Repubblica.
A source in the prosecutor's office said that the transcript was genuine. Mr Schettino's lawyer Bruno Leporatti did not dispute it but said his client should not be treated as a "scapegoat."
Mr Schettino is currently under house arrest, blamed for causing the crash by steering too close to shore and accused of multiple manslaughter and abandoning ship before the evacuation of more than 4,200 passengers and crew was complete.
At least sixteen people died when the cruise ship struck a rock which tore a hole in its side and caused it to capsize off the Tuscan island of Giglio on January 13th. Another sixteen people are still unaccounted for. Six bodies are as yet unidentified.
Divers resumed their search for bodies today and will blast new holes into the ship to open up submerged interior spaces. Salvage teams are also continuing preparations to pump more than 2,300 tonnes of diesel fuel from the hulk, an operation expected to start by Saturday and last about a month.
Investigators say Mr Schettino steered the 114,500 tonne vessel to within 150 metres of the shore to perform a manoeuvre known as a "salute" in which a ship makes a special display by coming in very close to land.
Whether or not such manoeuvres were tolerated or even encouraged by the ship's operators is one of the key questions at issue in the investigation.
In an interview last week, the company's chief executive said ships sometimes came close to shore but only under safe conditions. According to reports in the Italian media, the practice is widespread in the cruise industry.