FLORIDA| The first sign something was wrong came Tuesday when Bahamian authorities reached out to the U.S. Coast Guardâs Southeast Division to alert them that 20 people aboard a blue and white 29-foot Mako Cuddy Cabin vessel had gone missing. The passengers were in the oft-cited Bermuda Triangle. The group, yet to be identified, was last known to have left Bimini on Monday en route to Lake Worth, the Coast Guard learned. They should have arrived that day. But something went wrong somewhere in the waters between the Bahamas and South Florida â an area that encompasses the mythical section of the Atlantic oft-dubbed the Bermuda Triangle or Devilâs Triangle, unofficially bounded by Miami, Bermuda and Puerto Rico and covering about 500,000 square miles of ocean off the southeastern tip of Florida, according to the History Channel.